Let the music lead
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Alex Coolman
John DeMain praised Puccini’s opera “Manon Lescaut” for half an hour
before he got down to mentioning one minor criticism of the work.
“It’s just too hard to sing,” he noted, taking a small sip of coffee.
DeMain, the artistic director for Opera Pacific, was kidding, but only
slightly.
“Manon Lescaut,” coming to the Orange County Performing Arts Center,
really is a difficult work for performers.
The part that Sylvie Valayre sings in the title role is, in DeMain’s
words, “unrelenting.” And many of the lines that tenor Barton Green has
to tackle are high enough and long enough to be a bit of a stretch, as
well.
But DeMain’s affection for the opera, Puccini’s first major success, is
undiminished by the challenges it poses for his performers.
If it’s a rough gem, he said, it’s a gem nonetheless, and it has an
interesting relationship to the more well-known operas -- works like “La
Boheme,” “Tosca,” and “Madama Butterfly” -- that Puccini went on to write
after “Lescaut’s” 1893 debut.
“Every composer has a musical bag of tricks” that recur throughout a body
of work, DeMain said. “This is the opera where he really began to get
that right.”
Take the use of the soft, impressionistic piano chords in the first act
of “Lescaut.” Puccini employs the music to convey the sense of eager
anticipation in the meeting between Manon Lescaut, the heroine, and des
Grieux, her suitor.
But DeMain said Puccini uses almost the same sound in the love duet of
“La Boheme,” a work that was not performed until 1896.
Or consider the use of the major 10th interval. In “Lescaut,” Puccini
introduces the 10th in an incidental manner.
“It’s just used in a way to show some of the whimsy of Manon,” DeMain
Said.
The same interval comes back in a much different way in the marriage
scene in “Madama Butterfly.” In that context, DeMain said, the 10th is
used to convey “a kind of Orientalism.”
The later use of these melodic figures is generally “more refined” than
what happens in “Lescaut,” but it’s in the early work in which Puccini
first shows himself capable of bringing together his formidable
showmanship with a complex musical sensibility.
“This is when the dramatic, emotional writing is coming together,” DeMain
said.
“Lescaut” features an interesting combination of finesse and awkwardness.
When the audience isn’t being wowed by Puccini’s powerful use of
leitmotif, they may find themselves wondering about the odd setting of
the fourth act, which is supposed to take place in “a desert in
Louisiana.”
What desert that might be, Puccini’s notes do not mention.
“There were four librettists working on that piece,” DeMain said. “You
would think that somebody would have known their geography.”
But DeMain said quibbling over minutia will not occupy too much of the
audience’s mental energy.
“The music has to take over. You can’t get your logic buttons
overworking.
“[Verdi’s opera] ‘Il Trovatore’ doesn’t make any sense, either,” he
pointed out.
What Puccini lacks in story line clarity, he tends to make up for in
sheer dramatic force. “Lescaut,” with its tale of turbulent love and
untimely death, is no slouch in this respect.
At times, what DeMain calls the “fabulous death scenes where they say
goodbye for an hour” even come a little close to emotional excess. But
the director said Puccini’s towering peaks and bottomless valleys make
for an entertaining ride.
“I do think the audience’s emotions are manipulated,” DeMain said. “But
that’s why you go.”
WHAT: Puccini’s “Manon Lescaut”
WHERE: The Orange County Performing Art Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
WHEN: Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, Feb. 26, at 7:30 p.m., Sunday, Feb.
27, at 2 p.m.
HOW MUCH: $32 to $107
PHONE: (800) 34-OPERA
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