Don Giovanni review – Mozart's dark vision delivers subterranean thrills

Hackney Empire, London
Under Lloyd Wood’s guiding hand, English Touring Opera go underground to create the work’s best UK staging for some time

Lloyd Wood’s English Touring Opera production of Don Giovanni relocates Mozart’s tragicomedy to 1900s Vienna and sets it in the system of underground tunnels that served as makeshift housing for the city’s disenfranchised proletariat. It’s a striking concept that reminds us that the opera is as much about class as it is about sex.

George von Bergen’s sensualist Don descends to this underworld from the Klimtian city above in search of conquests, dragging his fellow aristocrats with him. Elvira (Ania Jeruc) sets out in pursuit, ostensibly to rescue Lucy Hall’s Zerlina from his clutches, though in reality she of course wants the Don back. Anna (Susanna Fairbairn, replacing the indisposed Gillian Ramm) and Ottavio (Robyn Lyn Evans) are out of their comfort zone here as they build a memorial near the spot where her father met his end.

‘Beautifully acted’ … Lucy Hall, Robyn Lyn Evans, Camilla Roberts and Ania Jeruc as Donna Elvira in Don Giovanni.
‘Beautifully acted’ … Lucy Hall, Robyn Lyn Evans, Camilla Roberts and Ania Jeruc as Donna Elvira in Don Giovanni. Photograph: Richard Hubert Smith

Wood trusts Mozart’s ambiguities, though, and his interpretation has none of the arty glosses that have muddied many recent stagings. Von Bergen and Lyn Evans are both handsome, both bearded, so that Anna’s narrative of catastrophically mistaken identities for once rings true. Matthew Stiff’s dirty-minded Leporello carries not only the infamous catalogue but also endless changes of his master’s clothes in his knapsack.

It’s beautifully acted and for the most part finely sung. Von Bergen is utterly charismatic, though conductor Michael Rosewell, swift and urgent in his approach, pushes him hard in the champagne aria. Stiff is excellent. Jeruc sounds good, but we could do with more words. Fairbairn is really commanding, though Lyn Evans can occasionally be effortful. The original Prague version is used, albeit with a few cuts. Even so, it’s a fine achievement, and the best UK staging of Don Giovanni for some time.

Watch a trailer for ETO’s Don Giovanni

Contributor

Tim Ashley

The GuardianTramp

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