The Seckerson Tapes: Messiah, ENO

Deconstructing Handel's Messiah with Deborah Warner

With its powerfully emotive stagings of Bach's St John Passion and Verdi's Requiem English National Opera has built something of a reputation for bringing sacred masterworks to the secular stage. Award-winning director Deborah Warner, conductor and Handel specialist Lawrence Cummings, and ENO's indefatigable chorus master Martin Merry tell Edward Seckerson about the challenges of making a credible stage spectacle of Handel's Messiah, which opens on Friday 27 November.

"It's about us all," says Warner, when asked how inclusive this most popular of all sacred oratorios can be. And she promises to be as good as her word by involving a cross-section of the local community in her vision. "There could be upwards of a hundred people on stage," says Lawrence Cummings, who promises of great public racket for the celebrated "Hallelujah Chorus". So is the fourth wall coming down? Will we the audience be following King George II's example and rising to our feet...?  

Listen to the podcast here.

The Messiah performances at the London Coliseum 27, 29 November, 1, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10 and 11 DecemberCheck out what's on in the ENO season

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.

rating

0

explore topics

share this article

more opera

Support our GoFundMe appeal
Australian soprano Helena Dix is honoured by fine fellow singers, but not her conductor
Striking design and clear concept, but the intensity within comes and goes
A well-skippered Wagnerian voyage between fantasy and realism
Asmik Grigorian takes all three soprano leads in a near-perfect ensemble
A Faust that smuggles its damnation under theatrical spectacle and excess
Welcome opportunity to catch opera-ballet, though not everything is in perfect focus
Incandescent singing and playing, but the production domesticates the numinous
When you get total musicality from everyone involved, there’s nothing better
Janáček’s wacky space-and-time-travel opera glows and grips in every bar
Telemann’s comic opera hits the mark thanks to two fine, well-directed young singers
Kosky, Pappano and their singers soar on both wings of Wagner’s double tragedy