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Mixed bag … La Cenerentola – a co-production by Scottish Opera and Opéra National du Rhin.
Mixed bag … La Cenerentola – a co-production by Scottish Opera and Opéra National du Rhin. Photograph: KK Dundas Photograph: KK Dundas
Mixed bag … La Cenerentola – a co-production by Scottish Opera and Opéra National du Rhin. Photograph: KK Dundas Photograph: KK Dundas

La Cenerentola review – decent but unmemorable Cinderella retelling

This article is more than 9 years old
Theatre Royal, Glasgow
Sandrine Anglada’s Rossini revival is neither very funny nor profound, but Victoria Yarovaya’s Cenerentola is terrific

Rossini’s 1817 opera is basically a comedy; there’s an indubitable daftness to the characters, a gleeful frivolity to much of the music. Yet it is also a socially conscious retelling of the Cinderella story. The title character is lifted out of hardship not by any flick of a fairy-godmother’s wand but by her own kindness: the simple humanity of being charitable to a beggar earns her a ticket to the ball.

Any good staging will convey this wholesome moral message with moments of comic gold. Scottish Opera’s new co-production with Strasbourg’s Opéra National du Rhin doesn’t really do either. Directed by Sandrine Anglade, it’s a fairly decent, largely forgettable effort that is neither funny nor profound. Claude Chestier’s visuals are handsome enough but a bit all over the place, with tired tricks (multiple umbrellas) and vacuous gimmicks (all those luminous ruffs).

Musically it’s a mixed bag, too. The overture was a non-starter – no tension in the opening bars – but things picked up. Conductor William Lacey keeps tempos bouncing along and the orchestra generally sounds taut and bright. There isn’t much logic to the casting: the voices are ill-matched in size and style, making for slightly awkward ensemble pieces. John Molloy hasn’t got the right gravitas for Alidoro; Nico Darmanin’s tenor is a little pinched but he scales Don Ramiro’s stratospheric second act with aplomb. Standing in as Don Magnifico, Umberto Chiummo is the classic fool, gangly and hapless rather than anything more malicious or interesting. Best are the three women. Rebecca Bottone and Máire Flavin sing nimbly and have fun as the stepsisters, all swivelling hips and mouths agog. Victoria Yarovaya is terrific as Cenerentola, with a velvet low register and dazzling coloratura to boot. It’s worth sitting through this production for her final scene alone.

Until 25 October (box office: 0844-871 7647), then touring until 22 November. Details: scottishopera.org.uk.

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