I was convinced the act had finished, and then realised - we were getting an encore. For those of you who don't know - this actually doesn't happen in real life. But it did. They did the whole duet again. And she did that high note thing all over.
Incredible.
Well, last night WNO didn't do that! But the orchestra under some 32 year old Spaniard I've never heard of was on fantastic form - shaping all the beautiful, gentle Verdian phrases in a way I haven't heard for ages. So often I hear stodgy strings and wish for someone who would be a little more musical at the helm. Last night I really got it. And in Simon Keenlyside, singing his first Rigoletto, we had a world-class performance. World class.
Gwyn Hughes Jones didn't sing - a chest infection. To be fair - Simon coughed a couple of times, and the American soprano singing Gilda missied a couple of notes, so I guess it was going around. GHJ's stand in was OK, no more. The sop was (at times) glorious - her big Act One aria was genuinely love sick, and I enjoyed the way she played it (shame her top note didn't come out). But I will remember SK's Rigoletto for many, many years.
Goodness - speaking of the tennis - I hope you saw Isner/Mahut the other day? And the day after... and the day after... The longest tennis match ever. Unbelievable. Those guys are now linked for ever. This will haunt them. They will never be able to let go of the cord that ties them together. Over 100 aces each in a game that took over eleven hours - when they are seventy, they will still have this. If one dies, the other will be bereft and lesser because of it. They will never play each other again. They will never dare. Their future has just been re-written, and I hope for good, but certainly in a way that neither of them currently understands.
And speaking of not understanding - before this evening, I didn't understand how the current season of Doctor Who could top the penultimate episode. But it did. With image after image, word after word of telling emotional power. Last week we had adventure and filmic power; this week we had fairy tale and emotion. The girl who waited all night was beaten by the man who waited for 2,000 years. The Doctor was brought back from oblivion by the memory of something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue - a description of the TARDIS - at Amy's wedding. The dreams of childhood were revealed as powerful driving forces of adult reality and something never to lose. I simply loved it. Loved it. I watched it twice tonight, and knowing all the reveals and surprises, still loved it. Wonderful. A varied season, but with genuine love and real depth. Now, there's just a drop of that Sancerre left, so excuse me...
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