This film from Glyndebourne in 2008 with Danielle de Niese is my favorite.
Monteverdi’s L’Incoronazione di Poppea comes at the beginning of commercial opera in Venice. If we
have no royalty footing the bill, we must turn to operas which might
interest the masses: namely operas about sex and violence, the same
things that interest us.
The sexual ambiguity of the casting is probably also authentic to the original.
The incredible Alice Coote is Nerone, originally a castrato, putting the role back into the
treble where it belongs. Women definitely appeared on stage in Venice,
and one of them sang Poppea.
Everything is up to date with 2008, including the staging. The prologue
takes place in the audience. The first scene is a bed. Then we have a
few books scattered around the floor for Seneca’s house; then a
bathtub, first for Nero to kill Lucano in, then for Ottavia; then a
scene at the beach created with a large drape and a picnic basket; lots
of black men’s suits; in short, modern minimalism.
Of course the star of the show is actually Emmanuelle Haïm and the
Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment. In the extras it is explained
that the two extant scores for this work consist of the voice parts and a
figured bass. For any modern performance what the orchestra plays is
completely invented in the modern era. The orchestration for this
performance conforms to current standards for original instrument
orchestras. For my ears the recorders and tambourines sound almost
medieval.
The playing is passionate and expressive. We are still in the period of
opera where most of the music is Florentine Camerata recitative. There
are outbursts of incredible coloratura and instrumental interludes for
variety, but the endless recitative can get occasionally a bit tedious.
Try to imagine you’re Italian.
All of Monteverdi is
pre-tonal, but he clearly has a personal style for how the chords
progress from one to the other that is quite beautiful. He is a very
great master.
Yes, there’s plenty of sex, actually surprisingly a lot. Also violence.
If sex and/or violence can be going on while this dialog is being
sung, it pretty much is. Both men and women are in drag. There is talk
about virtue and a character who dies for it. That alone has to be
unique. On top of all of that we have the gorgeous Danielle de Niese.
Danielle and Alice's voices are well paired.
Here is a film of a different version
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