Music of the marsh
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Young Chang
Jean-Philippe Rameau’s “Platee” may musically be of the Bach and
Handel school, but it doesn’t have a noble sound, said Philharmonia
Baroque Orchestra conductor Nicholas McGegan.
And the story line? Well, the comic opera’s plot is not the classic
tale of boy meets girl, boy gets girl, boy loses girl. Jupiter woos
Platee -- an ugly swamp thing -- just to make his wife Junon jealous.
When Junon reveals Platee’s ugliness during a mock marriage, everyone
ridicules the vain yet unfortunate creature and Platee drags herself back
to the swamp devastated.
Throw into the marsh designer Isaac Mizrahi’s bejeweled costumes, some
modernized classic dance and a cast of frolicking frogs, snakes and other
bog dwellers, and the result -- which will open the six-week Eclectic
Orange Festival tonight -- is just zany.
“It’s certainly very witty,” McGegan said. “And it’s very funny. I
don’t know that there are any particular challenges that are different
from any other opera, except, of course, all the time I’m laughing very
hard.”
Mark Morris, director of the New York-based Mark Morris Dance Group,
originally staged the rare Rameau piece for London’s Royal Opera of
Covent Garden, which premiered the production at the Edinburgh Festival
in 1997. The current cast includes tenor Philip Salmon, baritone Bernard
Deletre, baritone Marcos Pujol, mezzo-soprano Mary Phillips and soprano
Lisa Saffer.
Assistant director Susan Hadley helped choreograph the show, which
will be staged at the Orange County Performing Arts Center.
“I think the wonderful thing for me, having come out of the field of
dance, is to work with singers and to coach them to move,” she said. “And
probably to move more than they have to in most operas . . . to figure
out ways for singers to animate their bodies.”
The dancing is more contemporary than the baroque style done in the
1745 version staged by Rameau -- as is the haute-couture costuming -- but
Morris’ interpretation is still true to the original vision, McGegan
said.
“There are a lot of animals in the production,” he added. “Dancers
pretending to be animals. What [Morris] has done in a case like that is
he doesn’t say this animal is a turtle. He decides it’s a turtle. The
original still has a turtle, so he hasn’t taken something and just sort
of completely changed everything.”
The same can be said of the score. Not one note has been changed,
McGegan said. Other than the fact that the orchestra won’t play the
overture twice, Rameau’s music stays intact.
McGegan is no newcomer to the piece, as he also conducted during the
Edinburgh premiere four years ago.
“I love doing this piece,” the Berkeley resident said. “And I don’t
get to sit down, but I get the best view from the house.”
FYI
WHAT: “Platee”
WHEN: 8 p.m. today and Saturday. Preview lecture with McGegan will
begin at 7 p.m. each night.
WHERE: Orange County Performing Arts Center, 600 Town Center Drive,
Costa Mesa
COST: $34-$89
CALL: (949) 553-2422
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