Sorry to be so late with this. Thanks to Conroy I attended last night. I hadn't booked in advance because I wasn't sure I was going to be around. Actually - that was the excuse. I hadn't booked because I have a bit of an allergy to Opera. The Tell Tale Heart and The Doctor's Tale may have cured me for stuff like this, if not for gallumphing nightmares like La Forza del Destino (I get a rash even typing it) and anything Wagner.
My understanding is that the Opera Shots programme at the ROH is intended to stimulate interest in the art form, and bring in new audiences. It's a fine idea but until they get works by people like Mr Copeland, Mr Jones, and Ms Dudley into the main hall I think their audience is going to remain the same.
Anyhow. The Tell-Tale Heart. It is a wonderful libretto: creepy and witty. The device of narrator/protagonist was brilliantly effective. I've not read any Poe since my teens, but I recall him being a bit earnest, unleavened by humour. The style of the time I guess
. The review that lunavirgo posted from The Independent nailed it nicely. This is Poe for the post-Hammer / post-Rocky Horror generation (which is pretty much everyone alive today). In short - you can't play it entirely straight. It was also beautifully staged and performed. In conversation with Conroy afterwards I commented that the music sounded like much of Mr Copeland's previous work. I was a bit negative about this, suggesting there was nothing new there. On reflection I think I'm wrong about that - I just need to go again and listen with my eyes closed and not get sucked into the story. I was kinda engrossed with the stage, so it was the familiar quirks that cut through.
The Doctor's Tale was superb, but I won't witter on about that here. I'm sure Terry Jones has a web forum somewhere. First time I've heard dog howls during a curtain call, and definitely the first time I've heard a tenor bark.
A gazillion thanks to Conroy for his company. I'm pleased to report that he seemed to be coming down with something pretty nasty. It was quite a thrill to sit next to the master of WOOOOOOHOOOOOOO. There were definitely imitators in the audience, but (unless you're dealing with Poe) you can't beat the original.