The Glyndebourne Festival Opera was founded in 1934 by the English landowner John Christie (1882-1964) and his wife, the English and Canadian soprano Audrey Mildmay (1900-1953). The Christies mounted their productions in a theatre specially built for the purpose in the grounds of their manor house near Lewes in East Sussex. After John Christie's death, the management of the Festival was taken over by his son George Christie (1934-2013). George Christie demolished Glyndebourne's original theatre in 1992 in order to replace it with something larger and better equipped. The final performance in the old auditorium was a fund-raising gala presented at 8:30 p.m. on 24 July 1992 in the presence of His Royal Highness Charles, Prince of Wales. The event was sponsored by N M Rothschild & Sons, Rothschild & Cie [fr] Banque and The Private Bank and Trust Company Limited, with additional support from British American Tobacco plc. In acknowledgement of the Festival's history, the gala began and ended with excerpts from the opera which had been the first work performed in the Festival's original house, Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro. This was also the opera that was performed on the opening night of the new theatre in 1994.[1]
DVD chapter listing
1 (3:29) Opening credits and introduction by George Christie
J. B. Steane reviewed the gala on DVD in Gramophone in May 2004. In the words of its "urbane Master of Ceremonies", he wrote, the gala was "a moment of some nostalgia". Glyndebourne habitués who watched the disc would find themselves on a journey down memory lane. The critic Philip Hope-Wallace used to observe that an evening in Glyndebourne's opera house was "like living in a match-box with a bumble-bee", but many people were fond of the familiar old theatre, and would feel even warmer about it after a couple of hours with Arthaus's DVD.[2]
The gala was well planned and well executed. It offered a menu of composers and compositions with which Glyndebourne had had some of its greatest successes, and presented artists who had played a particularly distinguished part in the festival's history. Janet Baker, Geraint Evans and Elisabeth Söderström participated in order to introduce other singers rather than to perform themselves, but their contributions were nevertheless very worthwhile.[2]
The best section of the concert was the closing scene of Capriccio, sung by Felicity Lott with "Bernard Haitink conducting with undemonstrative skill and affection". Also difficult to forget was the scene from Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria in which Ulysses and Penelope begin to heal the rift between them. Both of the Penelopes from Sir Peter Hall's production were in attendance, Janet Baker introducing the duet and her successor in the role, Frederica von Stade, "recreating her own lovely performance" of 1979.[2]
Ruggero Raimondi was a singing actor who was invariably enjoyable, and his exposition of the mischief of "La calunnia" offered as much to the eye as the ear. Montserrat Caballé - visiting Sussex despite being thereby obliged to hire a private jet in order to get her to Barcelona in time for the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games - exhibited astonishing skill in her excerpt from Otello, although "the slow tempo, always seeming about to get slower, [weakened] the cohesion and underlying tension of the scene".[2]
Sir George Christie was eloquent in his admiration for his company's chorus and the London Philharmonic Orchestra, and his encomium was no less than they deserved. The BBC too deserved praise for the expertise of their filming. Arthaus's DVD preserved a broadcast that was "carefully supervised with no time wasted, and a few occasions found to roam around the garden, watch the light fading on the walls of the house, and see the night sky lit up with celebratory fireworks".[2]
The gala was also discussed in BBC Music Magazine,[3]Billboard,[4]Country Life,[5] Paul Campion and Rosy Runciman's Glyndebourne recorded: sixty years of recording, 1934-1994 (1994)[6] and Michael Kennedy and Julia Aries's Glyndebourne: a short history (2019).[7]
Broadcast and home media history
The gala was televised live in England by the BBC.[8]
All home media releases of the gala present the same 111-minute edition of it, and all offer 4:3 colour video and stereo audio. In 1995, the gala was issued on VHS videocassette by Kultur Video in the United States[9] and by Videolog in the United Kingdom.[10] In 1997, Image Entertainment issued the gala in the United States on a Region 1 DVD with NTSC video and Dolby Digital audio.[1] In 2004, Arthaus Musik issued the gala in Europe on a Region 2 and Region 5 DVD with PCM audio.[11] Also in 2004, Geneon NBC issued the gala in Japan on a DVD with NTSC video and PCM audio.[12]