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Profile reviews

2
The Turn of the Screw, Aurora Orchestra, LSO St Luke's

...inflecting with an intelligence and subtlety that suggests housekeeper Mrs Grose understands more than she says...

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27 October 2015www.theartsdesk.comDavid Nice
Complete Songs of Fauré, Vol 1 CD review – sensuality and simplicity

Ann Murray,who spins long, velvety lines in songs ranging from Fauré’s first published work to the Cinq Mélodies “de Venise”, taking in a gorgeously supple Après un Rêve on the way.

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07 July 2016www.theguardian.comErica Jeal

Past Production Reviews

1
Le nozze di Figaro, Mozart
D: David McVicar
C: Christopher Willis
Le nozze di Figaro (Royal Opera House)

Anita Hartig and Ellie Dehn share similar voice types, which makes their fourth-act shenanigans when Susanna and the Countess swap identities more convincing than usual. Each has a feather-light timbre – indeed, there were moments in "Dove sono" when Dehn's could have done with guy ropes to weigh it down – and they bring such airiness to their big duet, "Sull'aria", that they all but waft away on the breeze. The scene stealer in this revival is Heather Engebretson as Barbarina, who peeps in like a schoolgirl then pipes up like a diva. The young American is a name to watch and a perfect partner for Kate Lindsey's gangling, hopelessly priapic Cherubino. Of the opera's other comic roles, the great mezzo Ann Murray is on her best vinegary form as Marcellina, but the Bartolo and Basilio of Carlo Lepore and Krystian Adam are a touch under-characterised. Ivor Bolton conducts a ROH Orchestra composed of stay-at-homes from the company's Japanese tour, no doubt bolstered by deps, but the standard is as high as one would expect of a band bearing the house name. Despite some fastish tempo choices, matters are mostly (but not invariably) secure between pit and stage, so Mozart carries the day and bliss is king.

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16 September 2015www.whatsonstage.comMark Valencia