Allison Cook, Kundry, sang with the intensity and expressive varierty demanded by the complexity of the role. With resounding lower register and extremely secure top, when woken in the second act, the fiendishly difficult phrases, as if she were still dreaming, were sublimely executed. After being rejected by Parsifal, she sang the extended 'Grausamer!' passage with great dramatic effect and vocal intensity while trying to seduce Parsifal this time by means of compassion." (Beckmesser , January 2023)
"For her part, Allison Cook completed this great cast with an extremely detailed interpretation in terms of phrasing, making credible with the changes of register and colour, the dual nature of Kundry as both a seductrice and as a repentant. The timbre is beautiful and the voice runs equally well in all registers." (Scherzo , January 2023)
Allison Cook, Kundry, sang with the intensity and expressive varierty demanded by the complexity of the role. With resounding lower register and extremely secure top, when woken in the second act, the fiendishly difficult phrases, as if she were still dreaming, were sublimely executed. After being rejected by Parsifal, she sang the extended 'Grausamer!' passage with great dramatic effect and vocal intensity while trying to seduce Parsifal this time by means of compassion." (Beckmesser , January 2023)
Allison Cook is a perfect Marquise de Merteuil; an intelligent, cynical, sophisticated, androgynous beauty. Cook is a star with scenic charisma and voice control allowing her to withstand the sharp contrasts of the music and capture all the variety of expression in this dynamic role.” ( teatro .it April 2011)
Phenomenal…. It would be impossible to imagine a more beautiful, intense, predatory and tragically glacial Marquise than that created by Allison Cook.” (Il Giorno, April 2011)
“As the Duchess, Allison Cook was nothing less than superb. A compelling presence at all times, she handled the vocal and dramatic demands of the role stylishly and with apparent fearlessness. Again and again I was impressed by the timing of her gestures and utterances, the nuance which she brought to the expression of an elaborately constructed personality. Cook managed to be at once pitiable and commanding as she negotiated a path through her own history, until the last of her delusions was stripped, leaving her with only bitter truths about society and herself.” (paperblog, February 2013)
“Ms. Cook took the remainder of the show onto her shoulders, moving with consummate insight and dignity through one of contemporary opera’s most psychologically nuanced sequences…. [She] rose to the task, her Duchess a dark reflection of Strauss’ Marschallin for an age in which noblesse is no longer obliged.” (Steve Smith, The New York Times, February 2013)
“The two soloists fully assume the requirement of writing...it is first of all the astonishing performance of Allison Cook as the Marquise that will be remembered, passing from one hallucination to another at will, with pyrotechnics as much musical as they were psychic.” (Anaclase, March 2017)
Bien qu’elle n’échappe pas à cette tension, l’écriture vocale ménage un lyrisme dont s’empare l’excellent plateau. La mezzo-soprano Allison Cook, dont on se souvient notamment de la prestation dans Quartett de Francesconi à Milan en 2011, confirme son engagement dans la création lyrique et charge le personnage de Lea de toute l’intensité possible sans jamais basculer dans l’excès.
Mezzo soprano Allison Cook excelled in the demanding role of Lea both in the dramatic aspect as well as in her ease of projection and employing a timbre endowed with an ethereal quality.” (La Platea, February 2019)
In the hands of an excellent soprano like Allison Cook the line was imbued with Straussian roundness." (Criticà de Clasicà January 2022)
Allison Cook spends one and a quarter hours demonstrating all manner of vocal and interpretative layers to portray a gripping and moving character. From delicate internal struggles to dramatic outbursts; from speech to a large aria; the mezzo-soprano shows a wide range of technique and huge potential to keep the audience present at every moment.” (Salzburger Nachrichten, June 2014)
“The considerable task of around 70 minutes completely alone on stage falls to Allison Cook. The way the mezzo-soprano solves this theatrically and vocally is downright phenomenal. She mastered the extreme demands of the difficult vocal part which was predominantly in French, partly in English, with flying colours – be it during the more ordinary writing or the extreme and almost unsingable heights - and the rest of her role was sung with incredibly purity and sophistication.”
"Allison Cook also gives a tour de force performance. It’s not so much that she portrays the Duchess, rather she reincarnates her. First as a playful sex-goddess, then as a fallen angel. With a final number as gripping as the best bel canto aria.” (Koen Van Boxem, Tijd, September 2015)
The interpreters of the original production return and are masterful in their roles, mezzo Allison Cook as he Marquise de Merteul and baritone Robin Adams as the Vicomte de Valmont. Both were amazing, their voices using all possible registers and techniques, from the passionate to the declamatory up to the coloratura..." (Renato Verga, Bachtrack, October 2019)
The interpreters of the original production return and are masterful in their roles, mezzo Allison Cook as the Marquise de Merteuil and baritone Robin Adams as the Vicomte de Valmont. Both were amazing, their voices using all possible registers and techniques, from the passionate to the declamatory up to the coloratura, the male voice often climbing to falsetto when warbling in the role of the Marquise. The two characters must support a deliberately mannered acting ("The brutality of our conversation bores me. We should have our parts played by beasts."), their task is burdensome and demanding, ranging from the blasphemous to the obscene to the ironic, as when the two characters exchange their respective roles ("I think I could get used to being a woman," says Valmont in the part of the Marquise, and she comes out with "I wish I could.”).
Allison Cook gives a totally committed performance in the title-role, keeping her nerve with steely assurance to sing with great skill and security.” (Rupert Christiansen, The Telegraph, September
Where she stood out was with the colour and drama of the voice; imperious and enticing in her dealings with Narraboth, desperate and fiery with Jochanaan, cold and forceful with Herod. Her final scene was compellingly delivered, sung with dramatic intelligence and entranced passion, the severed head carried within a plastic bag as though straight from a butcher’s stall.
Allison Cook made the evening as Venus not only with her solid soprano voice but also with her diverse acting ability."
Allison Cook convinces as Venus with lascivious playfulness and dark coloured highs."
Allison Cook sings a magnetic and tormented Miss Jessel."
Allison Cook's Miss Jessel , a dramatic soprano with a fascinating timbre and precise singing line, probably the character in which vocal quality and stage presence blended best."
Alison Cook as Eddy’s real mum and lover whose aria lamenting the death of her abusive husband was matchless.