sun 01/12/2024

Albert Herring, English Touring Opera | reviews, news & interviews

Albert Herring, English Touring Opera

Albert Herring, English Touring Opera

Ensemble cast and neat production help Britten’s society comedy shine

Mark Wilde's Albert: a picture of bumbling nervousnessRichard Hubert Smith

Albert Herring probably doesn’t make the top five most performed of Britten’s operas, yet is easily the best known work in English Touring Opera’s brave Autumn season – the other two are Viktor Ullmann’s The Emperor of Atlantis and Peter Maxwell Davies’ The Lighthouse.

Britten’s "country comedy" is light-hearted but it displays similar preoccupations to Peter Grimes and Billy Budd – insularity, groupthink, innocence and a hero who doesn’t fit in. Overall, ETO gave a compelling production with very effective direction from Christopher Rolls. The characterisation in the piece is fairly two-dimensional – we are dealing with types rather than fully-fledged individuals – but Rolls gets the best out of his cast, with plenty of nifty comedic touches, and the Suffolk village’s suffocating smallness is right there.

The band was flawless, and Rosewell kept things tight and light

Albert himself (Mark Wilde) is a picture of bumbling nervousness, if perhaps lacking some of the wide-eyed wholesomeness which really clinches the role. Charles Rice as Sid, the rakish butcher, is spot on and a great match for Martha Jones’ Nancy – the chemistry is convincing and the voices well matched. Jennifer Rhys-Davies makes a very imposing Lady Billows, if a little underpowered on the first night. The rest of smaller roles are also well cast and enthusiastically performed: a particular highlight is the effervescent Miss Wordsworth (Anna-Clare Monk) taking choir practice. A lack of surtitles, however, presents a bit of a challenge not always taken up: especially in ensemble numbers some of the comedy dissipates through half-heard lines.

They say that when lighting is good one shouldn’t notice it, but in this black box theatre with no proscenium arch, in a single-set production, Guy Hoare deserves special mention for conjuring up a very distinct atmosphere and sense of space for each act. Neil Irish’s neat set of a skeleton of a house cleverly allows action both indoors and out without sightline problems, though perhaps allowed a hint of abstract modernity into this archetypically rustic world.

The 14 young musicians in the pit were from Aurora Orchestra, conducted by ETO’s music director Michael Rosewell. There is a great deal of complexity in the music, plus all manner of special effects, not to mention many exposed passages for instruments more used to courage in numbers (a sprightly double bass solo comes to mind). The band was flawless, and Rosewell kept things tight and light, extracting every ounce of wit from a score which may not be Britten’s best, but still has plenty to enjoy.

The score may not be Britten’s best, but it still has plenty to enjoy

rating

Editor Rating: 
4
Average: 4 (1 vote)

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Comments

Largely I would agree with the review by Kimon Daltas; I would very much support the comment that absence of surtitles was a big negative: usually I find surtitles in English rather annoying and distracting to the eye, but on this occasion they would have been a big benefit for 3 reasons: the number of ensemble items, the not-always-perfect diction of some of the singers and the unfriendly Linbury acoustic. My other major criticism (not touched on in the review) is that Albert Herring is supposed to be a comedy; indeed the director in his notes states it is funny. This production was not in the slightest amusing - surely the director's fault - also the decision to give Albert a nervous tic was surely badly mis-judged: he appeared to be a more than a little simple at times, indeed several bananas short of a bunch, a source of sympathy not humour.

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