thu 02/10/2025

Opera Reviews

Die Zauberflöte, Royal Opera review – enjoyable revival of much loved production

Bernard Hughes

This is the sixth revival of David McVicar’s production of Die Zauberflöte at Covent Garden since its debut in 2003. It was heard most recently in 2015, and is modestly described in the Royal Opera’s own publicity as a “classic”.

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La Bohème, Royal Opera review - spectacle and sentiment not yet in focus

David Nice

“I’m not in the mood” – “non sono in vena” – sings aspiring poet Rodolfo as he settles down to write a lead article. Was it me, or had the mood not settled by the premiere of the Royal Opera’s first new production of Puccini's structurally perfect favourite for 43 years? The singing was good to occasionally glorious, Antonio Pappano’s conducting predictably idiomatic and supportive.

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Princess Ida, National Gilbert & Sullivan Opera Company review - sparkling comedy, wobbly sets

Richard Bratby

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: you have to be pretty silly to take Gilbert and Sullivan seriously. But even sillier not to.

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Prom 61 review: Fleming, Royal Stockholm Philharmonic Orchestra, Oramo - heliotropic ecstasies

David Nice

No sunshine without shadows was one possible theme rippling through this diva sandwich of a Prom.

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Edinburgh Festival 2017 review: Verdi's Macbeth - exhilarating and overwhelming

David Kettle

Skeletal horses; piles of newborn babies smothered in a bloody sheet; a whole garden centre of prickly pears. There’s no denying that Italian director Emma Dante’s new production of Verdi’s Macbeth, which Turin’s Teatro Regio brings to the Edinburgh International Festival, is visually dazzling, even at times hallucinatory.

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Prom 31 review: La Damnation de Faust, Gardiner - Berlioz tumbles out in rainbow colours

David Nice

The road to hell is paved with brilliant ideas in Berlioz's idiosyncratic take on the Faust legend.

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Prom 29 review: BBCSO, Bychkov - Musorgsky's Khovanshchina sears in concert

David Nice

"Ura!" as soldiers cry in Russian epic opera's last fling, Prokofiev's War and Peace: supertitles have arrived at the Proms, after much special pleading here and elsewhere.

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La clemenza di Tito, Glyndebourne review - fine musical manoeuvres in the dark

David Nice

So much light in the Glyndebourne production of Brett Dean's Hamlet; so much darkness in Mozart's La clemenza di Tito according to director Claus Guth.

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Le nozze di Figaro, Clonter Opera review - a wedding full of future stars

Robert Beale

Clonter Opera is a finishing school for young opera performers, with its own well appointed theatre and professional administration and artistic direction, based on a farm in Cheshire near Jodrell Bank. It’s seen a succession of promising young post-conservatoire singers come to perform in fully staged productions for many years, and is also (from an audience point of view) the only countryside summer opera venue of any substance in the north of England.

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Prom 9 review: Fidelio, BBCPO, Mena - classy prison drama rarely blazes

David Nice

What a pity Beethoven never composed an appendage to Fidelio called The Sorrows of Young Marzelline. One crucial moment apart, the music he gives to his second soprano in his only opera isn't his best, but Louise Alder so lived the role of the gaoler's daughter in love with a woman disguised as a man that everything else felt rather less intense. It's only fair to say that there were...

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