Essence And Vacancy; Carsen’s Minimalist Orfeo ed Euridice Returns To COC

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Iestyn Davies as Orfeo within the Canadian Opera Firm’s manufacturing of Orfeo ed Euridice, 2025 (Picture: © Michael Cooper)

Canadian Opera Firm/Théâtre des Champs-Elysées, Fondazione Teatro dell’Opera di Roma, Opéra Royal Château de Versailles Spectacles, and Lyric Opera of Chicago — Gluck: Orfeo ed Euridice. Bernard Labadie, Conductor; Robert Carsen, Authentic Director & Lighting Designer; Christophe Gayral, Revival Director, with Iestyn Davies (Orfeo); Anna-Sophie Neher (Euridice); Catherine St-Arnaud (Amore). October 9, 2025, 4 Seasons Centre for the Arts. Continues till October 25, 2025; tickets right here

A minimalist staging for Gluck’s stripped-down opera is nearly too apparent a alternative. With solely three principal roles, this primary reform opera already makes a manifesto of changing the ornate with the important — each musically and dramatically.

Canadian Robert Carsen’s tried-and-tested manufacturing, first mounted in Chicago in 2006, goes additional in its abstraction, stripping down each the legendary setting and, maybe extra frustratingly, most of its physicality, particularly dance.

Iestyn Davies as Orfeo and Anna-Sophie Neher as Euridice with chorus members in the Canadian Opera Company’s production of Orfeo ed Euridice, 2025 (Photo: © Michael Cooper)
Iestyn Davies as Orfeo and Anna-Sophie Neher as Euridice with refrain members within the Canadian Opera Firm’s manufacturing of Orfeo ed Euridice, 2025 (Picture: © Michael Cooper)

The Manufacturing

Carsen’s idea typically coheres properly. The visible world unfolds in restrained monochromes — shades of gray for the realm of the residing, black with glints of orange for Hades, and a darkish, melancholy blue for Elysium. The dim lighting permits for a putting play of shadows, notably efficient within the portrayal of the refrain, with silhouettes of mourners within the opening scene, and later the Blessed Spirits frozen in sculptural poses behind Orfeo’s surprise.

Costumes are fashionable, but timeless: males in easy fits, girls in sombre village attire, some with scarves, harking back to Zorba the Greek — besides that these girls are much more restrained.

Uncooked feelings are left to the leads. Carsen’s Orfeo is not any legendary musician however an Everyman mourning the lack of his spouse. As such, the main focus shifts from the facility of music to the facility of affection — a alternative that goes some solution to justifying the opera’s quite banal completely satisfied ending.

In Orfeo’s encounter with the Furies, it’s not music however ardour that clears his path. Accordingly, he wields a flaming bowl quite than a lyre, and this literal hearth of affection renders the offstage harp considerably redundant. The scene is successfully nightmarish, the refrain’s livid “No!”s ringing out with visceral drive.

The transition to Elysium, although clean, feels distinctly unheavenly, because the Furies jitter from their cocoons to turn into the Blessed Spirits. A few of Carsen’s visually putting positioning of the refrain sadly serves to fragment their sound; within the opening scenes particularly, they appear under-powered, regardless of Bernard Labadie’s delicate and classy conducting and the Orchestra’s discretion.

Catherine St-Arnaud as Amore and Iestyn Davies as Orfeo in the Canadian Opera Company’s production of Orfeo ed Euridice, 2025 (Photo: © Michael Cooper)
Catherine St-Arnaud as Amore and Iestyn Davies as Orfeo within the Canadian Opera Firm’s manufacturing of Orfeo ed Euridice, 2025 (Picture: © Michael Cooper)

Performances

The clean stage locations the onus on emotional reality, which British countertenor Iestyn Davies as Orfeo delivers with arresting depth. His rounded tone conveys each despair and tenderness, each phrase charged with humanity. His “Che farò senza Euridice?” is a masterclass in emotional gradation, starting from numb disbelief by means of pleading anguish to hole resignation.

As Euridice, Anna-Sophie Neher gives darkish, resonant tone and sincerity of presence, at occasions recalling the grave dignity of Irene Papas (actress in Zorba). She does her finest to make sense of Euridice’s outbursts throughout her rescue scene, lending them real ache quite than petulance.

Amore stays a weak hyperlink. For all her vocal agility, Catherine St-Arnaud’s mild soprano lacks weight and penetration. Carsen’s concept — that she represents Orfeo’s unconscious — by no means fairly registers, and the gender shift, whereby she is first dressed as Orfeo, later as Euridice, feels extra arbitrary than revelatory.

Nor does the ultimate giddy tableau wholly persuade: Gluck himself appears tied once more to conference, and Carsen — resolutely against the inclusion of dance — doesn’t resolve the inherited downside. One nearly needs, at that ultimate refrain, for a cathartic Zorba-style tableau to interrupt the spell of tasteful restraint.

This system lists 4 actors and two dancers, however other than a ultimate, quite symbolic lifting of the lovers, their contribution stays elusive. That absence, nevertheless, could possibly be thought-about apt for a manufacturing that so rigorously pares again all the things to its essence — generally, maybe, an excessive amount of so.

Iestyn Davies as Orfeo and Anna-Sophie Neher as Euridice with chorus members in the Canadian Opera Company’s production of Orfeo ed Euridice, 2025 (Photo: © Michael Cooper)
Iestyn Davies as Orfeo and Anna-Sophie Neher as Euridice with refrain members within the Canadian Opera Firm’s manufacturing of Orfeo ed Euridice, 2025 (Picture: © Michael Cooper)

Closing Ideas

Finally, Carsen’s Orfeo ed Euridice exemplifies the virtues of universality and practicality, a manufacturing refined sufficient to journey wherever (because it has) and stay timeless.

But, amidst its measured self-discipline I discovered myself craving for extra risk-taking and magic, for a reckless leap of creativeness that will one way or the other pierce its polished floor. The austerity that fifty years in the past might have felt like radical renewal has now turn into a behavior.

Maybe the time has come to maneuver past minimalism for its personal sake.

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