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Past Production Reviews

24
Madama Butterfly, Puccini
D: Anthony MinghellaCarolyn Choa
C: Pier Giorgio Morandi
Metropolitan Opera 2019-20 Review: Madama Butterfly

In the role of Butterfly, Hui He made a splendid entrance with Act one’s “ancora un passo,” flanked by her proceeding relatives and their eye-catching, traditional costumes. The soprano’s youthful tones carried wonderfully through the excited, legato phrases which blossomed into a soaring B-flat conclusion. Her infatuation lent itself to her flirtatious lines with Pinkerton, as she revealed her conversion to Christianity and willingness to leave her family, framing these as loving sacrifices. The character’s volatile emotions were expertly captured by Hui He throughout her time onstage, with her sensitivity to the words of others able to drive extended passages of suspicious or romantic fervor. This was powerfully heard in her Act two aria “Un bel di vedremo,” where her delicate passion quickly swept her up into a sonorous reverie, finishing as she demurred and closed the screen door as if to give herself a reprieve from the emotional excess. After the truth of Pinkerton’s return is made clear to her in Act three, Hui He’s utterly crushed lines were highly gripping as she readied for her suicide; her final aria “Tu? Tu? Piccolo iddio” was a thing of ruinous beauty as her grieving farewell to her child swelled to tremendous vocal heights.

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15 October 2019operawire.comLogan Martell
Madama Butterfly, Puccini
D: Anthony MinghellaGlen Sheppard
C: Martyn BrabbinsMartin Fitzpatrick
Pulling the heart strings: Madam Butterfly returns to ENO

The prospect of Natalya Romaniw making her role debut as Cio-Cio-san at English National Opera has given the latest revival of Anthony Minghella’s 2005 production of Madam Butterfly an added flutter. The Welsh soprano has been building an impressive career in bringing opera’s tragic women to life in a startlingly vivid way; the uniquely awful story of the heart-broken Japanese girl who commits ritual suicide – albeit inauthentically – was always likely to be movingly depicted in Romaniw’s hands and indeed this was an absolute triumph.

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28 February 2020bachtrack.comDominic Lowe
PROUD TO SUPPORT UKRAINIANS FIND OUT HOW WE'RE HELPING Opera review: Madam Butterfly at the English National Opera

This is the third or fourth time I have seen Anthony Minghella's stunningly gorgeous production of Puccini's Madam Butterfly at the London Coliseum and in many ways it is the best. Revival director Glen Sheppard has made some delightful tweaks that make Minghella's vision even more effective and the title role is sung by Welsh soprano Natalya Romaniw in gloriously impressive style.

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06 April 2020www.express.co.ukWilliam Hartson
Příhody lišky Bystroušky, Janáček
D: Barrie Kosky
C: Mirga Gražinytė-TylaRobert Jindra
GENUG LAMETTA

Was Regisseur Barrie Kosky macht, ist meistens klug und immer sinnlich. Wenn er in München zu Gast ist, sind die Erwartungen hoch: Schließlich sind ihm an der Bayerischen Staatsoper schon mehrere Inszenierungen gelungen, zuletzt ein starker "Rosenkavalier". Nun hat er die Tierfabel "Das schlaue Füchslein" von Leoš Janáček in Szene gesetzt – für Kosky "ein Spiegel unserer Welt in 100 Minuten".

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31 January 2022www.br-klassik.deBernhard Neuhoff
A Midsummer Night's Dream, Britten
D: Robert CarsenEmmanuelle Bastet
C: Alexander Soddy
Theseus in A Midsummer Night's Dream by Britten

​The other Harewood Artists were ... and Andri Björn Róbertsson singing Theseus. All clearly have great careers ahead and gave wholehearted performances.

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David Buchler - OperaSpy.com
Theseus in A Midsummer Night's Dream by Britten

Andri Björn Róbertsson, Emma Carrington, Simon Butteriss, Timothy Robinson and Jonathan Lemalu who may have smaller roles, but add much character and wonderful singing and acting in the final scenes.

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Mary Grace Nguyen - trendfem.com
Tannhäuser, Wagner, Richard
D: Tim Albery
C: Sebastian WeigleAlexander Soddy
Astonishing Performance from Sophie Koch in Covent Garden’s Tannhäuser

Sophie Koch was an astonishing Venus, making her Royal Opera role debut triumphantly. Rich and refulgent of tone, her voice was fully open; this, coupled with her sheer stage presence made her hypnotic. Perhaps Peter Seiffert was not quite her equal, and the opening scenes revealed a trait that was disconcertingly present throughout the evening: a sort of zooming in and out of focus for his voice and, indeed, his rapport with the role itself. Initially, he sounded disconnected and strained; then for a while all would be fine, as if everything was congruent once more, before strain once more crept in. He is an experienced Tannhäuser, for sure (San Francisco, Berlin State, Deutsche Oper and Zurich are amongst the opera houses that have featured him in this role), but this was not his night; the beam was not consistently on full, shall we say. Far more consistent was the clear star of the evening, Christian Gerhaher in the role of Wolfram. He brought a Lieder singer’s art to Wagner’s long lines, triumphantly: here was a strong interpretation moulded into human shape by infinite gradations of tone and flexibilities of phrasing. Lyrical and beautiful, his “O du, mein lieber Anendstern” brought the hushed intimacy of a fine liederabend at the Wigmore Hall to the far more spacious Covent Garden – yet the sound projected over the vast space perfectly. The role furnished Gerhaher’s Covent Garden debut in 2010. Emma Bell’s Elisabeth, another singer making a role debut, was magnificent. Set amongst ruins, “Dich teure Halle” needed all the magic she could inject, and her gleaming voice brought it through. Here was an intensely human Elisabeth, and we the audience felt her hopes and fears with her in the song contest.other small roles were well taken, including Michael Kraus’s Biterolf and Stephen Milling’s confident Hermann. Yet it is difficult to ignore the fact that the imperfect masterpiece that is Tannhäuser still makes its blazing mark. If Haenchen’s tempi alternated between injecting intensity and just staying the right side of feeling rushed, he remained within boundaries; and Gerhaher’s Wolfram made the evening worthwhile.

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29 April 2016seenandheard-international.comColin Clarke
Madama Butterfly, Puccini
D: Anthony MinghellaCarolyn Choa
C: Karel Mark Chichon
Review: ‘Madama Butterfly’ Showcases Ana María Martínez

Ana María Martínez artful restraint was matched by those around her, including the conductor Karel Mark Chichon, who made his company debut with a performance that kept the drama flowing inexorably forward.

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21 February 2016www.nytimes.comZachary Woolfe
Elektra, Strauss
D: Robert Carsen
C: Marc Albrecht
Opera Online

«Le baryton australien Derek Welton offre ses superbes graves à Oreste».

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28 January 2020www.opera-online.comEmmanuel Andrieu
Opera Wire

‘Orest … was sung by the Australian bass-baritone Derek Welton, whose attractive dark timbre fulfilled this heroic and lyrical music … Welton sang with extreme beauty and style, creating a noble character.’

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22 January 2020operawire.comMauricio Villa
Iphigénie en Tauride, Gluck
D: Andreas Homoki
C: Gianluca CapuanoCarrie-Ann Matheson
FIFTY SHADES OF BLACK: IPHIGÉNIE IN ZÜRICH

Frédéric Antoun overlaadt ons daarentegen met tenorale finesse. De Canadees belichaamt de jonge held Pylade zowel scenisch als vocaal volledig geloofwaardig.

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18 February 2020www.operamagazine.nlAlessandro Anghinoni