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The Makropulos Affair review fast-flowing and flamboyant – The Guardian

Posted: September 24, 2022 at 2:17 am

Only someone whos lived for centuries could possibly know how to find long-hidden evidence to help settle a protracted legal dispute over an inheritance. In Janeks penultimate opera, the singer Emilia Marty has lived for 337 years, originally named Elina Makropulos and assuming different identities over the many decades, though using the same initials. But tied up in her interest in the case of Gregor v Prus is Martys desperate quest to find again the secret formula for the elixir that granted her immortality. As the young daughter of Hieronymus Makropulos physician to the Holy Roman Emperoror Rudolf II who ordered Makropulos to find a means of extending his life Elina was the hapless guinea pig.

Placing it in the 1920s when the opera was written, and befitting a story whose heroine aspires to being the greatest operatic performer ever, Olivia Fuchs new production for Welsh National Opera has a suitably overblown and flamboyant air. Its also all of a piece with the often tumultuous feel and fast-flowing current of Janeks music, thrillingly delivered here by the orchestra of WNO under its music director, Tom Hanus. Co-editor of the new edition of the score being used, Hanus affinity with Janek was always evident, ravishing details emerging.

In Nicola Turners design, the settings of the three acts the solicitors office, backstage at the theatre where Marty has just sung, her hotel bedroom brought a degree of clarity to the complex narrative, sung in Czech. Ironically, what didnt work was when, between the first two acts and covering the set-change, Mark Le Brocq as himself and as Vitek the clerk addressed the audience in English explaining who was who. It was just naff.

As diva roles go Elisabeth Sderstrm sang in the 1978 WNO production this one demands a commanding presence and soprano ngeles Blancas Guln was certainly that. Amply embracing the vocal challenge, she brought an almost brute physicality to the encounters with the various men whose passions are aroused the young Janek is driven to suicide and her native Spanish flair coloured Martys reunion with her former lover, Baron Hauk (Alan Oke). In the uniformly strong cast, Nicky Spence and David Stout were excellent as the litigants Albert Gregor and Baron Prus.

The essential deeply philosophical question of whether immortality might actually be desirable is core to the closing scene when Martys hitherto cold demeanour begins to thaw, the ageing process now accelerating. In her final exhortation to those around her to celebrate their one existence, Janeks life-affirming purpose is manifest, the music glowing. Significantly, Kristina (Harriet Eyley), the young singer to whom she offers the ancient parchment detailing the elixir, sets it on fire. It is the cue for Marty to finally expire.

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The Makropulos Affair review fast-flowing and flamboyant - The Guardian

Recommendation and review posted by G. Smith