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 In an audio recording, the distinctive quality of this  Netherlands Opera production would go unnoticed, and a lot of people  might like it better without pictures. The singing is first-class, with  a pert, smart, visually appealing Rosina (Jennifer Larmore), a Count  Almaviva who can spin out bel canto melodies and also do a good drunk  scene (Richard Croft), a Figaro with lots of personality (David Malis).  And conductor Alberto Zedda is an expert in the music of Rossini. But  video brings out the fact that, for better or for worse, this Barber  of Seville differs radically from other treatments of Rossini's  comic masterpiece.
   Usually The Barber of Seville is an intimate little comedy with  a half-dozen solo roles and a small, all-male chorus. Except for a few  ensemble numbers, there are usually only two or three people on stage  at any given moment, often conversing in stage whispers. Sometimes, in  a plot full of secrets and deceptions, supernumeraries are out of  place.   Dario Fo's staging ignores this stylistic tradition. He gives the solo  singers a crowd of artfully choreographed silent partners (including  acrobats, dancers, and two men rigged to imitate a donkey), who scamper  around the stage carrying ladders and sheets, pushing platforms, waving  banners, and making sure that there is always something to amuse the  eyes as well as the ears. This staging gives a solid visual embodiment  to the comic spirit of the words and music, but it wipes out any  pretense of dramatic realism. The Barber of Seville does not  pretend to be "a slice of life" and many patrons will find that the  energy of these added participants is its own justification. But those  who treasure traditional staging and the conventions of realism should  be ready for a lively but unconventional production. Perhaps they can  listen with their eyes closed and enjoy a first-class sound recording.  --Joe McLellan
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