Britten’s ‘Dream’: moonlit magic at Garsington
Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream is located in a forest, a dark place where anything can happen, and where accepted hierarchies are dissolved. In this Garsington performance of Benjamin Britten’s 1960 operatic adaptation of the play, under the baton of Douglas Boyd, it all started with a very slow air of mystery. Sounds began almost imperceptibly from the orchestra pit, ushering us into a half world of emerging irreality. I attended the second night on the evening of midsummer’s day, which this year coincided with fine weather — and a full moon — so the auspices were good.
The Garsington Opera Youth Company, all clothed in black as woodland spirits, sang splendidly, and with counter-tenor Iestyn Davies and soprano Lucy Crowe as Oberon and Tytania, plus Jerone Marsh-Reid as a highly acrobatic Puck in a bright green suit, this was musically close to perfection. To create a link between the natural and supernatural Britten uses chords that never quite stabilise, forever leaving a sense of impermanence. In the half-light of a midsummer’s evening, reflections of the performers could be seen through the glass sides of the auditorium, a faint reminder that all is not as well-defined as it might be. The images in these can appear as ghostly reflections interposed on the gardens beyond the auditorium.
In the designs by Netia Jones the trunk of a tree grew through the side of a grand piano as if the music had become a permanent feature of the forest, growing there before Shakespeare’s day. Certainly Britten has remained true to the Bard’s intentions, yielding a double dose of English mystery. It was mediated here through a fine cast of Mechanicals: John Savournin as Quince the carpenter, Frazer Scott as Snug the carpenter, Geoffrey Dolton as Starveling the Tailor, James Way as Flute the Bellows-mender in a wonderful red dress as Thisbe, Adam Sullivan as Snout the tinker, and Richard Burkhard brilliant as Bottom the weaver.
As Theseus the Duke of Athens and Hippolyta the Queen of the Amazons, for whom the Mechanicals are to present their play about Pyramus and Thisbe, were Nicholas Crawley and Christine Byrne (replacing Christine Rice, who was ill). In the end, of course, the quartet of lovers, Hermia (Stephanie Wake-Edwards), Helena (Camilla Harris), Lysander (Caspar Singh) and Demetrius (James Geidt) find their rightful partners and Theseus is able to bless the two couples. The enchantment of Midsummer Night has dissolved and the parallel nocturnal world that Britten creates can resolve into harmony with the worlds of the lovers and the play-acting of the Mechanicals.
Britten’s opera is not meant to carry us away emotionally, like Peter Grimes or Billy Budd, but to transport us to a subliminal world of spirits and back again. On a moonlit night at Garsington, it was just the ticket.
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