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It Takes Two To Sing 'Norma'

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  • It Takes Two To Sing 'Norma'

    IT TAKES TWO TO SING 'NORMA'
    By Mark Stryker
    Free Press Music Critic

    Detroit Free Press
    Oct 12 2005

    One soprano has the voice, the other acting

    All the buzz surrounding Michigan Opera Theatre's production of
    Bellini's bel canto masterpiece "Norma," which opened the company's
    fall season last weekend, centers on Armenian soprano Hasmik Papian
    in the title role. She portrays the larger-than-life druid priestess
    whose affair with the Roman proconsul, a rapscallion as well as the
    sworn enemy of her people, ends badly for all. (Now, really, who saw
    that coming?)

    Bellini's 'Norma' THREE STARS out four stars Michigan Opera Theatre

    7:30 tonight

    8 p.m. Fri.-Sat.

    Detroit Opera House, 1526 Broadway

    313-237-7464,

    www.michiganopera.org

    $28-$113

    Hasmik Papian sings the title role tonight and Sat.; Brenda Harris
    on Fri.

    Papian has been making an international splash in the role, and since
    great Normas appear as often as Halley's Comet, Papian has begun
    to generate enormous and perhaps unreasonable expectations. That's
    the price of admission with Norma, which demands Herculean stamina,
    the agility and support to sing long-breathed melodies and a rush of
    coloratura fireworks, and the acting skills to create a warrior and
    woman of outsize passions and complexities.

    Vocally, Papian delivered the goods Saturday, spinning Bellini's
    glorious melodies into a web of lyricism. Her tone was pure and
    golden. Her alluring high notes floated as if on clouds, shaped by
    diminuendos of exquisite control. Her coloratura was accurate, lovely,
    legato and feminine. She sounded fresh enough at the end to sing the
    opera again.

    Her "Casta Diva," Norma's famous prayer, was to die for, and her
    duets with romantic rival Adalgisa -- sung with grand eloquence by
    mezzo soprano (and Detroiter) Irina Mishura -- were as thrilling as
    anything I've heard in 10 years at the Detroit Opera House. Yet long
    stretches fell curiously flat, and had I not returned Sunday to hear
    American soprano Brenda Harris replace Papian at the matinee, I might
    have chalked it up to the dramatic inertness built into the opera.

    Harris' voice is weightier, her coloratura more earthbound and
    her pitch less secure. She produced some sweet vocal moments but
    no magic. Yet she conveyed the mercurial temperament that Papian,
    for all her vocal splendor, rarely reveals. When Norma shifts into
    Medea-mode and nearly kills the children she has borne with the
    proconsul Pollione, I never believed that Papian might use the dagger;
    but I feared for those kids when Harris stood over them.

    Harris stalks the stage, exploring the political and personal
    dimensions of the tragedy, and she is not afraid to twist her voice
    into expressions of pain, anguish or ambivalence; Papian favors
    minimalist gestures, which is a reasonable choice, but she also seems
    wary of making anything other than a beautiful sound, even when the
    drama calls for it.

    When push comes to shove, "Norma" is an opera in which pure vocalism
    probably trumps all-around stagecraft, but critics are a greedy lot:
    If you could merge Papian and Harris into a single soprano, you'd
    have an unimpeachable Norma.

    Elsewhere, MOT's "Norma" is less complicated. Tenor Julian Gavin
    sang with firm focus and ardor as Pollione on Saturday and looked
    good in tights and a ripped shirt. Dongwon Shins' barking tenor was
    less compelling Sunday. Bass Arutjun Kotchinian is an impressively
    stentorian Oroveso. The chorus sings with distinction.

    Mario Corradi's efficient direction does no harm, and conductor
    Stephen Lord leads an enthusiastic if sometimes untidy orchestra.

    John Pascoe's sets and costumes, created for MOT's 1989 production
    starring an autumnal Joan Sutherland, eschew Stonehenge cliches in
    favor of an early 19th-Century vision of ancient times. The sets are
    disappointingly dingy, but they don't detract from the irresistible
    sport of hearing Papian and Harris try to scale Mt. Everest.
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