New releases from Joe Wilkes, Honey and the Bear, and Hannah James and Toby Kuhn
IT’S perhaps unavoidable for that formidable opera director David Pountney, known for tackling the more obscure Slavic operatic repertoire, not to pursue the somewhat simplistic comparisons of Ivan the Terrible’s reign to that of Joseph Stalin in this production.
This may be an interpretative conceit too far because, at its heart, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov’s opera is the tragic tale of an all-powerful ruler rediscovering his long-lost illegitimate daughter Olga.
Ivan, portrayed as a passionate lover in the prologue, in the final scene has laid siege to Pskov, where he discovers that Olga is in fact his daughter. He determines to spare the city but fails and Olga dies in the cross-fire.
DAVID NICHOLSON recommends the staging of this Wagnerian classic minus one or two insignificant quibbles
DAVID NICHOLSON recommends a dazzling production of Bernstein’s opera set in a world where chaos and violence are greeted by equanimity
DAVID NICHOLSON is thrilled – and shocked – by an opera that seethes and sizzles with passion and the depraved use of power
Danni Perry’s flag display at the Royal Opera House sparked 182 performers to sign a solidarity letter that cancelled the Tel Aviv Tosca production, while Leonardo DiCaprio invests in Tel Aviv hotels, reports LINDA PENTZ GUNTER


