‘Every Carnival Has Its End’ | Nathan Shields

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“With blondes, he praises their gentleness; with brunettes, their faithfulness…. The large ones he calls majestic, the little ones charming.” So Don Giovanni’s manservant, Leporello, tells the jilted Donna Elvira. Then the knife twist: “But his greatest passion is the young virgin.” 

The change neatly captures the ambivalence and amorality of Mozart’s seducer. Don Giovanni, it suggests, has a manner of being all issues to all folks. All through the opera, he’s repeatedly confused with another person. When he and Leporello swap outfits, not even their lovers see by the disguise; when he tries to rape the noblewoman Donna Anna, she errors him for her fiancé. The viewers is hardly clearer about his identification. Alone among the many opera’s main characters, he has neither soliloquies nor moments of introspection. His flights of lyricism, just like the seduction duet “Là ci darem la mano,” are means to sexual conquest. His nice showpiece, the Champagne Aria, “Fin ch’han del vino,” betrays no indicators of an inside life—solely a relentless, superhuman power. 

Leporello tells Elvira that Giovanni has seduced 1,003 ladies in Spain alone. Throughout the opera he assaults two extra, kills one man, and beats one other half to dying. He lies as simply as he breathes and betrays Leporello with out hesitation. He enjoys the privileges his society affords him, invoking the droit de seigneur at a peasant marriage ceremony, whilst he corrodes society from inside. To Kierkegaard, Don Giovanni embodied the erotic energy of music itself; he was want in its purest kind, “victorious, triumphant, irresistible, and demonic.” Newer interpreters have seen him as a captivating monster who, within the phrases of the director John Caird, “slowly turns his own heart into stone.”

The opera, like its central determine, has worn totally different faces at totally different occasions. Early critics within the dying days of the ancien régime praised its “beauty, greatness and nobility.” Mozart’s biographer Maynard Solomon, writing in 1995, famous its “jarring fragility and incompleteness.” However Don Giovanni has at all times been elusive. Musically it alternates lucid grace with uncooked violence. Dramatically it lurches between terror and farce, refined sensuality and sadistic laughter, inviting interpretations solely to confound them.

Nowhere is that this extra evident than within the remaining scene. On the climactic second, a defiant Don Giovanni is dragged into hell, accompanied by a D-minor conflagration within the orchestra. The efficiency appears to be over; at this level, neophytes typically stand and applaud. However no sooner has the final chord died away than the surviving characters rush onstage, eagerly proclaiming the ethical of the story: “The wicked always meet the end they deserve.” The orchestra rounds issues off with a perfunctory cadence. 

The Romantics have been among the many first to seek out this epilogue unsatisfactory. Franz Liszt omitted it from his piano fantasia on the opera; many nineteenth-century productions adopted go well with. This mirrored a brand new dramatic sensibility and a brand new view of Mozart’s Don Juan. For a era preoccupied with eros and the irrational, he took on a cosmic significance. He was now a Promethean insurgent, like Milton’s Devil or Goethe’s Faust (“Mozart should have composed Faust,” Goethe remarked to a good friend). His damnation, removed from placing him in his place, testified to his horrible grandeur. In E.T.A. Hoffmann’s “Don Juan”—a sort of metafictional fantasy concerning the opera—Giovanni’s tried rape of Donna Anna turns into a second of transfiguring ardour, and her vengeful pursuit of him the product of perverted love.

Hoffmann’s admiration persists, in cruder kind, in lots of later readings. Within the twentieth century Giovanni turned a Romantic cutout, an existentialist antihero, or (a favourite publicity cliché) “opera’s bad boy.” Even the productions I noticed as a baby sanitized him, the place they didn’t overtly lionize him. The blunt Italian verb used within the libretto to explain his assault on Donna Anna—sforzar, “force”—was translated as “ravish.” In her research Rape on the Opera, Margaret Cormier describes one not atypical staging, at Toronto’s Opera Atelier in 2019. As Giovanni grapples with Donna Anna, her “body language is at odds with what she says…. Anna says no, but based on the staging of the scene, she means yes.”1

Like Cormier, many listeners now perceive Don Giovanni quite in a different way. Criticisms of the character should not precisely new. “At the end of the charming seduction is rape,” the thinker Catherine Clément wrote in 1979 in Opera, or the Undoing of Ladies.2 However in recent times the opera itself has come underneath hearth. Lecturers have implicated it within the habits of alleged sexual predators, just like the disgraced Metropolitan Opera conductor James Levine. Some musicians have professed their reluctance to carry out it. A number of academic establishments have dropped it from their curricula. 

