Fidelio to the rescue
The ultimate rescue operation
Beethoven’s only opera Fidelio is considered the most famous example of the rescue opera. While the term was coined much later, the genre describes operas of the late 18th and early 19th century with lofty humanistic ideals revolving around the heroic rescue of a protagonist from mortal danger. In other words, it describes the plot of Fidelio itself.
Now, over 200 years after the premiere of its final version in Vienna, the opera once again lives up to its redeeming reputation. After over half a year of closed doors, Garsington Opera’s return to live performances with Fidelio was an inspired choice. Practically speaking, it salvaged its 2020 festival. Its symbolic impact, however, is much deeper.
With its life-affirming message of courage in the face of menace, the opera could not be timelier. At Garsington, the application of Covid-induced restrictions took on a poetry of its own. The stage director Peter Mumford reworked a minimalist concert staging first performed at the Paris Philharmonie in 2016. Video footage conjuring up a prison setting and recalling Piranesi or Goya are projected in black and white at the back of the stage. The images turn crimson as soon as Pizarro (Andrew Foster-WIlliams) threatens violence.
Like a silent movie
Mumford’s decision to omit spoken dialogue turns out to be unexpectedly felicitous. With the need to reduce performance time and resolve the challenges brought about by the lack of costumes and set, the dialogue is replaced with narrative titles as if in a silent movie. The device is as straightforward as it is effective, allowing the plot to advance smoothly and focus on the music. ‘It is famously challenging for a director to incorporate this spoken text without punctuating the flow of the piece,’ remarks Mumford in his director’s notes. ‘In other words, the drama in Fidelio is often expressed through the music rather than in the action.’
The music, performed by a reduced orchestra of 13 musicians under the baton of Garsington Opera’s artistic director Douglas Boyd, is indeed splendid. ‘Far from missing the lushness of a full string sound, we could hear every nuance of Beethoven’s ingenuity in constructing melodies, harmonies and rhythmic device. Each time a single note caused a particularly felicitous change in harmony, that note was clearly signposted to us, without orchestral clutter to hide it – a true revelation of the music.’ (David Karlin, Bachtrack)
A sterling cast