Written by Igor Toronyi-Lalic
John Cox's production: 'Its dogged wigs-'n'-breeches line did what many more daring productions fail to do, namely, elucidate the story'
The sun rode high, the gardens glowed green, my lemon berry pudding bulged proudly and, on stage, the familiar 24-carat farce that is Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro was working itself out to perfection. It was Garsington - and my baking - at its very finest, a fittingly triumphant opening to the final season at Garsington Manor (they move down the road to Wormsley Estate next year). Sets, direction, singing - two young standouts in particular - all had a part to play, as did the conducting of Douglas Boyd. The country house conductor (an unsung role) has the singular task of somehow warding off the inevitable, scientifically inescapable consequences of a beating sun and a vat of wine on an ageing audience - namely, the catnap. Boyd proved himself the catnap-vanquisher par excellence.
Musical  excitement came not just in the exercise of dynamic  muscle and speed -  underpinned by strong beats and secure corners. It  came also with the  squeezing of every drop of dramatic colour and  narrative interest from  this extraordinary score. Boyd's attention to  detail, inner voicing, tremolo  colour and musical phrasing -  that was at times so buxom in its peaks  as to compete for attention with  our curvaceous young Susanna, Sophie  Bevan - meant the musical evening  never flagged. All of which attention  to instrumental finery had its  impact on the orchestra, who played out  of their skins.
On stage, there was  far less re-inventive flash. John Cox's  production could just as well  have been a revival from 1805 as 2005,  such was its dogged  wigs-'n'-breeches line of thought. Not that any of  this mattered to any  of us in the audience; it did what many more daring  productions fail  to do, namely, elucidate the story. Le nozze  is a Feydeau-like  play, where assignations and accidents set off  jack-in-the-box  denouements in each act. The mechanics need to be oiled  properly, set  off efficiently and allowed to run their course unimpeded,  with only  the slightest and subtlest of guidance, and Cox knows it.  With the help  of Robert Perdziola's clever, efficient sets - whose  angles and  corridors and Lego-like action drew applause every time they  changed  their configuration - and the real gardens coming into play in  the Act  Two "who-fell-into-the-garden" japery, everything - comedy,  tension,  denouement- unfolded like clockwork.
The real rise in temperature, however, the  two teaspoons of baking  powder in this golden operatic sponge, let's  say, came from two young  singers: Bevan and Anna Grevelius (Cherubino).  Grevelius made the first  big impression by leaping head-first into her  breathless opening aria.  Her tone was sweet, windy, air-borne, full of  a deliberate nervous  energy; it's what one imagines a young Mary  Garden might have sounded  like in her day. Bevan was even more  extraordinary as Susanna, filling  this character's many roles  (accomplice, wronged lover,  mothering-figure, flirt) with exceptional  ease. Her solo stints were as  stunning as her ornamented contributions  to ensemble.
Next to these two fresh daisies, Kishani Jayasinghe's thick,  creamy  voice, which always hung back from the beat for extra emotional   attention, was less interesting. Her musical instinct and dynamic urge   never quite made as much sense as the others. James Oldfield's  cerebral,  brooding Figaro was finely - perhaps too finely - drawn. Grant  Doyle's  hairy-chested Count was nicely poised between the greaseball  and the  cad. Conal Coad's Doctor Bartolo delivered some lovely low  sounds, full  and clean, through passages of pianissimo and forte.   Daniel Norman (Don Basilio) was more engaging when in full flow than   when attempting to wring comedic effect from the recitative. But the   sun-kissed evening belonged to the two girls, Bevan and Grevelius, both   of whom should hit the big time pretty damn soon.


