The Marriage of Figaro
The Marriage of Figaro
Royal College of Music

The Marriage of Figaro

Mozart
This performance is no longer viewable as video-on-demand for rights reasons but other material about the production is still available.

When a personal valet hears of the Count’s designs on his fiancé, he resolves to beat his master at his own game. Unfortunately, he has already signed a contract agreeing to marry a spinster, to whom he owes some money.

Mozart’s rip-roaring comedy is a marvel of musical theatre and a must-see show. Full of twists and turns, it is treated with the youthful vigour it deserves in this Royal College of Music production directed by alumnus Sir Thomas Allen.

Cast

Count Almaviva
Harry Thatcher
Countess Rosina Almaviva
Josephine Goddard
Susanna
Julieth Lozano
Figaro
Adam Maxey
Cherubino
Lauren Joyanne Morris
Marcellina
Katy Thomson
Bartolo
Timothy Edlin
Basilio
Joel Williams
Don Curzio
Samuel Jenkins
Barbarina
Poppy Shotts
Antonio
Conall O’Neill
Housemaid 1 / Chorus
Camilla Harris
Housemaid 2 / Chorus
Jessica Cale
Wet Nurse
Annabel Kennedy
Head Housekeeper
Rebecca Leggett
Kitchen Maids
Alice Ruxandra Bell, Olivia Turner
Laundry Maid
Samantha Gaspe
Dairy Maid
Rebekah Jones
Gardeners
Dafydd Allen, Peter Edge, Conall O’Neill and Humphrey Thompson
Footmen
Peter Dunn and Matthew Keighley
Head Footman
Xavier Hetherington
Stable Boys
Michael Bell and Adam West
...
Music
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Conductor
Michael Rosewell
Director
Sir Thomas Allen
Sets
Lottie Higlett
Lighting
Rory Beaton
Text
Lorenzo da Ponte
...

Video

Trailer

INTERVIEW | Sir Thomas Allen THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO - Royal College of Music

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Teaser

TEASER | THE MARRIAGE OF FIGARO Mozart - Royal College of Music

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Extract

Voi, che sapete che cosa è amor

Cherubino (Lauren Joyanne Morris) has written a song for the Countess (Josephine Goddard) but was too shy to sing it. Susanna (Julieth Lozano) has convinced him to give it a go and accompanies him on the guitar. In his song, the inexperienced boy says he is experiencing unusual feelings of desire, pleasure and suffering, asks the ladies if this is what it feels like to be in love.

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Extract

Voi signor, che giusto siete

Susanna (Julieth Lozano) and the Countess (Josephine Goddard) seem to have convinced the Count (Harry Thatcher) that Figaro (Adam Maxey) was the author of an anonymous letter falsely implying that the Countess has a lover. But just as Figaro and Susanna try to sneak out, Marcellina (Katy Thomson), Bartolo (Timothy Edlin) and Basilio (Joel Williams) burst into the room. They have a lawsuit demanding that Figaro honour his agreement to marry Marcellina since he cannot repay the debt he owes her. With this latest development, the Count triumphantly calls off Figaro and Susanna’s wedding until he has fully investigated the matter.

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Behind the scenes

Sir Thomas Allen

Mozart’s rip-roaring comedy is a marvel of musical theatre and a must-see show. Full of twists and turns, it is treated with the youthful vigour it deserves in this Royal College of Music production directed by alumnus Sir Thomas Allen.

Sir Thomas Allen is an established star of the great opera houses of the world and has sung over 50 roles at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden.

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The story

Act I

It is the day of Figaro’s marriage to Susanna, maid to the Countess. Figaro, valet to the Count, is assessing the bedroom offered to him by his employer; it conveniently adjoins both the Count’s and the Countess’s apartments. Susanna points out that the room will also be ‘convenient’ when the Count chooses to reinstate the ‘Droit de Seigneur’, a feudal practice in which a local Count can ‘deflower the bride’; a practice that he has recently abolished. Figaro determines to outwit his master.

But Figaro owes money to Marcellina, and has promised to marry her if he does not manage to repay her. He has also raised the ire of Dr. Bartolo, the Countess’s former guardian, for his role in helping bring about the Count’s marriage to the Countess. To complicate matters further, the young page Cherubino wants Susanna to intercede on his behalf with the Count, who has dismissed him from the castle after catching him alone with Antonio’s daughter, Barbarina.

Suddenly the Count shows up, causing disarray. Cherubino hides and hears the Count’s overtures to Susanna. The Count in turn hides, and overhears Basilio, the music master, making insinuations about Cherubino and the Countess. The Count emerges, discovers the unfortunate page, and sends him to rejoin his regiment.

Act II

A weeping Countess laments the loss of the Count’s love. Figaro reveals his plan to outwit the Count: he has sent him an anonymous letter implying that the Countess has a lover. Susanna points out that Marcellina can still invoke the debt and stop the wedding, and a second plan is hatched. Susanna will agree to meet the Count in the garden, but Cherubino will go disguised in her place. Figaro instructs the women to dress Cherubino appropriately.

