Jacques Offenbach
ENO
Director Emma Rice makes her ENO (and opera) debut in a rather gritty and glitzy production that gives room for her head turning theatrical spectacle and trademark humour. This Orpheus in the Underworld transports us to a hedonistic, party-filled Underworld. In the notes Rice writes of struggling with the story so goes back to basics and produces a new story with new lyrics by Tom Morris.
The story rejigged a touch to make slightly more sense follows Eurydice who is fooled into taking Pluto, ruler of the Underworld, as her lover after her new marriage to Orpheus falls apart through a still-born tragedy. Orpheus must try to win his wife back, but to achieve the impossible he needs the help of the glamorous, conceited but rather bored gods…
Read the full synopsis here:
The tag line for Rice’s first flirtation with the ENO is – “Heaven is overrated. Hell is where the party’s at.” It’s an infernal cynical party of indulgent squabbling gods desperate for sensation and quivering under the tyranny of Jupiter, sung here by Sir Willard White as the scheming Daddyo and his wonderful counterpoint Anne-Marie Owens as Juno who gives us carry-on matriarchal realness. Idunnu Münch, as Diana is intoxicating her voice rising way above the fray, hunting and transporting us into the ether and delicately bringing us back to earth again. ENO Harewood Artist Alex Otterburn hangs it all together as Pluto and his mesmerising wink-wink charm is seductive. Mary Bevan’s Eurydice and Ed Lyon’s Orpheus are both superb, voices clear and rising to the serious emotional intent inherent in their complex love story.
Alan Oke is seedy as hell as John Styx and gives us a wonderful performance of gum-sucking perviness. Baritone Lucia Lucas, the first trans singer on the ENO or any main opera stage in London is charming as Public Opinion, ‘aving the knowledge as a London cab driver but given too much serious heft to allow the humour to penetrate, unlike her lyrical rich voice which was joyful.
Sian Edwards returns to the ENO pit and brings mostly good work out of the orchestra although there was some lack lustre moments which failed to convince, perhaps this will find it’s groove, I’d like to think so, Edwards is assertive and her striking holding of the more delicate parts of Offenbach’s teasing is confident and convinces. Tom Morris lyrics are clever, simple modern and fun and gives some of the rather grim wordyness a darkly comical underlining.
Offenbach’s riotous operetta features the popular ‘Can-can’ and this Infernal Galop here is more of a menacing Macarena. There’s a lot of anger on show here, and although it helps to dilute the cynical ruthlessness of some of the protagonists it leaves us uncomfortable.
Worth a trip up to catch this just for the glorious campness of the ENO Chorus in those white balloon body suit tutus, swoon….
Until 28 Nov 2019
For more info or to buy tickets see the ENO website: