Colin Graham’s successful and atmospheric 1972 staging was revived for six performances the following year to accompany Tristan when the company made its first trip to a London theatre – on this occasion Gibson’s old stamping ground at Sadler’s Wells (two performances of each work). The production as rehearsed by David Pountney was recognised as something of a classic, which was a particularly notable achievement when the Royal Opera's own great 1970 staging by Václav Kašlík (conducted by Pierre Boulez) was such a recent memory.
Anne Howells made a wonderful Mélisande, and would repeat the role both with Scottish Opera and at Covent Garden. Most of the cast had appeared in the first run the previous spring - George Shirley was still an excellent Pelléas, while Anna Reynolds made Geneviève a far more important role than it seems on paper - always observing. John Shirley-Quirk's Golaud was growing more subtle still, nervy and repressed. For a couple of performances, the Finnish veteran Kim Borg joined the company as Arkel. This memorable production continued to be revived regularly for several seasons.
John Shirley-Quirk (Exc Sep 29)
Neil Howlett (Sep 29)
Joseph Rouleau (Aug 30, 31; Sep 29; Oct 9)
Kim Borg (Sep 15; Oct 2)
Sadler's Wells Theatre | London
30 Aug, 19.30 31 Aug, 19.30
King's Theatre, Glasgow | Glasgow
15 Sep, 19.30
Theatre Royal, Newcastle | Newcastle-upon-Tyne
29 Sep, 19.30
Grand Theatre, Leeds | Leeds
2 Oct, 19.30
His Majesty's Theatre, Aberdeen | Aberdeen
9 Oct, 19.30
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