Swedish baritone
Peter Mattei has become a regular on the Met stage, with 140 performances
behind him and a headlining turn in the company’s new production of Berg’s
Wozzeck coming up next season. As he returns to the Met this spring in the
title role of Mozart’s Don Giovanni, on stage through April 18, the Met’s Joel
Rozen explores what makes Mattei’s take on one of opera’s touchstone roles
unique.
There are many ways
to portray Don Giovanni, Mozart’s ultimate anti-hero, from suave Lothario to
irredeemable villain, or anything on the spectrum in between. Peter Mattei,
with his warm, red-velvet voice, might seem destined to take the first course,
giving a seductive performance that hews to the character’s most sympathetic
side.
Instead, Mattei’s
interpretation depends on subtlety and nuance. In each successive act of the
Met’s vivid production, the star baritone proves himself a chameleon: first an
irresistible charmer in his Act I duet with Zerlina, then a melting troubadour
in his famous serenade “Deh vieni alla finestra,” and finally, in Act II,
sneering and chillingly calculated as he roots out his enemies.
Don Giovanni has
become something of a signature role for Mattei: he’s sung it six times for the
Met alone, including in the premiere of Michael Grandage’s production in 2011.
And though he plays a convincing devil, the heart of his portrayal is his
ability to make the venal and corrupt seem relatable. “All humans go through
moral challenges in life,” Mattei says. “And with Don Giovanni, I don’t feel
that I’m playing an evil person. He can be evil, but he has different colors,
and he can use all of them successfully—evilness, goodness, happiness, freedom,
beauty. As a singer, you also have to use them all.”
Mattei also finds a
key to the role in Giovanni’s childlike enthusiasm and impulsiveness.
“Everything has to come easily, with a lightness of touch,” he says. “The
moment you put effort into him, you lose the magic.”
Mattei first
demonstrated his theatrical flair at the Met in 2002 as Count Almaviva in
Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro. Since then, he’s built a diverse repertoire of
nine roles with the company, including Figaro in Il Barbiere di Siviglia,
Shishkov in Janáček’s From the House of the Dead, Amfortas in Wagner’s
Parsifal, and the title role of Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin.
Still, Mattei
remains a natural fit for Mozart, a composer who lends the baritone many
opportunities to put an individual stamp on his roles. And when he identifies
Don Giovanni’s ability to trade identities and personas, to vanish behind
masks, as the character’s definitive talent, he might as well be describing
himself: “The best way to capture him is to be different in every moment—to
never let anybody think that they know him. He has to change all the time.”
Joel Rozen is the
Met’s Staff Writer.
https://www.metopera.org/discover/articles/consummate-characterization/
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