CurtainUp
CurtainUpTM

The Internet Theater Magazine of Reviews, Features, Annotated Listings
www.curtainup.com


HOME PAGE

SEARCH CurtainUp



On TKTS



LETTERS TO EDITOR



REVIEWS



FEATURES



ADDRESS BOOKS
Broadway
Off-Broadway
DC



NEWS (Etcetera)



BOOKS and CDs



OTHER PLACES
Berkshires
DC (Washington)
London
Los Angeles



QUOTES



FILM



LINKS



MISCELLANEOUS
Free Updates
Masthead
Type too small?
NYC Weather

A CurtainUp BerkshiresBerkshire Review
Cosí fan tutti

The Porches Inn


A caveat for feminists and those who think of opera in terms of dark, tragic plots with at least one person dying. The translation of the title is "All Women Are Like That". The fluffy plot centers on two somewhat ditzy sisters, Fiordiligi and Dorabella, who are engaged to two young officers, Ferrando and Guglielmo. The devoted but somewhat flighty ladies fall prey to a plan by their fiancés' cynical bachelor friend Don Alfonso to prove his theory that all women are fickle and easily persuaded to replace one man with a more available one.

But political correctness or a believable and strong plot isn't what this chamber opera in two acts is about. Its appeal rests with Mozart's incredible combos -- duos, trios, quintets, etc. Who cares if the sisters quite incredibly fail to see through their fiancés' disguises and let Despina, their maid, and Don Alfonso trap them into a flirtation that almost ends in a double marriage (with the wrong fiancés no less)? Despite opera lovers who thought the libretto too inconsequential to deserve Mozart's music and attempts by several writers in the 1800s to retrofit the music with a new libretto (with dire consequences), Così fan tutte has remained one of most beloved operas since its 1790 Vienna debut. It was Jacqueline Kennedy's favorite opera. It is also a favorite with the Berkshire Opera Company which is staging it for the second time in this its seventeenth season -- the last in its rented space before settling into its permanent new home in Great Barrington .

Maestro Joel Revzen couldn't have assembled a better cast to show off the melodic lushness and handle the farcical proceedings with panache and emotional resonance. Several have made strong impressions in previous BOC productions:

Bass baritone John Cheek, who so ably portrayed and sang the part of the secret police agent in The Consul and Lawyer Royall in Summer (see links below), is equally affecting as the trouble-making Don Alfonso. Stephen Powell, last seen as the womanizing central character in Don Giovanni, is now the devoted Guglielmo, his bass tenor powerful as ever. Barbara Shirvis, who in a case of life imitating art, was a visibly pregnant Donna Elvira in Don Giovanni, is once again trim and lovely, and it's a treat to hear her lyrical soprano in such virtuoso arias as "Come scoglio". Another BOC favorite, the vivacious Sari Gruber (The Marriage of Figaro and The Magic Flute), is a delight to watch and listen to, whether in her day job as the wise and wily maid or disguised as a doctor and a notary.

From the first tantalizing trio when Don Alfonso and his friends argue about women's virtue and the wager that drives the farce is tendered and accepted, through the finale that features the entire ensemble, this Così fan tutte is a feast for the ears. Michael Yeargin's single set design is attractive and efficient if not spectacular. This being the company's single fully staged offering of the season -- with an attractively efficient if not spectacular rented set design -- the company's more full-featured future in the refurbished Mahaiwe Theatre (which was built as a vaudeville house and is considered an acoustical gem) looms ever more excitingly on Berkshire opera enthusiasts' horizon.

LINKS
The Consul
Summer
Don Giovanni
The Magic Flute
The Marriage of Figaro

CosÌ fan tutte
Composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
Libretto by Lorenzo da Ponte
Directed by Rhoda Levine
Berkshire Opera Orchestra conducted by Joel Revzen
Cast: Fiordiligi/ Barbara Shirvis, Dorabella/ Jennifer Dudley, Ferrando/ Richard Clement, Guglielmo/ Stephen Powell, Don Alfonso/ John Cheek, Despina/ Sari Gruber
Chamber Maid/ Deborah Morris, Waiter/Kevin Winston
Set Design: Michael Yeargan (sets courtesy of Virginia Opera
Costume Design: Charles Caine (supplied by Malabar Ltd.
Lighting Design: Michael Lincoln
English super titles: Cori Ellison
Running Time: 2 1/2 hours, plus 20 minute intermission
Koussevitsky Arts Center, Berkshire Community College - Pittsfield, MA 413/644-9988
July 14, 19, 21, 26 and 28 at 8 pm;July 16 and 23 at 2 pm -- $60-20

Reviewed by Elyse Sommer based on July 14th performace
2 Berkshire Inns


Berkshire Hikes Book Cover





Berkshire Theater Index and Schedules. . .  Berkshire News Page. . .  Berkshire Review Archive. . .  A-Z Index All CurtainUp Reviews
©Copyright 2001, Elyse Sommer, CurtainUp.
Information from this site may not be reproduced in print or online without specific permission from esommer@curtainup.com