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    Singing outshines staging in Met's "Grimes"

    Tue Mar 18, 2008 2:25am EDT

    Peter Grimes

    Entertainment  |  Arts

    By Frank Scheck

    NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - Far more satisfying to hear than watch, the Metropolitan Opera's new production of Benjamin Britten's modern classic "Peter Grimes" demonstrates that director John Doyle's minimalist style is ill-suited for the massive Met stage.

    Making his debut at the august opera house, the British director, who has garnered acclaim on these shores for his bare-bones productions of such musicals as "Sweeney Todd" and "Company," delivers a static, monotonous staging that fails to do justice to this highly atmospheric work.

    "Grimes," which premiered in 1945, depicts the travails of its titular character (Anthony Dean Griffey), a hotheaded fisherman who runs into conflict with the citizens of his remote 19th-century seaside town when it becomes clear that he has an unfortunate habit of losing his young male apprentices. Despite the loving attentions of Ellen (Patricia Racette), a widowed schoolteacher who sees the humanity underneath his violent physical presence, Peter Grimes emerges as a tragically troubled figure who falls victim to the censorious tendencies of his community.

    The chief miscalculation in Doyle's staging is the set, which essentially consists of a gray-brown wooden wall several stories high featuring scattered doors and windows in which the supporting characters periodically appear. Although the effect is visually arresting in the opening scene depicting the inquest into the death of Peter's apprentice -- the presiding judge and witnesses peer down as if judging from a heavenly perch -- it soon proves detrimental, resembling nothing so much as a drab version of the wall on the old television show "Laugh-In."

    Fortunately, the innate power of the work and the glorious singing provide ample compensations. The massive Griffey has a beautiful tenor voice that well contrasts with Peter's blustery demeanor, allowing us to see the tragic vulnerability of the character, and Racette's gorgeous vocalizing makes Ellen's ultimate despair deeply moving. Also excellent are baritone Anthony Michaels-Moore as the initially sympathetic skipper and John Del Carlo as the town's mayor.

    The evening's most powerful moments are the soaring choral passages, superbly delivered by the large ensemble that often is grouped at the edge of the stage to deliver their haunting condemnations.

    Cast:

    Peter Grimes: Anthony Dean Griffey

    Ellen Orford: Patricia Racette

    Bastrode: Anthony Michaels-Moore

    Swallow: John Del Carlo

    Mrs. Sedley: Felicity Palmer

    Auntie: Jill Grove

    Bob Boles: Greg Fedderly

    Ned Keene: Teddy Tahu Rhodes

    Boy: Logan William Erickson

    Music: Benjamin Britten; Libretto: Montagu Slater; Director: John Doyle; Conductor: Donald Runnicles; Set designer: Scott Pask; Costume designer: Ann Hould-Ward; Lighting designer: Peter Mumford.

    Reuters/Hollywood Reporter



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