Description
Offenbach: La vie parisienne DVD 2007 Recorded live at Opera national de Lyon / Directed by Francois Roussillon / Stage Director Laurent Pelly / Opera-bouffe in 4 acts / Actors: Jean-Sebastien Bou, Maria Riccarda Wesseling, Laurent Naouri, Marie Devellerau / Erato
UPC 5099951930196
REGION 0 NTSC DVD (ALL REGIONS)
MADE IN EU
AUDIO: French 2.0, French 5.0
Subtitles: English, French, German, Spanish, Italian
Total Runtime: 135 minutes
English Description:
This 2008 production of Offenbach's satirical operetta is directed by Laurent Pelly and conducted by Sebastien Rouland. This was Offenbach's first full-length piece to portray contemporary Parisian life, unlike his earlier period and mythologically-themed pieces, and went on to become one of his most popular works. The production brings together a rich cast of singers, including Marie Devellereau and Laurent Naouri, under Rouland's lively baton.
La vie parisienne (French pronunciation: [la vi paʁizjɛn], Parisian life) is an opéra bouffe, or operetta, composed by Jacques Offenbach, with a libretto by Henri Meilhac and Ludovic Halévy.
This work was Offenbach's first full-length piece to portray contemporary Parisian life, unlike his earlier period pieces and mythological subjects. It became one of Offenbach's most popular operettas.
In 1864 the Théâtre du Palais-Royal presented a comedy by Meilhac and Halévy entitled Le Photographe (The Photographer), which featured a character called Raoul Gardefeu, the lover of Métella, trying to seduce a baroness. Two years earlier, a comedy by the same authors La Clé de Métella (The Key of Métella) was played at the Théâtre du Vaudeville. These two pieces presage the libretto of La vie parisienne which can be dated from late 1865.
- Adapted By (Text) – Agathe Mélinand
- Art Direction [stage director], Art Direction [costumes] – Laurent Pelly
- Baritone Vocals – Jean-Sébastien Bou, Laurent Naouri, Marc Callahan
- Choir – Chœurs De L'Opéra De Lyon
- Choreography – Laura Scozzi
- Chorus Master – Alan Woodbridge
- Composed By – Jacques Offenbach
- Conductor – Orchestre De L'Opéra De Lyon, Sébastien Rouland
- Directed By [television] – François Roussillon
- Mezzo-soprano Vocals – Maria Riccarda Wesseling
- Set Designer – Chantal Thomas (2)
- Soprano Vocals – Marie Devellereau, Michelle Canniccioni
- Tenor Vocals – Jean-Paul Fouchécourt
- Vocals – Brigitte Hool, Christophe Mortagne, Jean-Louis Meunier, Jesús Garcia
Contributors / Actors:
Christophe Mortagne / Brigitte Hool
Laurent Naouri
Maria Riccarda Wesseling
Marie Devellereau
Michelle Canniccioni / Marc Callahan
Jean-Paul Fouchecourt
Jean-Sébastien Bou
Jesus Garcia / Jean-Louis Meunier
Director
François Roussillon
Director
Laurent Pelly
Jacques Offenbachs La vie parisienne, is one of his most enjoyable works, especially in this Lyon Opera production. A satirical romp poking barbs into the thick skin of Second Empire Paris, its updated to a farcical sendup of a contemporary Paris populated by thrill-hungry tourists and euro-seeking natives, both groups with sex on their minds. Producer Laurent Pellys imaginative production makes the tangled plot, with its characters assuming false identities and roles to bilk a not-so-innocent pair of Swedish tourists, perfectly clear. And he fills the stage with endless comic bits and clever routines that keep you laughing throughout. So to depict the Swedish barons drunken state in Act Three, the banquet table itself rocks like a see-saw and spins like a top. Chantal Thomas sets make it clear that Paris itself is the subject of this madcap Opera-bouffe, with semi-abstract views of the city and a map as backdrops to the action. And further delights are provided by Laura Scozzis choreography, turning orchestral introductions like that for Act Four, with its dawn street-sweepers and tipsy part-goers, into a laugh-out-loud ballet.
The production also features a well-matched cast of singing actors who throw themselves into the spirit of the work with gusto. As the two young lovers of the flighty Métella, Jean-Sebastien Bou and Marc Callahan look, act and sing their roles with just the right serio-comic flair, while veteran baritone Laurent Naouri as the Swede displays a gift for farce unsuspected in his Baroque opera successes. Tenor Jean-Paul Fouchécourt stands out with his hilarious turn as the horny boot maker and faux admiral, and his Act One duet with Marie Devellereau as the pretty glove-maker Gabrielle is a highlight. Devellereaus character also masquerades as other characters too, and shes faultless in those as well, while singing with panache and bright-voiced flair. The same can be said of Michelle Canniccioni as the Swedish baroness and Maria Riccarda Wesseling as the elusive Métella. Offenbachs bouncy music is nothing without bubbles galore and conductor Sébastien Rouland keeps the score moving with the appropriate champagne fizz. Video director Francois Roussillon keeps us riveted on exactly the singers and parts of the stage action where we need to be, helping to make this as intoxicating a video experience as, judging by the audience laughter, it was in the theatre. --Dan Davis
La vie parisienne is an all-regions disc in 16:9 ratio. Sound options include PCM Stereo,Dolby 5.0 Surround and DTS 5.0 Surround. Sung in French, subtitles include English, French, German, Italian and Spanish.