Figaro, Figaro, Figaro
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Young Chang
You won’t leave this opera sniffling and sad.
There are jokes and laughter, a likable villain and a happy ending.
Mitchell Krieger, director of operations and artistic advisor for
Opera Pacific, said it wasn’t a hard choice to include “The Barber of
Seville” in the company’s season because it’s “just one of those
perennial favorite operas.”
“It tells a charming story, and it tells it in a way that you can’t
help but liking all the people in the show,” he said.
The opera company wanted a performance space as intimate as the story
being told, Krieger said, which is why the piece is being presented at
the Irvine Barclay Theatre instead of at the Orange County Performing
Arts Center today through May 19.
“It’s a piece about just a few people,” he said of the Gioachino
Rossini opera. “We wanted to put it into a situation where you can just
see these people interact in a way that can be hard to see in a big
theater.”
The story is about a count named Almaviva who is trying to win over a
rich ward named Rosina. His competition is a Dr. Bartolo, Rosina’s
benefactor and a man who will resort to lowly depths to keep the two
apart. Almaviva is helped by Figaro, the barber. Almaviva tries on all
kinds of disguises and identities in his pursuit of Rosina to deceive
Bartolo, and all ends well in the end.
Metropolitan Opera performers John Osborn and Lynette Tapia sing the
role of Count Almaviva and Rosina, respectively. John Packard sings
Figaro, and Andrew Fernando sings Dr. Bartolo.
An interesting aside: Osborn and Tapia, whose characters end up
happily ever after in “Barber,” are married in real life.
Fernando, a resident artist with Opera Pacific, said he hopes to make
Dr. Bartolo his trademark role.
“Dr. Bartolo, as a character in itself, is awesome,” he said. “He’s
very dynamic. He is sort of the villain in the story, but he’s not evil
and he’s a good-hearted man.”
Which can be harder to pull off, Fernando added. Purely evil or purely
good characters are often the easiest to play, but the artist welcomes
the challenge.
“And the aria itself is a very, very challenging aria,” he said. “It’s
a patter aria. It’s 10 million words. But it’s just an awesome, awesome
thing. I’m very excited.”
Rehearsing for “Barber” was filled with laughs, Fernando and Krieger
agreed.
“I would say that the humor is based very much in the
characterizations,” Krieger said. “It’s not slapstick for slapstick’s
sake. . . . It’s all about the people and their lives. We love that
kind.”
FYI
* What: “The Barber of Seville”
* When: Today through May 19. Show times are 7:30 p.m. today,
Wednesday, May 17-18; and 2 p.m. Sunday and May 19
* Where: Irvine Barclay Theatre, 4242 Campus Drive, Irvine
* Cost: $45-$65
* Call: (949) 854-4607
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