Robert Carsen’s classic production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream returns to the London Coliseum

1st February 2018 in Press

A Midsummer Night’s Dream
Benjamin Britten (1913-1976)
Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears, after William Shakespeare

Conductor, Alexander Soddy
Director, Robert Carsen
Associate Director, Emmanuelle Bastet

Robert Carsen’s classic production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream returns to the London Coliseum

Opens Thursday 01 March at 7.30pm at the London Coliseum (6 performances)

Robert Carsen’s ‘legendary production’ (Bachtrack) of Benjamin Britten’s Shakespearean comedy returns to the London Coliseum this spring, featuring an ensemble of some of British opera’s most sparkling rising stars.

The production is the first of four works by Benjamin Britten to be performed in this fiftieth anniversary year of opera in residence at the Coliseum and highlights the historic role of the company in premiering and performing the composer’s work. The Turn of the Screw at Regent’s Park Open Air Theatre and Paul Bunyan at Wilton’s Music Hall follow later this season, finishing with a staged interpretation of Britten’s War Requiem in November.

Shakespeare’s romantic comedy, with its two pairs of lovers enchanted, switched and finally given their happy ending by fairy magic, is beautifully retold in Britten’s opera. Carsen’s bewitching nocturnal staging, with Michael Levine’s arresting dreamscape designs and Matthew Bourne’s gorgeously fluid choreography, has enchanted audiences from La Scala to Beijing since its 1991 premiere at the Aix-en-Provence Festival. This is its third revival at the London Coliseum, where it last appeared in 2004.

Shakespeare’s hapless and hilarious cast of fairies, lovers and mechanicals are given life by a group of singers closely associated with ENO, including five Harewood Artists, members of ENO’s scheme for the training of talented young singers. Harewood Artist and winner of the 2016 Susan Chilcott Award Soraya Mafi sings fairy queen Tytania in her role debut, after her ‘scintillating’ (The Daily Telegraph) performance as Mabel in 2017’s revival of The Pirates of Penzance. She is joined by countertenor Christopher Ainslie as her husband Oberon; the two also sang together in October 2017 as Cleopatra and Cesare in ETO’s Giulio Cesare. In 2014 Ainslie performed in Thebans with his most recent appearance being a ‘breathtaking’ (The Guardian) performance in Rodelinda.

Harewood Artist David Webb returns for his second engagement of the season as the young lover Lysander following his Messenger in Aida. His Frederic in The Pirates of Penzance opposite Mafi was praised for its ‘effortless vocal lyricism’ (What’s On Stage) and considerable comic ability. Fellow Harewood Artist Matthew Durkan sings his rival Demetrius in his third appearance of the season, following Fiorello in The Barber of Seville and Malcolm Fleet in the world premiere of Marnie.

Lysander’s lover Hermia is sung by mezzo-soprano Clare Presland, who has appeared in many roles at ENO since training with Opera Works, in shows which include Lulu, The Force of Destiny and Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk. She is the winner of the 2014 Susan Chilcott Award. Her rival Helena is sung by Harewood Artist Eleanor Dennis, whose role as the High Priestess earlier in the season in Aida gained wide attention: ‘she is a major talent’ (What’s On Stage).

Bottom is sung by bass Joshua Bloom, whose comic chops were demonstrated by his swaggering Pirate King in the 2015 run of The Pirates of Penzance. The non-singing role of Puck is performed by Miltos Yerolemou, who has performed the role in Carsen’s production since 2008: ‘has it all: a scorching twinkle in his eye, the richest of speaking voices and fearless tumbling skills’ (Bachtrack). Yerelemou is known to television audiences as Game of Thrones’ Syrio Forel.

Theseus is sung by ENO Harewood Artist Andri Björn Róbertsson and his bride Hippolyta by Emma Carrington. The band of Mechanicals, Quince, Flute, Snug, Snout and Starveling, are sung by familiar ENO faces Graeme Danby, Robert Murray, Jonathan Lemalu, Timothy Robinson and Simon Butteriss respectively.

Making his debut conducting the ENO Orchestra is Alexander Soddy, Music Director at the National Theatre at Mannheim since 2016. Having spent the last decade with orchestras in Germany and Austria, the English conductor has been a guest conductor at the Hamburg and Berlin State Operas as well as the State Theatre at Klagenfurt where as Music Director he last conducted A Midsummer Night’s Dream in 2015.

The Canadian Robert Carsen is one of the most prominent and influential international directors of opera of the last thirty years, originator of numerous acclaimed productions and recipient of the Order of Canada. Revival direction is by Emmanuelle Bastet, longtime collaborator of Carsen’s and revival director for the previous run of performances at the London Coliseum in 2004.

Matthew Bourne is one of the most important figures in contemporary choreography, whose work includes seminal interpretations of Swan Lake (1995) and Carmen (Matthew Bourne’s The Car Man, 2000). Designer Michael Levine has provided designs for ENO productions including The Magic Flute (2012) Between Worlds (2015) and A Dog’s Heart (2010). Lighting design is by Robert Carsen and Peter van Praet.

A Midsummer Night’s Dream opens on Thursday 01 March at 7.30pm at the London Coliseum for 6 performances: 01, 08, 10, 14 and 15 March at 7.30pm and 04 March at 3pm.

500 tickets for £20 or less are available for each performance. Tickets start from £12.

A production of the Festival d’Aix-en-Provence and Opera National de Lyon

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Notes to Editors:

English National Opera is founded on the belief that opera of the highest quality should be accessible to everyone. We are a national company of international standard. We forge ground-breaking collaborations across art forms, and our world-class productions inspire, surprise, and captivate. We sing in English. We believe that singing in our own language connects the performers and the audience to the drama onstage, and enhances the experience for all. We bring our productions to the widest possible audience, whether at the London Coliseum, nationally or internationally. We make our work accessible by offering a large proportion of tickets at affordable prices, and by distributing it widely on screen and via digital media. We nurture talent across the entire company, whether on-stage, backstage, or in the pit. We provide a platform for young singers to develop global careers.

We tell the world’s most timeless stories, unforgettably.

The ENO Harewood Artist programme was established in 1998 as a means of providing a full-time training and performance scheme for talented singers at the beginning of their careers. This allowed them to continue their technical development within the professional environment of a repertory opera company. The name honours the long-standing support and leadership of the company by Lord Harewood, whose work at ENO spanned over 40 years. He made a huge contribution to ENO, and opera in general, during his remarkable life as Managing Director, Chairman and latterly President of ENO, and in overseeing the creation of Opera North. ENO Harewood Artists make a vital contribution to the next generation of operatic talent. The programme costs over £200,000 a year to deliver and is funded entirely through donations. Former ENO Harewood Artists include Sophie Bevan, Mary Bevan, Katherine Broderick, Allan Clayton, Madeleine Shaw, Nicky Spence, Julia Sporsén, Sarah Tynan and Kate Valentine.

Cast

Oberon – Christopher Ainslie

Tytania – Soraya Mafi

Lysander – David Webb

Hermia – Clare Presland

Demetrius – Matthew Durkan

Helena – Eleanor Dennis

Bottom – Joshua Bloom

Quince – Graeme Danby

Flute – Robert Murray

Snug – Jonathan Lemalu

Snout – Timothy Robinson

Starveling – Simon Butteriss

Theseus – Andri Björn Róbertsson

Hippolyta – Emma Carrington

Puck – Miltos Yerolemou