Superb voices and music plus creative staging make Rigoletto a must see

 

Igor Golovatenko sings the title role in "Rigoletto," with Mané Galoyan as Gilda, in Lyric Opera's current production of the Verdi classic.

Igor Golovatenko as Rigoletto and Mané Galoyan as his daughter, Gilda, at the Lyric Opera of Chicago. (Photos here by Todd Rosenberg)

 

Four Stars

Even non-regular opera goers would recognize “La donna è mobile.” Among the genre’s most famous arias, it is sung by acclaimed Mexican tenor Javier Camarena making his Lyric Opera debut as the Duke of Manua in Verdi’s Rigoletto. It translates as “Woman is fickle.”

But audiences have to wait for it. The opera has several good arias appreciated by the audience. However, “La donna è mobile” comes in Act III.

Instead of fully turning the lights on and off, director Mary Birnbaum, artistic director of Opera Saratoga and also new to the Lyric, has divided Act II into basically two scenes.

That works beautifully with the dark and tense mood she has created in what is an exceptional Lyric production. The second scene becomes Act III which takes place at a dwelling owned by an assassin.

The aria sums up one of the opera’s two main themes – the duke’s attitude towards women and that vengeance is dangerous.

 

(The Duke’s palace)

They bring down Rigoletto, the Duke’s hunchback jester sung by Russian  baritone Igor Golovatenko who appeared at Lyric as Rodrigue in Don Carlos, and Rigoletto’s daughter, Armenian soprano Mané Galoyan who makes her Lyric debut as Gilda, the lass who falls for the Duke when he comes to her disguised as a penniless student.

Both are outstanding in their vocal and acting interpretations. Plus, Gilda gets her own aria, “Caro nome” in Act I, (“Caro nome che il mio cor” (Sweet name that made my heart) that sets her character in spite of the Duke’s later betrayal of her love.

Originally a Victor Hugo play called Le roi s’amuse (“The King Amuses Himself”) Verdi turned the story into a drama-tragedy that moves back and forth between the Duke’s frivolous loves and lifestyle and Rigoletto’s hatred of that lifestyle and his worries about the previous Duke’s curse. Indeed, one of the early titles to this opera referred to the curse.

Add in Rigoletto’s over-protected, naive daughter and audiences know this can’t end well.

Conducted by Music Director Enrique Mazzola with superb insight and shading, the Lyric Orchestra skillfully brought out Verdi’s perfectly colored contrasts in mood during the story’s fateful progress. Kudos also to the entire company

In addition, the opera’s contrasting atmosphere was enhanced by costume designer Jane Greenwood and set designer Robert Innes Hopkins. 

Details: “Rigoletto” is at the Lyric Opera of Chicago, 20 N. Wacker Dr., Chicago specific times now through Oct. 6, 2024. Language: Sung in Italian with projected English titles. Running Time:2 hours and 35 minutes, including 1 intermission. For tickets and more information visit Lyric Opera.

Jodie Jacobs

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