Lively, entertaining reviews of, and essays on, old and newer films and everything relating to them, written by professional author William Schoell.

Thursday, June 8, 2023

AMICA

Camoine and Amica
AMICA. Composed by Pietro Mascagni. Conductor: Manlio Benzi. Director: Alessio Pizzech. Singers: Anna Malavasi; David Sotgui; Pierluigi Dilengiti; Marcello Rosiello; Francesca De Giorgi. 2008. 

Performed at Mascagni's birthplace, Livorno Italy, this production, while hardly of Met quality, is admirable. Amica is a young woman who has been raised by her uncle, Camoine, who insists that she marry Giorgio, who adores her but whom she doesn't love. Instead she loves his brother, Rinaldo, whom her uncle banished some time before. Amica runs off into the mountains with Rinaldo after he returns, followed by Giorgio, who has no idea who her lover is, just as Rinaldo doesn't know that she was supposed to marry Giorgio. When the two men meet up in the high hills, they are each astonished to learn the truth. Rinaldo realizes that his running off with Amica will utterly destroy his brother, whom he has cared for since childhood, but Amica simply can't accept his decision for the two to part forever, leading to tragedy.

Mascagni responded to this story with music of great emotional power, melodiousness, and symphonic beauty. Some have noted that the music of the climax is so dramatic that it's as if the world had ended in a cataclysm, but this is exactly what has happened in the minds of the three lead characters and Mascagni expresses their torment in striking musical terms. With a clearly limited budget, the production is still effective, and the singers, while not necessarily world-class, deliver generally good vocal and dramatic performances. 

Verdict: Women just can't get a break! Another verismo masterpiece from Mascagni. ***1/2.   

2 comments:

angelman66 said...

Looks beautiful. Need to brush up on my opera!
-C

William said...

This is not very well-known like, say, La boheme, but worthwhile.