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A night at the opera brings me to tears

Claire Calman discovers the magic of Mozart

October 7, 2021 17:06
Royal Opera House HYCC7J
HYCC7J Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London, UK
3 min read

My neighbour is having essential refurbishment works carried out on her house — cue hour upon hour of sawing and drilling with occasional respite for cigarette breaks (the builders’, not mine). The high-pitched whine of machinery makes me feel as if the horrific dentist scene from The Marathon Man is playing on an endless loop inside my head. One of the downsides of working from home is that, if there’s a domestic problem — a leaky roof, a power outage, building noise from next door, you have nowhere else to flee to. In terms of timing, it has happily (for my neighbour) coincided with the end of mandatory home-working so she has escaped the noise by going back to work. Happily (for me), she works for the Royal Opera House.

To compensate us for the horrible noise, she offers us free tickets for The Magic Flute.

While I wouldn’t describe myself as an opera aficionado (who would, unless actively wanting to sound pretentious?), I used to go occasionally with my late father, who adored opera and did drawings for the programme at Glyndebourne. Looking back, I can see I was too young at the age of 11 for my first, The Marriage of Figaro, but by the time I was 13 and Dad took me to see Carmen at the Edinburgh Festival, I was more than ready.

Carmen not only has music to stir your heart, making you want to leap up into the aisle to stamp your feet and curl your disdainful lip (well, it’s sexy when she does it), it also has a proper story that makes sense. This is by no means a given in opera.