Opera review: âRomeo and Julietâ at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion
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Los Angeles Opera has done it again. Six years ago the company introduced the most promising young tenor in quite some time, Rolando VillazĂłn, and paired him with the exquisite soprano Anna Netrebko as the dazzling new dream couple in a new production of Gounodâs âRomeo and Juliet.â
Sunday afternoon that production was back at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, this time introducing the dashing Vittorio Grigolo, the most promising young tenor since, well, VillazĂłn. His Juliet was the sultry Nino Machaidze, and â voilĂ ! -- a brand new dazzling dream couple for opera.
PHOTOS: L.A. Operaâs âRomeo and Julietâ
And that, Iâm sorry to report, means that, once more, canary fanciers and all fascinated by the future of musical theater are required to put up with Gounodâs dreary antique.
First, the big news about Grigolo. Sunday was his L.A. Opera debut. It was not his first L.A. appearance, however. In 2006 -- the year he released pop single âYou are My Miracleâ with Nicole Scherzinger of the Pussycat Dolls -- he sang at the Miss Universe Evening Gown Competition here. The next year, he recorded a perfectly awful âWest Side Storyâ with Hayley Westenra and Connie Fisher. Sony has lately begun hyping him as a cross between Mario Lanza and Franco Corelli on solo CDs.
But if good taste hasnât been his strongest suit, maybe good sense has been. He made his La Scala debut at 23, and didnât rush off and destroy his voice as so many young tenors have done with early success. He is now 34, although he looks and sounds younger. Heâs been making big impressions of late at the Royal Opera in London and at La Scala. Sunday, he was commanding vocally and theatrically.
Gounodâs âRomeo and Julietâ is about the lovers and not much else. They have five love duets, all of them boilerplate. But there is plenty of opportunity for passion, and Grigolo had a ready supply. He jumped up balconies, leaped around the stage and poured his heart out. The voice is big, not huge, and he is not one to hold back. But PlĂĄcido Domingo was conducting, and nothing got out of hand.
Despite Grigoloâs clear addiction to the limelight, he didnât upstage Machaidze, whose Salzburg Festival Juliette with VillazĂłn in 2008 was her breakthrough (she made her L.A. Opera debut the next year in Donizettiâs âLâElisir dâAmoreâ). She was smoldering Sunday, and Grigolo never seemed to get enough of that either.
The attraction of Gounodâs 1867 opera, which is stuffily conventional although it has a couple of well-liked tunes, must be the evolution of puppy love to worldliness in little more than three hours. The puppy stayed in Grigolo. Machaidze, on the other hand, is more artificial as an ingĂŠnue. She made her âWaltz Song,â the operaâs most famous number, sparkle. But a seductively dark poignancy suited her best. The first time around Ian Judgeâs production, which is played on a skeletal set by John Gunter, seemed overactive in its necessary attempt to juice up Gounod. This time, two attractive singers who couldnât keep their hands off each other made it work.
Gounod dutifully supplied his French public all it enjoyed -- a big ball, a big fight, a bit of religion and adequate time in the tombs. Judgeâs efficiency and tendency to surprise seemed more satisfying this time around, as well.
The opera is French and most effective when sung by the French. The L.A. cast added a sonorous Russian school flavor: Vitalij Kowaljow (the impressive Wotan of the L.A. Opera âRingâ) was a resonant Friar Laurence; Vladimir Chernov, a gracious Capulet; and Alexey Sayapin a hot-headed Tybalt. Museop Kim was a blander Mercutio. The most French sounding singer was mezzo-soprano RenĂŠe Rapier as Stephano, a Montague youth invented for the opera to taunt the Capulets with song. Ronnita Nicole Miller was Julietâs resounding nurse.
Domingoâs conducting was not the last word in French finesse, either but he went beyond dutiful to get some beautiful playing from the orchestra, especially the lower strings. In September, he was accused in the Washington Post of sabotaging singers in a production of âToscaâ he conducted at the Kennedy Center, and a controversy arose after Domingo wrote a letter to the editor taking umbrage at the idea that he would consciously undermine a performance.
Just back from opening an new opera house in Oman, singing in an arena concert in Zagreb and two galas at Covent Garden in London, Domingo may have done little, or had too little rehearsal time, to make Gounodâs score sound better than it is. But Grigolo and Machaidze certainly did, and I donât think that would have been possible without a conductorâs help on some meaningful level.
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-- Mark Swed
âRomeo and Juliet,â Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, 135 N. Grand Ave., Los Angeles. 7:30 p.m. Wed., Sat. and Nov. 17; 2 p.m. Nov. 20 and 26; $20-$270; (213) 972-8001 or www.laopera.com. Running time: 3 hours, 10 minutes.