Skip to main content
New life breathed into old favourite
Barber of Seville

The Barber Of Seville
The Festival Theatre
Edinburgh International Festival
 

Rossini’s comic opera, composed allegedly in thirteen days, consistently rates among the most popular on the circuit. Opera buffs who find it odd that the official Festival should give airing to such a common favourite will have their doubts put to rest with Laurent Pelly’s wittily scintillating production from Theatre des Champs-Elyses.

The plot, with its stock Commedia del Arte characters and pattern of trickery and disguise, can be taken for granted. The dashing Count Almaviva, in love with enchanting young Rosina, is frustrated by her elderly guardian who has his own plans for his ward and her fortune. The resourceful barber Figaro comes to the rescue leading to an inevitable happy ending.
 

Pelly and conductor Jeremie Rhorer, with his period-instrument Le Cercle de l’Harmonie orchestra, let the music do the work.

Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Chaucer
Books / 16 October 2024
16 October 2024
GORDON PARSONS recommends an ideal introduction to the writer who was first to give the English a literary language
Georges sand
Books / 6 August 2024
6 August 2024
GORDON PARSONS welcomes a graphic biography of George Sand, the most popular French novelist in 19th-century Britain
scandal
Theatre Review / 10 July 2024
10 July 2024
GORDON PARSONS relishes a fast moving production of Sheridan’s comic masterpiece
English
Theatre review / 16 May 2024
16 May 2024
GORDON PARSONS relishes a play that reveals how language carries much more than simple communication
Similar stories
figaro
Opera Review / 12 February 2025
12 February 2025
DAVID NICHOLSON welcomes an overdue revival of WNO’s classic production, complete with protests against cuts
figaro
Theatre Review / 5 February 2025
5 February 2025
PETER MASON points out that it takes more than a string of poppy power ballads to make a satisfactory drama
trittico
Opera review / 21 June 2024
21 June 2024
DAVID NICHOLSON enjoys a rare outing for Puccini’s trilogy of one-act operas, staged amid protests over cuts to funding
trittico
Theatre Review / 19 June 2024
19 June 2024
DAVID NICHOLSON recommends a rare production of all three of Puccini’s one-act operas