None of this has significantly challenged its canonic standing, and opera corporations nonetheless put it on, although they appear to really feel the necessity to justify themselves: “Why present Don Giovanni in 2021?,” one interviewer requested the Seattle Opera’s forged. Amongst their solutions: as a result of it’s a “cautionary tale”; as a result of it’s about overcoming abuse; as a result of it “illuminates the powerlessness and trauma of victims.” Such accounts restore, in a special kind, the ethical that the Romantics excised. Don Giovanni embodies not want as such, however pathological male want. Not “masculinity in all of its marvelous splendor and power,” as Hoffmann wrote, however masculinity at its most base and harmful.

This view informs up to date productionswhich cross judgment on Don Giovanni in varied methods. Typically that judgment is enacted throughout the drama: in 2007 I noticed a efficiency in Berlin wherein, on the finish of the damnation scene, Giovanni’s penis was reduce off and flung throughout the stage; in Opera Queensland’s 2018 interpretation, a crowd of bare ladies dragged him to hell. Extra typically it’s a matter of characterization. A couple of minutes right into a latest staging on the Metropolitan Opera, he shoots Donna Anna’s father in chilly blood quite than killing him in a duel, because the libretto has it.



Santa Fe Opera/Curtis Brown

Ryan Speedo Inexperienced as Don Giovanni within the Santa Fe Opera’s manufacturing of Don Giovanni, 2024

Stephen Barlow’s manufacturing for the Santa Fe Opera, which I noticed in August, was much less heavy-handed, emphasizing the character’s vainness and buffoonery quite than his villainy. The bass-baritone Ryan Speedo Inexperienced portrayed, as Clément wrote of the character, “a pathetic man who does not get what he wants.” The staging had a subtlety not at all times evident in latest interpretations; however in its try to chop the seducer all the way down to measurement, it was unmistakably of its time.

Don Giovanni’s deflation started with the overture, effectively earlier than he would typically come onstage. Throughout the lacerating D-minor introduction—whose music prefigures the damnation scene, hanging over the opera like an axe—the stage remained empty. Then, with the allegro, the partitions of the set swung open to disclose Giovanni in his house, posing for a portray in his dressing robe. Greater than a dozen different portraits—all sporting the identical pink gown and mock-heroic pose—have been scattered alongside the partitions. The set swung shut once more, concealing this pantomime from view. However by the point Giovanni made his traditional entrance within the first scene, pursued by Donna Anna, we already knew he was a pompous clown. 

This set the tone for what adopted. The Santa Fe manufacturing—demystified, amusing, typically arch—confirmed what we have now gained, and what we have now misplaced, in dragging the demon all the way down to earth.

Don Giovanni unfolds in three massive arcs: the primary occupies Act I; the others divide Act II. Every begins with a sequence of arias, recitatives, and duets—the traditional parts of Italianate “number opera”—wherein the person characters pursue their separate affairs. Then it grows extra complicated because the characters are drawn collectively, culminating in an prolonged choral or ensemble scene, of symphonic intricacy and pressure, that’s on the similar time a scene of collective judgment. 

Twice Giovanni escapes punishment: within the first act he abandons Donna Elvira, assaults Donna Anna and kills her father, then tries to seduce the peasant Zerlina; he flees the masked ball that closes the act simply as his victims are about to actual vengeance. Halfway by Act II they appear to have caught up with him, solely to seize Leporello in disguise. However within the third arc judgment comes within the type of Donna Anna’s father, the Commendatore—or, extra precisely, his statue, which Giovanni has mockingly invited to dinner. Within the finale it arrives at Giovanni’s house with a refrain of demons, demanding he repent. When he refuses, his destiny is sealed. The supernatural accomplishes what society couldn’t.

