Close Menu
London ReviewsLondon Reviews
  • Home
  • What’s On News
  • Going Out
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • AI News
  • Tech & Gadgets
  • Travel
  • Horoscopes
  • Web Stories
  • Forgotten eBooks

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot
Summary Hospital-level Mortality Indicator (SHMI) – Deaths associated with hospitalisation, England, November 2024 – October 2025

Summary Hospital-level Mortality Indicator (SHMI) – Deaths associated with hospitalisation, England, November 2024 – October 2025

March 15, 2026
Five best Hertfordshire campsites near North London to visit

Five best Hertfordshire campsites near North London to visit

March 15, 2026
Asda petrol prices rise fastest among UK supermarkets since Middle East war began

Asda petrol prices rise fastest among UK supermarkets since Middle East war began

March 15, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
London ReviewsLondon Reviews
Subscribe
  • Home
  • What’s On News
  • Going Out
  • Reviews
  • Spotlight
  • AI News
  • Tech & Gadgets
  • Travel
  • Horoscopes
  • Web Stories
  • Forgotten eBooks
London ReviewsLondon Reviews
Home » Britten, Weill and Ravel at the Royal College of Music | Live Review
Theatre

Britten, Weill and Ravel at the Royal College of Music | Live Review

October 6, 20253 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram WhatsApp
Britten, Weill and Ravel at the Royal College of Music | Live Review
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

<p>
Three 20th Century operas are presented in great style at the London conservatoire

The Royal College of Music’s Francis Melville, Peng Tian, Anastasia Koorn, Daniel Barrett, Georgia Melville and Ross Fettes in L’heure espagnol | Photograph: Chris Christodoulou

Take one opera and two song-cycles, all in French, and create a coherent connecting narrative. This was the challenge of the Royal College of Music Opera Studio’s most recent triple bill, brilliantly directed by Ella Marchment, which presented (in this order) Britten’s luminous Les Illuminations (1940), Weill’s Chansons des Quais (1934) and Ravel’s exquisite L’heure espagnole (1911).

Connecting the pieces is a female protagonist based on the mononymous Mistinguett (Jeanne Florentine Bourgeois), who co-directed the Moulin Rouge after its 1915 fire, herself a famous cabaret performer. Time works backwards here, as in Les Illuminations we see Mistinguett looking backwards over her life and love(r)s. She appears as an entertainer, a close relative to the Animal Tamer of Berg’s Lulu, perhaps?

Instead of presenting a parade of incidents, Weill’s Chansons des Quais (Songs of the Waterfront) is a complete memory of a performance that brought Mistinguett stardom set in the 1930s, the music and (loosely) the action from the play Maria Galante. Finally, post-interval (there is a case for no interval, surely?) Ravel’s L’heure espagnole, now taking us back to the 1920s, when Mistinguett’s strong femininity was at its height.

And so it is that we begin, as Marchment puts it, through the prism of ‘the weird and wonderful world of a woman’s mind at the end of her life’. Soprano Georgia Melville, was in commanding form for Les Illuminations; projecting a protagonist’s confidence hewn by life experience, her entrance perfectly prepared by conductor Michael Rosewell. Melville’s voice cuts to perfection; just her lowest range lacks full strength. Perhaps inter-song contrasts could have been a touch more pronounced; but a final word of praise to the strings for their luminosity in ’Being Beauteous’.

Charlotte Jane Kennedy, centre, with Francis Melville, Peng Tian, Daniel Barrett and Ross Fettes, in Kurt Weill’s Chanson des Quais | Photograph: Chris Christodoulou

The Weill holds soprano and four male singers, these last taking an active role (they need to be ‘wound up,’ perhaps a nod to Hoffmann, but more likely to Ravel’s clocks). They are ‘machines’ that, over the course of the tableau, take on a life of their own (AI-based fear, anyone?). Mezzo Cecilia Zhang as Younge Mistinguett relished every moment. The orchestra and staging conjured a tangy 1930s Berlin, the four males (Marcus Swietlicki, Benedict Munden, tenors; Sam Hind, Edward Birchinall, basses) superb in ‘Les Filles de Bordeaux’. Weill’s music has a dark shadow, as does the tale; eventually, the clockwork, drag-artist males turn violent. Harrowing.

Then, ‘Younger Mistinguett’ becomes ’Young Mistinguett,’ Concepción in Ravel’s L’heure espagnole, a tale of sculduggerous adultery. Marchment’s staging is ingenious and brilliantly realised by designer Cordelia Chisholm and lighting designer Kevin Treacy: the men really can hide inside clocks and be ‘encouraged’ to move, their legs sticking out underneath. It is both beautiful and fantastical. This is the 1920s when, as Marchment points out, ‘opera funding was abundant’; a combination of surrealism and English farce, the staging works superbly. Alexandria Moon as Concepción has great comic timing plus a light, agile voice. Benedict Mason is her buttoned-up husband, Torquemade. The voices of Gonzalve (Marcus Swietlicki), Ramiro (Sam Hird) and Don Iñigo Gomez (Edward Birchinall) are perfectly differentiated.

Throughout, Chisholm’s designs made much of few props, completely supporting Marchment’s inspired ideas. A triumph.

rcm.ac.uk

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Verdi: Otello at Teatro La Fenice | Live Review

Verdi: Otello at Teatro La Fenice | Live Review

November 21, 2025
Gilbert & Sullivan: The Pirates of Penzance at English National Opera | Live Review

Gilbert & Sullivan: The Pirates of Penzance at English National Opera | Live Review

October 29, 2025
Duke of York’s Theatre London Box Office

Duke of York’s Theatre London Box Office

October 21, 2025
Duchess Theatre London | Home of The Play That Goes Wrong

Duchess Theatre London | Home of The Play That Goes Wrong

October 20, 2025
Dominion Theatre London | The Devil Wears Prada

Dominion Theatre London | The Devil Wears Prada

October 19, 2025
Criterion Theatre London | Home of Titanique

Criterion Theatre London | Home of Titanique

October 19, 2025
Editors Picks
Five best Hertfordshire campsites near North London to visit

Five best Hertfordshire campsites near North London to visit

March 15, 2026
Asda petrol prices rise fastest among UK supermarkets since Middle East war began

Asda petrol prices rise fastest among UK supermarkets since Middle East war began

March 15, 2026
Meet the duo behind UK’s first Japanese curry bread bakery

Meet the duo behind UK’s first Japanese curry bread bakery

March 15, 2026
16 to 19 funding: allocation statement guides

16 to 19 funding: allocation statement guides

March 15, 2026
Latest News
Library staff numbers halved since 2010, says UNISON

Library staff numbers halved since 2010, says UNISON

By News Room
Woman writes flirty note to flight attendant and his reaction changes her life

Woman writes flirty note to flight attendant and his reaction changes her life

By News Room
Natural flood management aims to protect Suffolk road & wildlife

Natural flood management aims to protect Suffolk road & wildlife

By News Room
London Reviews
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Disclosure
© 2026 London Reviews. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.