Monday, October 21, 2019

The Barber of Seville at the Lyric Opera


Rossini’s The Barber of Seville certainly is a popular opera.  Since Lyric Opera of Chicago’s 1954 inception, the comedy has been performed in 14 seasons, more often than such favorites as Rigoletto, Carmen, Lucia, and Aida.  The story revolves around the matchmaking machinations of a fellow (Figaro) who has a day job as a barber, as he tries to link up his rich patron, a count, with his young inamorata Rosina, who is the ward of an elderly doctor who also has designs on her.  

The opera is an enjoyable comedy, easy to understand, and enduringly popular as a respite from the tragic, and often excessively melodramatic, staples of the repertory.  It’s a visual delight and the audience was certainly entertained.  Musically though the opera does not have the memorable, emotive arias, duets, and ensembles of dramatic opera, but it has plenty of melodic scenes with appealing harmonies.  The cast was terrific, and thankfully, the Lyric played it straight with the production, without any dysfunctional, annoying modern reinterpretations.

Some of my earliest exposure to opera and classical music came from Looney Tunes cartoons, and in my memory I can see and hear the parody of the Figaro, Figaro, Figaro riff that, as fact would have it, is sung in the opera by Figaro himself.  Sitting there taking in The Barber, I was distracted in my mind’s eye by images of Bugs Bunny singing the piece on stage, outwitting Elmer Fudd while the annoyed audience throws produce at him.

R Balsamo

No comments:

Post a Comment