Giovanni’s downfall appears fated earlier than he units foot onstage. The overture opens with two gestures: a pair of slashing, syncopated chords, D minor and its dominant A serious, and a trudging processional underpinned by a descending chromatic scale—the so-called lamento bass, a time-honored image of grief and anguish. These figures saturate the opera. Violins define that chromatic scale throughout Giovanni’s duel with Donna Anna’s father, touchdown on a jarring diminished seventh chord when he strikes the deadly blow; woodwinds then reiterate it because the Commendatore dies. The cheerful inventory gesture that asserts Giovanni’s remaining dinner—D-major and A-major chords, with the violins tracing a descending fourth—echoes the syncopated harmonies that started the overture and foreshadows their return. When the Commendatore’s statue seems in Giovanni’s doorway, these syncopations come again with an added shock: the D-minor chord has been remodeled right into a diminished seventh, the identical dissonance we heard when Giovanni’s sword discovered its mark. Coupled with the libretto’s doublings and symmetries—between grasp and servant, fiancé and rapist, the grim final supper and the glittering masked ball—these patterns convey the sense of an occult order closing in on Giovanni because the drama nears its finish.

Barlow’s staging, although conservative on the floor, modified the opera’s authentic scheme in telling methods. First it transposed the motion from feudal Spain to late-Victorian London, changing the aristocracy with the haute bourgeoisie and the Spanish peasantry with cockneys. This selection, which initially puzzled me—why was the opera set on this planet of Sherlock Holmes?—took on new significance when coupled with the casting. Leporello is commonly forged as Giovanni’s double; in Peter Sellars’s well-known 1990 movie, the 2 roles have been sung by twins. Most productions accept a vaguer resemblance, making the singers the identical top or similar construct. In Santa Fe, Inexperienced and his Leporello, Nicholas Newton, have been two of three Black singers. 


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Santa Fe Opera/Curtis Brown

Rachel Fitzgerald as Donna Anna, Ryan Speedo Inexperienced as Don Giovanni, and David Portillo as Don Ottavio within the Santa Fe Opera’s manufacturing of Don Giovanni, 2024

The third was Soloman Howard, very good and iron-voiced because the Commendatore.3 Howard performed one of many few males within the opera not confused with the seducer. But in Barlow’s staging they have been carefully linked, and never simply because, with Newton, they have been the one Black males onstage. Within the finale, quite than showing on the door within the type of a statue, Howard emerged from a type of ridiculous work, clad in a singed pink dressing robe. He was one other double—a haggard portrait of Giovanni’s soul. Inexperienced rushed at him with a carving fork, seeming to stab him earlier than falling to the bottom, the fork protruding from his personal stomach. The ultimate sextet was sung over his corpse. Having uncared for to learn the press supplies, that was after I lastly grasped the opera’s setting: it was the London not of Conan Doyle however of The Image of Dorian Grey.

Initially this ending produced a nice frisson, just like the third-act plot twist in a movie noir. Occupied with it afterward, nevertheless, I began to have doubts. The Commendatore has been interpreted in several methods. To Kierkegaard he was Spirit personified, negating Don Juan’s “immediate, sensate life.” To the thinker Bernard Williams his return was a “vast and alarming natural consequence” of the seducer’s life, “rather than a transcendental judgment.” In Barlow’s staging it was neither. When Dorian Grey confronts the mocking face of his portrait, its loathsome options and hypocritical smile, he sees “his own soul…looking out at him from the canvas and calling him to judgement.” Wilde’s story is a research within the psychology of guilt and regret—two issues Giovanni conspicuously lacks.

On this sense, Barlow’s imaginative and prescient appeared subtly however crucially at odds with Mozart’s personal. In making the opera much less savage and extra humane, the manufacturing obscured one thing important: paradoxically, Giovanni’s very shallowness, his incapacity for remorse or reflection, provides Don Giovanni a lot of its human depth. This impact is sure up with its style—with the query of what sort of art work it truly is.

Mozart and his librettist, Lorenzo Da Ponte, referred to as Don Giovanni a dramma giocoso. The label hints at its ambiguity however doesn’t do justice to its vary. The determine of Don Juan—as he emerged from the Baroque dramas of Tirso de Molina and Molière—was a mythic trickster, with roots within the archetypes of premodern well-liked theater; there hung about him the environment of Carnival, the season of license previous Lent.

In a single sense Mozart’s Don Giovanni retains this vintage flatness. It offers, or so we predict at first, not in characters however inventory figures—the rake, the patriarch, the shrew—typically portrayed with a slapstick absurdity. But alongside this, and rising with growing pressure because the story unfolds, is one thing extra intimate and pained. The result’s an unstable combination of tragedy and farce: in “Là ci darem la mano” Zerlina is hypnotized by Giovanni like a mouse by a snake; then Elvira bursts onstage and chases him away, reworking him from Svengali into Mr. Punch. The Commendatore’s dying, set to a plangent lament within the woodwinds, transitions into vaudevillian patter: “Who’s dead,” Leporello asks his employer, “you or the old man?”

