Sondra Radvanovsky as Elisabetta in Roberto Devereux at San Francisco Opera
Cory Weaver/San Francisco Opera
Cory Weaver/San Francisco Opera
![]() Russell Thomas in the title role of San Francisco Opera's Roberto Devereux Cory Weaver/San Francisco Opera |
![]() Jamie Barton's Sarah Cory Weaver/San Francisco Opera |
Radvanovsky was in excellent company. In the title role, tenor Russell Thomas made an indelible impression. His sturdy physique and clear, unforced tenor yielded an ardent Act I duet with Sarah, and he sang with elegant line in his Tower of London aria, “Come uno spirito angelico.” As Sarah, Jamie Barton deployed her velvety, richly colored mezzo with beauty and urgency to limn the character’s desire and anguish. Andrew Manea’s dark-hued baritone registered with potency as the Duke of Nottingham. The Lawless production, first seen at Canadian Opera Company in 2014, features scenic designs by the late Benoît Dugardyn that place the action in a unit set modeled on Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre. During the overture, the staging offers a kind of whirlwind backstory: vitrines displayed the figures of young Elizabeth, flanked by Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, and Elizabeth sent Essex into battle amid maps and cardboard ships. The director’s scheme included a claustrophobic chamber for Sarah and Nottingham, and a metallic enclosure for the Tower scene. Lawless also proved effective in evoking the public nature of the opera’s events; Ian Robertson’s chorus sang with gusto throughout, serving as observers of the regime while courtiers Cecil (Amitai Pati) and Raleigh (Christian Pursell), smirked and skulked and assumed watchful positions.
Frizza conducted an ideally paced performance, driving the action and illuminating the shifting allegiances, emotions, and sheer brilliance of Donizetti’s score in each new episode. —Georgia Rowe

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