7 November 2008

The Turn of the Screw

(Eastman Opera Theatre, 7 November 2008)

Remarkably for an opera, the singers take the trouble to act---and they do so well. Furthermore, it appears that as much effort has been put into directing the actors as in conducting the orchestra and rehearsing the arias. The singers stay in character throughout the performance and between the scenes. The orchestra and the actors are co-ordinated impeccably. The leading lady (Meghan Attridge, who plays the governance) is beautiful and is of the same age as her character, which, again, is doubly unusual for an opera.

Acting in this opera comes closest to a musical piece. The acting is intense and concrete, and, yet, it invites the observer to infuse it with a meaning of his choice. The plot is bursting with developments and at the same time is hollow and begs to be filled by the viewer's imagination.

The actors' task is made easier by the subject matter of the performance. Sexual tension is easy to identify with for a viewer (and the actor); so, any half-hearted hint at it will fire the viewer's imagination, and acting imperfections may go unnoticed. If there were any acting imperfections, they did go unnoticed, indeed. One exception, perhaps, is the narration from the protagonist's point of view at the beginning of the opera. The narration is done with an accent---New Jersey TOEFL---markedly different from the protagonist's accent in the remainder of the play.

There is a sparkle of madness in each character. This is the kind of madness that stems from hunger rather than satiation. Most instances of madness, perhaps, stem from hunger. Thus--- more precisely---the characters' madness stems from their intellectual poverty, their plainness.