It’s laborious to seize this full tonal vary in efficiency. Most interpretations emphasize some moods over others. Within the Santa Fe manufacturing, intriguingly, there gave the impression to be two distinct interpretations at work. If you happen to closed your eyes, Inexperienced was a daunting, protean Don Giovanni, projecting unctuous allure and heroic energy by turns. If you happen to opened them, nevertheless, he turned a little bit of a ham, all suggestive eyebrow actions and leering smiles. Many of the wonderful forged appeared equally torn. Rachael Wilson, as Donna Elvira, delivered a masterclass in vocal characterization: within the first act her singing was virtuosic but intentionally harsh and uningratiating; within the second her voice opened up, revealing an surprising tenderness and heat. Vocally her Elvira started as a comedic caricature and ended as a girl in love. However on stage she remained a caricature to the top. Within the remaining scene, she crouched over Giovanni’s physique in a pantomime of mourning, mugging for laughs.

What explains this pressure between music and motion? In up to date opera productions, staging and singing serve two totally different, not essentially suitable functions. The previous, a lot of the time, is meant to bridge the perceived hole between a piece and its viewers—to carry it in keeping with, or handle its distance from, up to date values. The Berlin Don Giovanni did so by Brechtian alienation; the Met manufacturing by signaling its disapproval. The Santa Fe manufacturing each diminished the title character and softened the opera’s stark contrasts of tone. The hints of parody in “Là ci darem la mano” robbed Elvira’s interruption of its deflating shock; the tried seduction of Elvira’s maid was staged as a comic book defeat; minutes after a brutal beating from Giovanni, Zerlina’s jealous husband, Masetto, walked offstage along with his head held excessive. Taken collectively, these decisions smoothed away Don Giovanni’s sadism. The viewers laughed typically, however it was not often disturbed. 

The singers, for his or her half, tried to make dramatic sense of Mozart’s music—and for that motive they captured one thing the staging didn’t. The combination of comedian and tragic modes is central to Don Giovanni’s view of character. Initially these modes are personified by two figures: Donna Anna, the avenger and tragic heroine, and Donna Elvira, the discarded lover and comedian shrew. Because the opera progresses, nevertheless, this dichotomy is known as into query. Like all that issues most in Don Giovanni, that transformation occurs within the music, and solely secondarily, if in any respect, on the stage.

Like its instant predecessor, The Marriage of Figaro, Don Giovanni is descended from the custom of opera buffa, with its carnivalesque temper and disreputable characters. But it’s haunted by the ghost of opera seria—the Baroque custom exemplified by Handel, involved with the dignified passions of heroes and kings. Opera seria depicted these passions in stark, major colours: a typical aria expressed one overriding emotion, or two contrasting feelings schematically opposed; an outpouring of rage may be adopted by a burst of grief in a special key, then repeated basically unchanged. This formal scheme, in its symmetry and deliberate artifice, mirrored a system of aesthetic values that was already falling out of favor in Mozart’s time. Within the operas that he wrote with Da Ponte, opera seria turned a logo of religious immobility, its conventions offering the outward signal of stunted inside lives. Opera buffa, in contrast, got here to suggest the versatile, the changeable, the free.


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Santa Fe Opera/Curtis Brown

Nicholas Newton as Leporello and Ryan Speedo Inexperienced as Don Giovanni within the Santa Fe Opera’s manufacturing of Don Giovanni, 2024

In The Marriage of Figaro, that freedom is related to the decrease courses, set towards the inward stasis of the ancien régime. Figaro sings the aria “Se vuol ballare, signor contino” on studying that his employer, the Depend, has tried to cuckold him. It’s a show of tightly managed sarcasm, punctuated by momentary bursts of rage; repeatedly suppressed, his anger lastly overflows, destroying the symmetry of the aria as a flooding river destroys its banks. The Depend, in contrast, is imprisoned by his personal social function. When Figaro tips him, he sings the aria “Vedrò, mentr’io sospiro,” which depicts him hemmed in by majestic Baroque ornaments, frozen in a pose of outraged vainness. It’s not within the the Aristocracy however within the servants, as Williams writes, “that some larger and more spontaneous humanity has triumphed.”

