HANSEL AND GRETEL
Orchestra of the Music Makers
Esplanade Concert Hall
Saturday (17 June 2017 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 19 June 2017 with the title "Enchanting opera for the young".
It
was Saturday afternoon, and many children and their parents packed Esplanade
Concert Hall to attend an opera. Hansel And Gretel by German Romantic
composer Engelbert Humperdinck (1854-1921, not the pop-star) is a 2-hour long
musical drama in the grand tradition of Wagner, which could have proven a long
stretch. Furthermore, the Brothers Grimm classic involved bratty kids, parental
ineptitude, paedophilia, cannibalism and witch-burning, not exactly children's
fare.
Innocence
and incredulity is the stuff of fairy tales, so they say. This semi-staged
production directed by Edith Podesta accompanied by the Orchestra of the Music
Makers led with much care to musical detail by Chan Tze Law worked a charm
because it was rich in one vital element - enchantment.
Despite
the many noisy children, the narrative itself was gripping enough to keep one's
attention through its entire course. The opera was sung entirely in English,
with helpful surtitles provided. Even if one already knew the story and its
eventual outcome, much of the fun was in following the action, which had more
than a fair share of interesting nuances. The scene when Hansel realised he and
his sister were lost in the forest was genuinely harrowing. This was only
soothed by the Angels' Prayer which provided reassuring safety and a
quantum of solace.
The
cast of international opera singers was also excellent. Australian
mezzo-soprano Caitlin Hulcup (Hansel) and German soprano Felicitas Fuchs
(Gretel) displayed excellent chemistry as the playful sibs, contrasted by their
hapless parents, a neurotic and depressive mother (Australian mezzo-soprano Fiona
Campbell) and a jolly-while-inebriated father (Australian baritone Warwick
Fyfe).
The
small roles of the Sleep Fairy and Dew Fairy were undertaken by very promising
local singers, Evangeline Ng and Rachel Lim (below) respectively. Also impressive was
the 100-strong Volare Treble Voices (directed by Darius Lim), which had added
elements of movement and lights that provided an extra dimension of fantasy.
The
young orchestra, honed by conductor Chan over the years on a steady diet of
Mahler symphonies, Wagner bleeding chunks and John Williams movie scores, took
to the music naturally. At no time did the orchestral forces overwhelm the
singers.
Overall,
this was a splendid production that ran for just two shows. That was, in a way,
a pity because a lot more young people could have been introduced to the
magical world of grand opera. Humperdinck's Hansel And Gretel is, after
all, several steps away from the “real world” murder, incest and mayhem of Richard
Wagner operas.
This concert was a co-production by the Orchestra of the Music Makers and Esplanade Theatres on the Bay.
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