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Purcell - Dido & Aeneas / Maria Ewing, Karl Daymond, Collegium Musicum 90 by Peter Maniura
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DVD Cover InformationActor: Karl Raymond, Maria Ewing, Richard Hickox Director: Peter Maniura DVD: Region Code 1 Audio: English (Original Language) Format: Classical, Color, Dolby, DVD-Video, NTSC Picture Format: 1.33:1 Running Time: 60 minutes DVD Release Date: 2008-06-24 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Studio: KULTUR VIDEO
Movie Reviews of Purcell - Dido & Aeneas / Maria Ewing, Karl Daymond, Collegium Musicum 90Movie Review: Dido Doesn't Summary: 3 StarsI have always loved Purcell's short piece on this famous story. However, this production is a big letdown. If you really like film, you will probably enjoy it because it is very cinematic. But if you really like opera it will be less satisfying. Like most attempt at filming opera made by film makers, this production is too cluttered visually. There is too much action to distract from the music for my taste.
Sad to say, ths biggest liability in the cast is Ewing (a singer I usually admire)as Dido. The production is, of course, dubbed. One is most aware of the lip synching with Ewing, probably most most seasoned professional in the cast. The other singers are more convincing in pretending to be singing and there are several truly outstanding voices in the cast. Anneas has a well produced lyric baritone (I don't agree with another reviewer's critique) and looks very handsome though clearly too young for the role. The first sorcerous, Sally Burgess, is outstanding with a melting mezzo and incredible phrasing. Why have we not heard more about this great singer?
Hickock has conducted this piece many times but he really seems to be dragging the tempos in the last scenes. Had Ewing been a bit more involved the ending might not have seemed so lifeless (no pun intended).
I also question the need for the nearly graphic sexuality during the "Come Away, Fellow Sailors" number. It seems that modern directors don't trust either the music or the story. They must feel that no one will pay attention if their direction is not suggestive enough. At least in this production half the cast did not carry rifles and guns.
Too bad this is the only game in town for this classic opera. It's unquestionably sumptuous visually but pretty bland as a representation of this glorious music
Summary of Purcell - Dido & Aeneas / Maria Ewing, Karl Daymond, Collegium Musicum 90Dido: MARIA EWING Aeneas: KARL DAYMOND Belinda: REBECCA EVANS Sorceress: SALLY BURGESS Second Woman: PATRICIA ROZARIO First Enchantress: MARY PLAZAS Second Enchantress: PAMELA HELEN STEPHEN Aeneas' Lieutenant: JAMIE MCDOUGALL Mercury: FRAN?OIS TESTORY Voice Of Mercury: JAMES BOWMAN Conductor: RICHARD HICKOX Director: PETER MANIURAPurcell's much-loved tragic opera is an intense tale of heroism, passion, betrayal and ultimate tragedy, played out against a backdrop of fiery rituals, evil spells and pageantry. It was filmed entirely on location at Hampton Court House, England, where spectacular settings are created in the house and grounds. Dido, Queen of Carthage, and Prince Aeneas, a fugitive lately arrived in her realm after the fall of Troy, fall in love; Dido's confidante Belinda urges her to yield to his suit, and they go off on a hunting party which, as a seventeenth-century audience would readily have understood, symbolises Aeneas's sexual capture of Dido. Meanwhile, skulking in the gloom of a cave, an evil Sorceress and her Enchantresses (an addition of Tate's not found in Virgil) plot to destroy Dido by conjuring up a false vision of Mercury to send Aeneas on his way; this is duly done when the hunting party is scattered by a sudden thunderstorm. Soon afterwards, as the Trojan mariners prepare to set sail, the Sorceress and Enchantresses arrive at the quayside to gloat; Dido upbraids Aeneas for his faithlessness and furiously dismisses him but after he has left she dies, broken-hearted, in Belinda's arms. The dramatic power of the piece is complemented by its musical riches, which are shared among all the individual singers and the various colourful groups: urbane courtiers, gleefully malignant witches, salty mariners portrayed by the chorus. Dido & Aeneas is not only one of the most perfect operas ever written but also an ideal opera for television. The extreme dramatic compression of its plot, which is one of the few grounds on which it is open to criticism, is even an advantage in film terms. Cinema and television audiences are extremely familiar with fast cutting, rapid plot development and the emotional twists and turns of much contemporary drama. A classical tragedy compressed into just under one hour is thus not as implausible as it might at first appear. The location, Hampton Court House, is an empty mid-eighteenth century mansion with its own, slightly decayed, formal gardens and grounds. Ancient Carthage on the coast of North Africa, the setting for the story, was a trading city and a melting pot of nations. Niek Kortekaas, the designer, decided to create a rich yet primitive world, lit by fire (for which there are many references both literal and metaphorical in the text) in which Dido's court draws together elements of many cultures and traditions fusing them into a society dominated by ritual and pageantry The challenge of working on film was a new one for most of the cast and it allowed a great subtlety in the vocal performances since the artists did not have to worry about projecting their performances into an auditorium. Magnetic performers like Maria Ewing were able to relish intimate effects which would not have registered in an opera house. Equally the tight focus of film work with its close-ups and reaction shots called for a style of acting quite different from that employed in a theatre and one which the cast embraced with great enthusiasm. I hope that this film captures both the personal intimacy and the public tragedy which lie at the heart of Purcell's great masterpiece. Peter Maniura
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