In Don Giovanni the play of types has grown extra elusive and the triumph extra equivocal. Each feminine leads initially communicate within the accents of opera seria. We first hear these accents after Don Giovanni flees the scene of his crime, and Anna’s fiancé, Don Ottavio, rushes in. A tense recitative, accompanied by hammering Handelian chords within the strings, introduces one of the alienated duets within the operatic literature. Fuggi, crudele, fuggi!, Anna sings, “flee, cruel man”—as if even now her fiancé and her assailant have been laborious to inform aside. By the top, her anguish has began to lose its grip. Her remaining aria, “Non mi dir, bell’ idol mio”“do not tell me, my love, that I am cruel to you”—begins with a serene unhappiness, then strikes by grief to a dancelike poise, earlier than ending in a flurry of exuberant vocal leaps and plummeting runs. It conveys a unprecedented sense of freedom, sliding from rapt interiority to extroverted energy. But the psychological reality of the music clashes sarcastically with the duplicity of the phrases. “You know well how much I love you,” Anna tells Ottavio. Right here, at the very least, most fashionable listeners agree with Hoffmann: we don’t know any such factor.

Donna Elvira’s transformation is not any much less putting. In her the hints of opera seria are pushed to the purpose of satire: she is a Handelian character misplaced in a Mozartian world, and her look has a comic book incongruity—like a knight from a medieval romance displaying up, totally armed, at certainly one of Jane Austen’s nation balls. We first encounter her singing a wild parody of a Baroque rage aria, leaping between the extremes of her vocal vary as she swears to tear out her betrayer’s coronary heart. By the top, she too has damaged free.

However the place Anna escapes the jail of opera seria, Elvira destroys that jail from inside. A stern recitative precedes her remaining aria, “Mi tradi quell’ alma ingrata,” accompanied by the identical Baroque rhythms that launched Anna’s duet with Don Ottavio. As Elvira addresses herself—“Wretched Elvira! What conflicting passions are born within you!”—her resolve crumbles; new melodic figures seem within the orchestra because the concord restlessly shifts about.

What follows is, to all appearances, a textbook da capo aria within the fashion of Handel: its first part, in E-flat main, exhibits Elvira considering forgiveness; the second darkens to E-flat minor, the Commendatore’s music showing like a shadow within the orchestra as she recounts her want for revenge. Then the primary part returns, its textual content repeated verbatim, although that is no mere reprise. As a substitute, by the subtlest of harmonic shifts, Mozart sends the music spinning off in a special route. The vocal line takes on a brand new pressure and determination, twisting into an exhilarating show of virtuosity that’s—like the top of Anna’s remaining aria—on the similar time a show of ethical power. We hear Elvira shifting past forgiveness to a willpower to save lots of Giovanni from himself.

On stage and within the libretto, that willpower can appear faintly retrograde; within the remaining scene, Elvira vows to finish her days in a convent. But the music tells a special story, revealing not simply her human mutability however her energy. “Visually, the [operatic heroine] is the passive object of our gaze,” writes the musicologist Carolyn Abbate.4 “But, aurally, she is resonant; her musical speech drowns out everything in range, and we sit as passive objects, battered by that voice.” Elvira’s story, like Anna’s, culminates in simply such a vocal battering. The textual content speaks of self-sacrifice and the music of triumph.

The 2 ladies thus attain a sort of synthesis: Anna’s tragedy has taken on a touch of excessive comedy whereas the comedian Elvira has revealed tragic depths. From the simplicity of commedia dell’arte inventory figures, they’ve assumed a dwelling complexity and inwardness. As Giovanni’s world is closing in on him, theirs is opening up.

These pictures don’t resolve into one another. We would see them, as a substitute, as a sort of diptych, one whose topic is Mozart himself. In biographical readings of the opera, Kierkegaard’s conflict of intuition and spirit is recast in psychoanalytic phrases: the Commendatore stands for Mozart’s unforgiving father, Leopold, and Giovanni for Wolfgang the everlasting little one. But Don Giovanni’s basic distinction will not be between the rake and his nemesis however between their shared ethical universe and that of the opposite characters. On this respect the opera is healthier understood as a portrait of the artist than of the person. On one facet lies the composer of the Requiem, with its visions of the saved and the damned, on the opposite the worldly artist of Figaro, wherein the quotidian touches the divine. Don Giovanni captures, extra totally than another of Mozart’s works, the stress inside him between the archaic and the fashionable—between a world of stark rules and elemental drives and certainly one of changeable ladies and men.

