Donizetti - Roberto Devereux

Donizetti - Roberto Devereux
by Friedrich Haider, Christof Loy

Donizetti - Roberto Devereux
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DVD Cover Information

Actor: Albert Schagidullin, Edita Gruberova, Jeanne Piland, Nikolay Borchev, Roberto Aronica
Director: Christof Loy, Friedrich Haider
DVD: Region Code 1
Audio: English (Unknown); English (Subtitled); Italian (Original Language), PCM Stereo; English (Original Language); French (Original Language); Spanish (Original Language); German (Original Language); Mandarin Chinese (Original Language)
Format: Classical, Color, DTS Surround Sound, NTSC, Subtitled
Picture Format: 1.78:1
Running Time: 135 minutes
DVD Release Date: 2006-08-08
Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated)
Studio: Deutsche Grammophon

Movie Reviews of Donizetti - Roberto Devereux

Movie Review: Outstanding conceptualization; a showcase for Gruberova
Summary: 5 Stars

Elisabetta: Edita Gruberova
Roberto: Roberto Aronica
Nottingham: Albert Schagidullin
Sara: Jeanne Piland
Cecil: Manolito Mario Franz
Paggio: Steven Humes
Giacomo il Re: Johannes Klama (silenzio)

Bayerisher Staatsoper
Friedrich Haider conducting
Staging: Christopf Loy
Sets, costumi: Herbert Murauer
Video director: Brian Large
Forget history, forget tradition. This is a modern conceptualization of English monarchy. A monarchy where things have not changed; executions still exist, the Queen's law still,well, LAW. Martial law, perhaps. This is a current-day England, stark, austere surroundings, not a hint of warmth. Severe, tailored suits for both the men and women; only Elizabeth is allowed any kind of color in her own outfits. The set resembles not so much a palace as a corporate boardroom that's all business, all in blacks and grays.

I'm usually against most "updatings" because they go into weird conceptualizations that have nothing to do with the premise; often times, there will be gimmicks and distractions to take us away from the music, even to the core of the drama, and worse, the singing. Not this production. It rather ingeniously conjures up another kind of kingdom, repressive, and severe, as if the royal figure wanted to keep matters in firm check against any kind of a "personal ruling" aspect. Oddly enough, it works. If you can forget history (Donizetti does anyway; he has Elizabeth abdicating to "Giacomo, il Re" at the end), this is an intriguing concept. Christopf Loy forsakes excessive gimmickry and focuses on the dramas inherent, aided by Herbert Murauer's spare sets and costumes. What this creates is an explosive drama about infidelity ( (imagined and real), betrayal and treason at its most grim. It is often brutal, tense and powerful; these figures emerge as unerringly real people. Amazingly enough, it only serves as to how astonishingly modern Donizetti's score is. No other musical drama depicts such a marvelous dichotomy of Elizabeth the Queen versus the Woman. The opera looks way way forward ahead of its time, presenting the queen in a psychological depth unheard of in the "bel canto" genre. Poor Donizetti lost his wife during a cholera epidemic in this time, and he seems to transmute his misery through this brilliant, evocative score. The queen's emotions scream out the agony of her dilemma, and this staging makes that pain really, vividly manifest. It is the score of a man beside himself with grief.

Loy has fleshed out all the characters indelibly. Quite often, the "secondary" chracters take a back seat to the leads, but not here. Sara and Nottingham are presented as a couple truly "in extremis," where marital trust and suspicion play a horrifying reality not usually encountered in opera. Sara, tormented by love for Roberto, and torn by her wifely duties, is made a loomingly tragic figure. Misunderstood and scapegoated by Nottingham's jealousy, she is much of a victim as Elizabeth. Nottingham becomes the unwitting catalyst for the story's resolution. Jeanne Piland and Albert Schagidullin give magnificent performances, not at all the "secondary" leads. They are in the forefront of the drama, and they respond to their assignments with unerring skill. Piland has a full-bodied mezzo which she uses expressively in her aria, "All'aflitto," (whose melody inspired Verdi's "Va, pensiero"), full of foreboding and remorse. Schagidullin, frankly, has a rather gritty, Germanesque throatiness, but what an actor. He depicts his character's vengeance and horror at Sara's alleged duplicity with marvelous intensity. Roberto Aronica, in the title role, scores a triumph. No "park and bark" tenor, he seizes the opportunity to create a real 3 dimensional figure. He allows himself to be blindfolded and stripped down to his underwear in the last act aria and cabaletta. Furthermore, he strives to sing expressively, putting real meaning into his words and angling to flesh out a real character worthy of the Queen's attentions.

This documentation of Edita Gruberova's Elisabetta may in fact be her finest, most committed, and certainly most "demented" performance. She's in Rysanek territory here. This conceptualization suits her to perfection. Here, playing the aging Queen, she has no need to be a younger personage. Outfitted in severe, tailored suits with a strawberry-blond bouffant, she conjures up an unmistakable cross between Margaret Thatcher and the current Elisabeth herself. Gruberova commands the walk, motions, and stature of a Royal figure. Though some of the sudden descents into the lower regions of her tone are a challenge for her bright, high-lying voice, she is in ideal form, making the most of the text and imbuing the line with sagacious skill. Gruberova etches the slow melodies with dynamic variety, while exhibiting immense dramatic power in the tense confrontations. She shirks none of the physical challenges, her body allowing itself to be used in every possible means to depict the Queen's increasing frustration and loss of control. The final scene though, is where Gruberova pulls out all the stops. After delivering a pain-wracked "Vivi ingrato," with long-lined expressivity, the discovery of Roberto's unwarranted execution, bringing about Elisabetta's abdication, Gruberova tops all else she has done before. With nerve-shattering intensity, she delivers "Quel sangue versato" as if this were her last performance. Gruberova does her classic wig-removing bit, where you see the balding, pathetic Queen exposed as a completely broken woman; "Non regno, non VI-vo" and she means it. Gruberova seems to be living in the moment. Face slack with shock, hyperventilating in desperation, close-ups reveal the extent of her involvement. After abdicating to her nephew, the Queen staggers upstage, and collapses, topples over into insane, abject grief. Her soul is dead, she is no more. This is operatic drama at its most powerful and brutally realistic.

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