Home & + | Search
Featured Categories: Special Focus | Performance Reviews | Previews | DanceSpots | Arts and Education | Press Releases
Join ExploreDance.com's email list | Mission Statement | Copyright notice | The Store | Calendar | User survey | Advertise
Click here to take the ExploreDance.com user survey.
Your anonymous feedback will help us continue to bring you coverage of more dance.
SPOTLIGHT:
PERFORMANCE REVIEWS
ExploreDance.com (Magazine)
Web
Other Search Options
Rita Kohn
Opera
Ballet
Musical Arts Center - Indiana University
United States
Indiana
Bloomington, IN

IU Opera & Ballet Theater's Xerxes delights

by Rita Kohn
February 2, 2013
Musical Arts Center - Indiana University
101 North Jordan Ave
Bloomington, IN 47406
(812) 855-7433
This review was originally published in NUVO Newsweekly, Indianapolis, IN.

Rita Kohn is a member of the Board of the Dance Critics Association.
With his opera Xerxes George Frideric Handel was leaps ahead of his time yet a few skips behind ours.

When the opera opened in London in 1738 the atypical music and libretto were coolly received. The work, set in Persia around 486 B.C., languished until 1924 after which multiple productions have since appeared. Surely none as sprightly as IU Opera & Ballet Theater's current staging at the Musical Arts Center.

Stage director Tom Diamond has added a capriciously balletic Amore a.k.a. Cupid to guide us through the twists and turns of two brothers loving the same woman and two sisters loving the same man.

Amore's presence is a brilliant stroke that fittingly interlaces with the absurdities of events, frailties of logic and depths and breadths of love. While based on two known episodes in the life of King Xerxes, the rest of the events are purely fictional. But no matter, it's a universal story involving love and power, fickleness and miscommunications, luck and foolishness.

When Romilda mocks Xerxes for his poetic musings about the plane tree [akin to our Sycamores], she sets into motion events that threaten not only her happiness and her life but that of her lover and a host of others.

How it all unravels is what delights, abetted by fine singing by seven leading characters, equally excellent playing by an on-stage orchestra conducted by Gary Thor Wedow, an amazing set by Robert Perdziola with lighting by Patrick Mero and zestful choreography by Jacques Cesbron (danced and mimed expertly by a Ballet Theater soloist).
Photo courtesy of IU Opera Theater

Photo courtesy of IU Opera Theater


Photo courtesy of IU Opera Theater

Photo courtesy of IU Opera Theater


Photo courtesy of IU Opera Theater

Photo courtesy of IU Opera Theater


Photo courtesy of IU Opera Theater

Photo courtesy of IU Opera Theater


Photo courtesy of IU Opera Theater

Photo courtesy of IU Opera Theater

Search for articles by
Performance Reviews, Places to Dance, Fashion, Photography, Auditions, Politics, Health