These photos are interdependent. Giovanni, writes Kierkegaard, personifies “the life principle” within the different characters; “his passion resonates in…the Commendatore’s earnestness, Elvira’s wrath, Anna’s hate, Ottavio’s pomposity, Zerlina’s anxiety, Masetto’s indignation, Leporello’s confusion.” By the identical token, it’s only in confrontation with them that he assumes human form. Within the phrases of the Slavicist Boris Gasparov, “He is pastoral in his duet with Zerlina, cynically jocular with Leporello, mockingly deferential to Ottavio, alternately cunning and audacious in his confrontations with Donna Anna, banal—one could even say provincial—in his mandoline serenade to Donna Elvira’s maid.”5

If that’s the case, then solely by Anna’s and Elvira’s tales can we perceive Don Giovanni’s. And vice-versa: the opera’s humanism—the sense of grace and forgiving irony that envelops its surviving characters—is sure up along with his chic inhumanity. This poses a dramatic drawback for administrators and performers, since there could also be no technique to demystify Giovanni with out diminishing his victims’ dignity. It additionally poses an ethical drawback for listeners. For Giovanni’s best seduction is of the viewers: to attend a efficiency that does him justice is to be lured repeatedly into identification—and to be repeatedly caught up quick. 

Ever since Kierkegaard, philosophers have been haunted by the thought that Giovanni embodies some obligatory side of our nature: want, vitality, an insatiable thirst for expertise. To Simone de Beauvoir he was the archetype of the “adventurer” who pursues “action for its own sake,” detached to the struggling of others. But his ardour for all times is near, maybe a precondition of, true freedom. “Those who survive Giovanni,” writes Williams, together with

not solely the opposite characters, however, on every event that we have now seen the opera, ourselves—are each extra and fewer than he’s: extra, for the reason that situations on humanity, which we settle for, are additionally the situations of humanity; and fewer, since one factor vitality wants is to maintain the dream of being as free from situations as he’s.

That’s, he represents a pressure inside us each monstrous and indispensable: a will to life, a boundless self-assertion whose triumph and extinction alike would go away us lower than human.


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Santa Fe Opera/Curtis Brown

Nicholas Newton as Leporello within the Santa Fe Opera’s manufacturing of Don Giovanni, 2024

Close to the top of the opera, Giovanni sits in his chambers ready for the Commendatore, enthusiastically devouring his banquet. (“What a barbarous appetite,” Leporello remarks.) He’s alone however for his servant and an onstage band. “I want to enjoy myself,” he declares, calling for them to play. They launch right into a medley of operatic hits, most of them now forgotten: first comes a tune from Una cosa rara, by Mozart’s up to date Vicente Martín y Soler; then one from Giuseppe Sarti’s Fra i Due Litiganti. Leporello greets each with appreciative noises. “That one I know all too well,” he exclaims on the third—an aria from The Marriage of Figaro. Right here up to date audiences chuckle in appreciation, belatedly catching on to Mozart’s joke.

However is it only a joke? I’ve at all times discovered the second ominous. The strings palpitate anxiously as Elvira rushes in, pleading with Giovanni to fix his methods; these palpitations flip right into a propulsive rhythmic determine that traces an ascending chromatic scale as she runs again offstage. When it reaches the highest, on a piercing diminished seventh chord, we hear her scream. The method repeats itself as Leporello opens the door, cries out, and slams it shut. On an expectant A-minor concord, Giovanni reopens it. By the point the Commendatore enters—accompanied by a paroxysm of dissonance quite than the anticipated D-minor chord—all aesthetic distance between the drama and spectator has collapsed. Classical readability has given technique to Romantic darkness, track to a scream, the gorgeous to the chic. 

In Barlow’s manufacturing, even because the Commendatore stepped out of the body of the portray to confront Don Giovanni, the aesthetic body separating each of them from the viewers remained intact. He superior from stage left, at an angle to the viewer, eyes firmly fastened on his killer. Within the performances I bear in mind finest, in contrast, he appears straight outward, as if passing sentence on the world. A 2001 staging on the Zurich Opera Home, preserved on movie, units Giovanni’s banquet in an encroaching darkness that merges with the shadows of the auditorium. When the Commendatore’s statue seems, on a scaffold excessive above the stage, he’s gazing into the corridor, his face clean and emotionless. He appears to say—to not Giovanni, however to us—that each carnival has its finish.

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