Serse has become one of the most successful and popular of Hsndel's operas in modern revivals. This may be because the work is, like Agrippina, a serious subject that is generally treated in comic terms. In Britain it was neglected until 1992 when English National Opera mounted a superb staging by Nicholas Hytner that instantly achieved classic status.
This student production was the Scottish premiere, and like the ENO reading, took a light-hearted view of the piece. After the overture, the first voice we hear is that of King Xerxes himself, briefly diverted from his invasion of Greece by his admiration for a plane tree. This opening aria, 'Ombra mai fu' immediately became accepted as a great melody, to be included in vocal recitals long after the opera itself appeared to be consigned to history. It turns out that the work is a beautifully integrated comic masterpiece, and the student team seems to have had a good success with it.
Cast details are from a copy of the programme in the Scottish Theatre Archive, one of the Special Collections in Glasgow University Library.
Renata Skarelyte (May 3, 7)
Hester Dam (May 5, 9)
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