Opera review: Engaging ‘Rigoletto’ another jewel in crown of Lyric Opera of the North
These elements combine to give audiences an evening of soaring operatic and orchestral music and scintillating drama in the Lyric Opera of the North production of Giuseppi Verdi’s “Rigoletto,” with stage direction by Dorothy Danner.
Part villain and part victim, Rigoletto is one of the most complex characters in operatic literature. John Pierce powerfully evokes the character’s shades and nuances dramatically while plumbing the musical depths of one of the greatest baritone roles in the Italian repertory.
Unfortunately, opening night, Pierce suffered an injury just before intermission. The announcer relayed this information at the beginning of the second half saying, however, that Pierce had decided to soldier on, despite his injury.
John Cudia, the only actor to have played both Jean Valjean in “Les Misérables” and the Phantom in “The Phantom of the Opera” on Broadway, is the amoral Duke of Mantua, at turns charming and despicable.
As the Duke’s fated love interest and Rigoletto’s daughter Gilda, soprano Sarah Lawrence is in elegant control of her voice. In the rise and fall of her arias and the duets with Pierce, she effortlessly portrays the delirious highs of Gilda’s love at first sight and the lows of her devastation at being betrayed.
Jeffrey Madison (Monterone) has the dramatic and vocal gravitas to cast the echoing curse (“La maledizione!”) that sets the wheels of the complex plot in motion. Playing the assassin, Sparafucile, Andrew Gangestad has a shiver-creating bass voice that helps him create the nastiest of villains.
As the “gentleman of the court,” the men’s chorus creates some thrilling moments of their own with songs featuring powerful unison vocals and intricate harmonies.
Ann Gumpper’s set design hits all the right “notes,” from the splendor of the Duke’s elegant palace to the squalor of Sparafucile’s ramshackle inn.
Gumpper also shows her sly, satirical side with two painted “tapestries” evoking a certain, blond-haired political figure surrounded by sycophants, also featuring the recognizable form of a currently significant Russian leader whispering in his ear.
Ora Jewell-Busche’s elegant costume designs are another character unto themselves, featuring a panoply of rich colors and fabrics.
While not a light and fluffy, summer’s eve diversion, “Rigoletto” is a visceral and engaging evening, again establishing LOON as one of the gems of the Northland’s cultural landscape.