At the Teatro Regio di Parma, director Valentina Carrasco centres her interpretation of this early, seldomly performed Verdi opera around the horse: “The horror of armed conflict passes through the presence of horses, used by soldiers, petted and cared for, but also killed and disfigured, a symbol of those who pay the price of war without ever having started it or wanting to” (Connessi all’Opera). The cast is excellent, above all Marina Rebeka as Lida with “precise virtuosity” (Connessi all’Opera) and Antonio Poli as Arrigo, who “portrays a sensitive, human hero” with a “robust, full voice” (GB Opera). The young conductor Diego Ceretta at the helm of the Orchestra of the Teatro Communale di Bologna delivers a clear interpretation of the score as he sets a “pressing narrative structure” and highlights “the many timbral and harmonic details” of the music (Teatro). The true star of the production is the Chorus of the Teatro Communale di Bologna, which convinces with “volume, roundness, and beauty of sound” (GBOpera).
Giovanna d’Arco
With more than 50 years of experience as film director, Peter Greenaway (Nightwatching, Eisenstein in Guanajuato) combines the worlds of film and opera with Giovanna d’Arco at the Verdi Festival in Parma. The opera’s libretto is based on Friedrich Schiller’s The Maid of Orleans. It tells the story of the French national hero Jeanne d’Arc. Earthly passion and supernatural purity are rendered vivid in the musical interpretation of the Virtuosi Italiani and the Coro del Teatro Regio di Parma, conducted by Ramón Tebar, and by three exceptional singers, Vittoria Yeo, Luciano Ganci and Vittorio Vitelli, “who have the Verdian idiom in their blood, performing veritable miracles of expressive singing and italianità” (Kieler Nachrichten). Turning the auditorium into the scene, Greenaway includes the unique architecture of the Teatro Farnese, one of Italy’s oldest and most exceptional theatre gems, into his staging. By the help of spectacular video and light installations, he creates a completely new opera experience, using a picture language that reaches from depictions of the Madonna to modern manga girls and the real faces of refugee children.