‘Rigoletto’ reworked
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Young Chang
The chorus opens Act One doing the twist, street scenes reek with
Hitchcock overtones, and Act Three takes place partly in a red-light
district, muggy and foggy like something out of Tennessee Williams’ “Cat
on a Hot Tin Roof.”
The Duke of Mantua, a character originally set in the 15th century,
climbs up drain pipes instead of archaic towers.
And Rigoletto, the tragically cursed hunchback with a bitter tongue,
is a paid entertainer instead of a court jester.
But even the conservatives in Australia, where Elijah Moshinsky’s
modern staging of Giuseppe Verdi’s “Rigoletto” was first presented,
enjoyed riding this theatrical time warp.
The opera’s success there signaled the obvious, said actor and tenor
Andrew Richards: “A timeless tale is just that.”
Set in the late 1950s and ‘60s, Moshinsky’s “Rigoletto” will be staged
at the Orange County Performing Arts Center on Tuesday through Nov. 11 as
part of Opera Pacific’s contribution to the Eclectic Orange Festival.
First performed in 1851 in Venice, the Verdi opera tells the story of
a father’s love for his daughter and the extent to which he’ll go to
protect her. Rigoletto is the hunchbacked father who has a rare soft spot
for his daughter. The duke is a lascivious womanizer who falls in love
with Rigoletto’s daughter, and the daughter -- Gilda -- later makes the
ultimate sacrifice for a man she knows she shouldn’t love but does
anyway.
The show is pillared with universal, timeless themes and universal,
timeless characters, cast members say.
Julie Edwardson, a stage director who makes her Opera Pacific debut
with “Rigoletto,” says the modern setting is barely even noticeable
against the timelessness of the story.
Inspired by films of the late ‘50s and ‘60s, particularly by the work
of Italian director Federico Fellini, Edwardson describes “Rigoletto” as
having a sort of cinematic realism. A revolving set capable of showing
multiple scenes at once -- on multiple tiers at that -- provides a
cinematic show. Curtains open in sleek, black halves resembling the
irises of an opening camera. A street scene shows the back of a ‘50s car
in the corner. Rigoletto’s daughter wears little-girl dresses and bobby
socks.
“It almost has a period look about it,” Edwardson said.
As for the characters, Rigoletto is deformed as he has traditionally
been, but Moshinsky also gave him a bad leg.
“It gives him a much more physically handicapped look,” Edwardson
said. “Gives him an insect look, like a bitter, twisted, paranoid
person.”
The duke, portrayed by Richards, is almost easier to understand in the
context of the ‘50s.
“In the middle of the sexual revolution. . . . there is no subtlety to
his depravity,” said the Staten Island actor. “He’s out for his own
pleasure.”
Richards added that the greatest challenge in portraying the duke was
making the immoral character likable. More than just someone to dismiss
as bad.
“To bring across that he’s an incredibly charming person, you have to
throw yourself into your character’s shortcomings.”
Richards admits there’s a little bit of the duke in him, in probably
every man. And as a father, he relates with Rigoletto’s protective
nature.
“Having two young daughters, I know what that’s like,” Richards said.
FYI
* WHAT: “Rigoletto”
* WHEN: 7:30 p.m. Tuesday through Nov. 10 and 2 p.m. Nov. 11
* WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
* COST: $25-$175
* CALL: (714) 740-7878
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