Monday, October 23, 2017

Dropping in on Bang the Drum Slowly

This 1973 film tells the bittersweet story of a star major league baseball pitcher who protects and supports his less-talented and simple-minded friend and teammate who just learns he is dying from Hodgkin’s disease.  The title comes from a phrase in the song Streets of Laredo, a story about a dying young cowboy, and the haunting tune is a backdrop in the film.  Michael Moriarty and Robert De Niro, unknowns at the time, give strong, understated performances, and Vincent Gardenia almost steals the show as the comically-frustrated manager who tries to find out the secret he knows the two men are hiding.  I enjoyed watching the film once again after so many years, getting absorbed in its slow rhythms, soft humor, and poignant moments.  In the movie world, this is one of those little gems that get lost in the glare from the big chunks of fool’s gold.


R Balsamo

Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Rigoletto at the Lyric Opera

Rigoletto was Verdi’s big comeback opera after the waning success of his earlier works, and it ushered in an especially productive time in his life.  Il Trovatore, La Traviata, and I Vespri Siciliani followed directly in this celebrated “middle period,” and constitute a remarkable quartet.  Rigoletto premiered March, 1851, at La Fenice in Venice when Verdi was 38 years old.

The story is set perhaps a few hundred years ago in northern Italy, centering on a widower, embittered by his hunchback deformity and empowered by his sharp, barbed tongue, who labors in degrading work as a court jester to a licentious Duke.  While he gets back at the courtiers who mock him by encouraging the Duke’s abuse of their wives and daughters, he fails in his efforts to protect his own young, beautiful, and naïve daughter from those very same predatory men. 

Parent-child relationships are not commonly the main focus in Italian opera, but they often are with Verdi.  His only two children died in infancy, and he lost his first wife soon after that.  He almost did not recover from those blows, but later he explored parents and children in his work.  In Rigoletto, a father-daughter relationship is central to the tragedy, and the complex father-son relationship in Sicilian Vespers and the very complex mother-son relationship in Trovatore also come quickly to mind. 

One theme of the opera is hubris, or what goes around comes around.  When confronted by an aristocrat who objects to the Duke’s violation of his daughter, Rigoletto mocks him and encourages the Duke to execute him.  The jester is shaken to the bone, however, when that aggrieved father places a curse on him.  The opera's original title, in fact, was La Maledizione – The Curse.  In Verdi’s time, a curse in such circumstances was for some a thing to be frightened of, and it comes to fruition when Rigoletto’s daughter Gilda herself is seduced and then violated by his employer the Duke.  Then the overprotected Gilda, filled with foolish, reckless, and thoughtless passion, sacrifices her life to save the Duke, whom she has already learned to be unfaithful to her, from an assassin hired by her father. 

Deception, and its tragic consequences, is another element of the story.  The jester hides his occupation from his daughter, while she hides her budding romance with the mysterious stranger who turns out to be the Duke.  The Duke deceives Gilda by pretending to be an impoverished student, and is himself deceived by the assassin’s accomplice and sister, who lures him into the trap.  The assassin attempts to deceive Rigoletto when he delivers the wrong body.    

The emotional range of Rigoletto is a key part of the opera’s impact.  His most touching music fills the tender moments between father and daughter, contrasting sharply with his harshness when singing to his courtier enemies and his terror when begging for the safe return of his abducted daughter.

The music of the characters is more intertwined than in many of Verdi’s past operas, with fewer set pieces easily segregated from the surrounding action and other characters.  Per Wikipedia: “Musicologist Julian Budden regards the opera as ‘revolutionary’: .... ‘the barriers between formal melody and recitative are down as never before.  In the whole opera, there is only one conventional double aria [...and there are...] no concerted act finales.’  Verdi used that same word – ‘revolutionary’ – in a letter to [librettist] Piave, [and in another letter Verdi wrote] ‘I conceived Rigoletto almost without arias, without finales but only an unending string of duets.’”

Of course, having said all that, one must acknowledge that one of the most recognizable arias in all of opera is the Duke’s La donna e mobile (in the singular, but better translated as “women are fickle”).  In fact, as the story goes, Verdi recognized that he tune was so catchy he feared that the opera’s cast would be humming it around Venice and reveal it before the premier, so he kept a tight lid on it until the first show.  The Duke has, in fact, not one but three arias, one other of which, Questa o quella, is also commonly heard.  But the real special music in Rigoletto is that between father and daughter.  

The set was in the budget-friendly, semi-abstract, minimalist style so common these days, but it had great visual impact and served to reinforce the theme of varying perspectives.  In this case, though, as is often the case, the single main set did not provide enough visual clue as to exactly where the action was taking place; was that scene in a palace, or on a street, or in an apartment?  Those in the audience familiar with the plot knew what was going on, but if prior study is a prerequisite for understanding and thus enjoyment, opera may struggle even more to expand its audience.        

The set notwithstanding, the Lyric hit a home run with this latest staging.  The singing was wonderful.  Baritone Quinn Kelsey in the title role and tenor Matthew Polenzani as the rapacious Duke, both alums of the Lyric’s training center, were very strong in their roles.  Latvian mezzo-soprano Zanda Svede was also quite notable as the assassin’s accomplice Maddalena, who joins the main three in the opera’s celebrated quartet, beautifully sung in this production.

And then there’s one Rosa Feola, a young Italian soprano in her Lyric debut as Rigoletto’s daughter Gilda.  Not since I saw future Hall-of-Famer Greg Maddux pitch for the Cubs as an unknown rookie over three decades ago have I had such a strong “star is born” feeling.  I expect we’ll hear a great deal about this remarkable young performer in the years to come.


R Balsamo