February 7, 2004
View from the Bridge
By George Walker,
WFIUThe IU Opera Theatre is putting on the
first collegiate production of William Bolcom’s “A View from the
Bridge.” The opera is based on Arthur Miller’s tragedy of
twisted love and violated loyalty.
Eddie Carbone,
potently played by Austin Kness, is man among men of the
Italian-American dockworkers in Brooklyn. He and his wife
Beatrice, the warmly sympathetic Tamara Wapinsky, take two of
her illegal immigrant cousins into their home. David Sadlier
played the flamboyant, blond Rodolfo with zest, while Robert
Samels was the dark serious brother, Marco. Rodolfo is in
America for romance. Marco seeks only to work to send money home
to his hungry wife and children in their poverty stricken
village.
Things go well
until Rodolpho and Eddie’s niece Catherine, Alison Bates, fall
in love. Bates handles her dual role as her uncles little girl
and herself as she becomes a mature woman adroitly. (I was a
little puzzled that in a drama where much is made of Rodolfo’s
non-Italian blond hair, Catherine is blond as well.) Eddie is
jealous and in his frustrated rage informs on the brothers to
the immigration authorities. The brothers are arrested and Marco
curses Eddie. In prison Marco sings a passionate aria of his
devastation that now he will be sent back. The brothers are let
out on bail and ironically, Rodolfo will in fact marry Catherine
and be allowed to stay. In a passionate scene, Marco demands
that Eddie apologize. They struggle, Eddie pulls a knife, but
the powerful Marco forces Eddie to stab himself to death.
William Bolcom has added a chorus of the community to “A View
from the Bridge.” The chorus shares the narration with the
lawyer Alfieri, realized with stiff eloquence by Robert Brandt.
Alan Dunar and Josh Whitener were featured as friends of
Eddie’s. In a recurring bit of comedy, though he varies it
nicely, Whitener’s only solo line is “Yah!” Vincent Liotta’s
staging individualized each of the thirty chorus members as well
as deftly handling the more intimate scenes with the principals.
Composer
William Bolcom has said that Miller’s play was already halfway
to being an opera and the potent production certainly bears that
out. In the opera, the play’s subtext—the feelings, the passions
that underlie the words—are dramatically realized in the music.
Throughout “a View from the Bridge” guest conductor William
Lumpkin kept pace and balances well in hand. The orchestra for
the opera is very large. English Horn, bass clarinet, contra
bassoon and bass trombone all add to the potency of the opera’s
dark sounds. Despite the size of the ensemble, Bolcom’s
orchestration leaves plenty of spaces for the singers. This plus
especially good diction from the whole cast almost made the
super titles unnecessary.
The IU Opera
Theatre’s production of “A View from the Bridge” plays this
Friday and Saturday at eight with preshow informances at seven.
You can see this and other WFIU theatre and film reviews on our
web site at WFIU dot Indiana dot edu. In addition there’s an
interview with “A View from the Bridge”’s composer William
Bolcom.
At the opera for you, I’m George Walker. |