NEW YORK, NY.- One of the many things that came to an end in the conflagration of World War II was the great Italian opera tradition. Giacomo Puccini, its apotheosis, had died in 1924; in the conflicts wake, modernism ruled European music, and a certain strand of lyric theater was over.
Which adds a bit of poignancy to the fact that Ricky Ian Gordons paean to that tradition, his new opera The Garden of the Finzi-Continis, is set in Ferrara, Italy, on the cusp of the war, amid members of the citys Jewish community who are largely blind to the tragedy that awaits them. Their coming destruction is mirrored by that of the emotive, melodic form being used to tell their story.
Emotive and melodic, yes, but here also overdone and overlong. Based on Giorgio Bassanis 1962 novel of the same name, which Vittorio De Sica adapted into a 1970 film, Gordons opera replaces its sources poetic richness with stentorian earnestness that feels like it continues unabated for, with intermission, three hours.
Presented by New York City Opera and the National Yiddish Theater Folksbiene at the Museum of Jewish Heritage in Manhattan, the work is, because of pandemic delays, opening almost simultaneously with another Gordon opera, Intimate Apparel, at Lincoln Center Theater. Together, they are a substantial showcase for a composer best known for his artfully impassioned songs, and for his eclecticism and versatility. Intimate Apparel, set in 1905 New York, draws on Americana and ragtime; Finzi-Continis, italianità.
But while Gordon is clearly aiming for Puccinian sumptuousness and extroversion, the score is not exactly tuneful; the 15-member orchestra, conducted by James Lowe, doesnt offer hummable hits so much as a plush carpet and punctuation for the fervid singers. The vocal lines arent ear worms, either. They just keep surging forth in full-throttle monologues and ensembles.
Its a bellowing take on a story thats not without whispers. Giorgio is a middle-class young man who gets caught up in the circle of the Finzi-Continis, aristocratic Jews living on their verdant estate in idyllic insulation from the increasingly unfriendly world. He falls madly in love with Micòl, the familys daughter, as the fascists take over Italy and antisemitism is codified in law.
Straightforward enough, but in the opera, far too much incident is crowded into 19 scenes, not counting a prologue and epilogue an uninterrupted trudge of exposition. Michael Kories libretto could have been significantly culled; among other things, the subplot of Micòls brother, a closeted gay man longing for his former roommate as his health fails, could have been easily excised. And Kories text, which often tips into rhyme, can tend risible: A feeling I infer of anarchy astir.
As Giorgio, tenor Anthony Ciaramitaro hardly stopped roaring at the performance Sunday, but at least he did it indefatigably and with pure tone. Soprano Rachel Blaustein brought a sweetness to Micòl that persevered through her characters capriciousness. Michael Capasso and Richard Staffords staging did its best to handle the flood of episodes, relying on a simple set illuminated by John Farrells evocative projections.
The operas ending jarred surprisingly with the post-Holocaust imperative doctrine at this point to never forget. Standing after the war in the ruined synagogue of Ferrara, Giorgio addresses his memories, singing, To live my life, I need to let you go. It is an intriguing turn from tradition in a work that otherwise hews to it all too ceaselessly.
'The Garden of the Finzi-Continis'
Through Sunday at the Museum of Jewish Heritage, Manhattan; nycopera.com.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.