Don Quichotte @ Wexford Festival Opera
The ageing and self-proclaimed knight-errant Don Quichotte and his long-suffering but fiercely devoted servant Sancho set out to have a chivalrous adventure. On his travels, he falls in love with the damsel Dulcinée, who sends him on a quest to retrieve her necklace from a band of thieves. After capture by bandits, a skirmish with windmills and a spurned marriage proposal, Don Quichotte contemplates his greatest adventure yet.
Though Jules Massenet had a few more operas left in him, Don Quichotte feels in many ways like his operatic farewell. The opera premiered 19 February 1910 in Monte Carlo it indeed proved to be his last great success – and two-and-a-half years later the composer died aged 70. He labelled it a comédie-héroïque, and as that unusual classification reflects how this opera is at once witty and sad, and above all deeply humane. Its view of Spain is hardly more authentic than that of Carmen; although drawn from Cervantes, it is transmitted via Jacques Le Lorrain’s play Le chevalier de la longue figure (1904), just as Carmen comes from Merimée. But one of the many enjoyable strands in the score is the pastiche-Spanish music, including the extraordinary evocation of windmills.
Starring Jette Parker Young Artist and Russian mezzo-soprano Aigul Akhmetshinato to perform the role of La belle Dulcinée. The award-winning and rising star recently performed in La forza del destino in Covent Garden and was described as “superbly alluring” by Bachtrack in what was called “the cast of the century”. Aigul performs the role of Carmen in the Royal Opera House 26 June 2019.