The page flirts with the ladies by singing his latest composition. When he is half undressed, the Count arrives. Having received Figaro’s letter, he is in a jealous rage. Cherubino, hidden in the closet, knocks over a chair. The Countess, in a panic, pretends that the noise is Susanna, but refuses to unlock the door; meanwhile, Susanna rescues Cherubino, who escapes out of the window. Susanna locks herself in the closet.

The Countess attempts to explain to her husband the presence of Cherubino in her closet. She is as surprised as the Count when it is Susanna who emerges. The two women pretend that the whole episode was a trick to provoke the Count into better treatment of his wife. They confess that the letter was written by Figaro, who then joins them, unaware of the women’s revelations to the Count. When Bartolo, Basilio and Marcellina arrive with a lawsuit to force Figaro’s marriage to Marcellina, the Count is triumphant.

Act III

The Countess and Susanna open the third act with a plan to disrupt the Count’s amorous intentions. Susanna will agree to meet the Count that evening in the garden, but the Countess will go in her place, disguised as her maid.

On the advice of his legal consultant, Don Curzio, the Count insists that Figaro pay Marcellina at once or marry her. Figaro is saved by the timely revelation that he is the long-lost son of Marcellina and Bartolo; everyone but the Count and Don Curzio embraces their new relations.

Finally the wedding celebrations of Figaro and Susanna begin. Cherubino is unmasked among the bridesmaids, but Barbarina shames the Count into allowing him to stay at the castle. Susanna passes the Count the letter dictated by the Countess, confirming her evening rendezvous with him under the pine trees.

Act IV

In the garden everybody is waiting:  the Count and Figaro for Susanna; the Countess for the Count; Bartolo and Basilio to witness the revival of the ‘Droit de Seigneur’. Figaro rails against the faithlessness of Susanna, while she looks forward to the conclusion of her plans.

The appearance of Cherubino is potentially disastrous, but the Count arrives and woos ‘Susanna’, in fact his wife. The jealous Figaro is then confronted by Susanna, disguised as the Countess, but he recognises his bride and they are reconciled – witnessed by the Count, who believes he sees his wife in the arms of his valet. He denounces her; the real Countess unmasks herself and forgives her husband. The day ends in celebration.

Insights

Love does conquer

Sir Thomas Allen, famous baritone and director of The Marriage of Figaro, marvels at the richness of the Mozart’s opera.

Amidst the luxuries of Catherine the Great’s Pavlovsk Palace, a beautiful French clock sits atop a marble mantelpiece. The device is the work of inventor Pierre-Augustin Caron de Beaumarchais, and is testament sufficient to a man’s worth and a life well spent. But Beaumarchais was also a playwright, and the man who gave the world… Figaro.

Figaro brilliantly illustrates the depth of life. As the play unfolds, layer after layer is stripped away to reveal the multi-faceted state of a disintegrating society.

Grateful as we undoubtedly are for such a work, this lucky world was further treated when, almost 250 years ago, Beaumarchais’ stage comedy was immortalised in a masterpiece of musical creation. The Marriage of Figaro is the product of a miraculous collaboration between Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Lorenzo Da Ponte, one a precocious composer, the other an adventurer in literature.

The opera premiered in Vienna on 1st May 1786. Imagine the atmosphere of the theatre of the day: candles and lamps, a smoky space and then - through the haze - the first scurrying notes of that brilliant overture.

What followed in both play and opera was a story for which the word ‘zeitgeist’ might well have been invented. Lorenzo Da Ponte had taken Beaumarchais’ lead and tapped into the grumbling discontent that was then just emerging, but which would lead inexorably to revolution and chaos.

All that, and comedy too.

Figaro points out the inequalities of its society in a way that is as relevant now as it was then. It deals with the big issues whilst at the same time allowing us to be witness to the finest details of human relations.

There are other details, left unwritten and unsaid, which we must tease out for ourselves in the white, blank spaces between lines. They are there, just as they are in all the greatest works… seek and ye shall find.

Finally, Figaro shows us that love does conquer, though more successfully for some than for others.

I return regularly to renew my acquaintance with Figaro, only to realise with each visit, that I’m learning the work afresh.

Sir Thomas Allen is an established star of the great opera houses of the world and has sung over 50 roles at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden.

Born in County Durham, he won a place at the Royal College of Music, where he performed the baritone lead in the RCM Opera School production of Arthur Benjamin's Prima Donna. His career began with Welsh National Opera and on his debut he was described as ‘surely the best British lyric baritone singing in opera since the war’.

In the 1989 New Year Honours he was made a Commander of the British Empire, in the 1999 Queen’s Birthday Honours he was made a Knight Bachelor, and in 2013 he received the Queen’s Medal for Music. He is also Chancellor of Durham University. But among his proudest achievements, Sir Thomas can count having a Channel Tunnel locomotive named after him.