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Manhattan's DiCapo Opera proves most valuable when airing unjustly neglected works (Barber's Vanessa and Falla's El Amor Brujo graced recent seasons). This season brought a welcome, effective staging of L'Amico Fritz, a charmer long absent from the city. Mascagni's highly melodic, engaging work, from 1891, would seem a natural for regional companies tired of "one more Butterfly"; it's an audience-pleasing romantic comedy with a small cast, haunting tunes and no elaborate scenic demands. Fritz belongs to the large, varied cadre of turn-of-the-century art suffused with the vanishing of rural ways, and the melancholy embedded in its folk-like tunes (in chorus, violin solo and aria) still can bring a lump to the throat. Michael Capasso's direction kept the love story clear and straightforward, and his performers created a believable ensemble onstage. John Farrell provided simple but effective geometric shapes and a small house unit for the opening scene. There was not a cherry
in sight for the famous duet, though Suzel later carried a basket of apples;
Angela Huff's handsome costumes were a plus. As the lifelong (until Act
III!) bachelor Fritz, tenor Ravil Atlas (April 26) displayed a substantial
voice with a Latinate throb that would suit the hero of Puccini's Edgar
(on Dicapo's docket for next year) better than the more lyric portions
of Mascagni's writing here. Idiomatic in basic timbre and diction, Atlas
deployed a patchy technique, with Broadwayish overvibratoed huskiness
and unsupported crooning intruding on more pleasingly formed tone. |
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-DAVID SHENGOLD Opera
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