OPERA
COMIQUE AT THE HOTEL
New Opera Singapore
The
Chamber @ The Arts House
Tuesday (15 April 2014 )
This review was published in The Straits Times on 17 April 2014 with the title "Suite voices and hilarious comedy from the young".
New
Opera Singapore, the young opera company founded by Korean soprano Jeong Ae
Ree, may be seen as Singapore ’s foremost academy for budding opera
singers. Its annual major productions have been critically received, while its
lighter Opera Comique series continues to tickle and tease. Opera Comique At The Hotel, the fourth
instalment to date, was yet another laugh-a-minute mix and match of operatic
highlights and farcical comedy.
While
previous runs were likened to the long-enduring British Carry On series, this one was more a cross between Fawlty Towers and Love Boat. Singapore ’s Hotel Amour is a Jalan Besar-like
family-run establishment where an irascible Mr Chow (played by tenor Shaun Lee)
tries to keep his three love-sick daughters in check while aiming to accommodate
his guests.
Goh
Ming Siu’s scenario stringing 15 arias and duets together within a 90-minute
frame worked because the audience is already used to the MediaCorp local brand
of humour and Robert Jenkin’s direction which included the house lights going
off whenever hanky panky is being suggested. It was left to the eight young
singers to deliver the vocal goodies on a plate.
As
with previous Opera Comiques, the girls mostly outsang the boys. When two of
your daughters are named Lakme and Mallika (above), the result could only be Delibes’s Flower Duet, beautifully blended by
Moira Loh and Rebecca Li respectively. The third daughter Natalia had a bit
part, with Ashley Chua comfortably handling Donne
veghe from Pergolesi’s La Serva
Padrona.
Diva
of past productions Teng Xiang Ting (above) was underused as forlorn hotel guest Dora,
and one should be content with enjoying just a few short minutes of her
Puccini, Donde lieta usci (La Boheme) and Ch’il bel sogno di Doretta
(La Rondine), however lovely. It was
left for Li’s Mallika (below), a Cinderella character, to steal the show with arias
from Donizetti’s Don Pasquale and
Johann Strauss’s Die Fledermaus,
displaying an enviable prowess in both bel
canto and coloratura singing.
Tenors
Jonathan Khoo and Shaun Lee (above) sounded overstretched in Mozart and Donizetti arias
respectively, although the latter should be commended for a credible La donna e mobile from Verdi’s Rigoletto. Baritone Lim Jingjie’s small
frame seemed at odds with his Don
Giovanni Serenade by Mozart, but
beside Loh in the duet La ci darem la mano (below), a nice balance was struck.
This
leaves angst-ridden tenor Joseph Yap How Joo (above), easily the best male voice on
show. His two passionately lugubrious songs, Tosti’s L’Ultima Canzone and Cilea’s Il
Lamento di Federico (L’Arlesiana),
the latter accompanying laughable failed attempts at suicide, were
heart-wrenching to say the least.
Pianist
Pauline Lee proved a sensitive partner, and was even obliged to play Chinese
hotel lounge music as a prelude to the serious stuff. All eight singers were
united at the production’s close with a rousing Soave sia il vento from Mozart’s Cosi Fan Tutte. New Opera Singapore’s production of Die Fledermaus in late July should be
worth waiting for.
All photos by the kind permission of New Opera Singapore.
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