Sunday 23 March 2014

Australian Opera 2014 Season - Carmen - Opera Review


Milijana Nikolic onstage in Carmen - Australian Opera 2014
Georges Bizet's Carmen is a staple part of any opera company's repertoire and no less so for the Australian Opera. Included in the 2014 season, Carmen brings a story and a music score which has long become far more recognisable and popular than when it first premiered in Paris in March 1875. The opera is in four acts and based on a novella by Prosper Merimee with the libretto written by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halevy. The story plot set in Spain follows the seducing influence of the fiery Gypsy, Carmen, who ensnares a naive solder by the name of Don Jose, causing him to abandon both his childhood sweetheart and his military duties. But Carmen sees greater opportunity and Don Jose loses her romantic attention to the flashy and glamorous toreador, Escamillo. In a fit of jealousy, Don Jose stalks and then kills Carmen and thus compounds the tragedy. As an opera, Carmen, broke new ground with the representations of proletarian life, squalor and lawlessness. The use of a chorus of street urchins and pickpockets adds an unusual element to the mechanism of choruses on stage.

For the Australian production the central role of Carmen herself is sung by Nancy Fabiola Herrera or Milijana Nikolic and for this performance Milijana Nikolic gave a perfect representation of the persuasive charm and influence of Carmen. For those who enjoy opera, Carmen is a required attendance in any yearly season.

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