Images: 
Total Rating: 
****
Opened: 
August 31, 2011
Ended: 
September 31, 2011
Country: 
Scotland
City: 
Glasgow
Company/Producers: 
Company Chordelia & Scottish Opera
Theater Type: 
International
Theater: 
02ABC
Theater Address: 
Sauchiehall Street
Phone: 
0141-248-4567
Website: 
scottishopera.org.uk
Running Time: 
45 min
Genre: 
Musical
Author: 
Music: Kurt Weill; Book/Lyrics: Bertolt Brecht
Director: 
Kally Lloyd-Jones
Choreographer: 
Kally Lloyd-Jones
Review: 

The Seven Deadly Sins, Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht's 1933 "Opera-Ballet," is dusted off and given new life by co-producers Scottish Opera and Company Chordelia. Credit for the successful revival of this period piece must go to director Kally Lloyd-Jones and designer Janis Hart, who have figured out a way to make everything that happens on stage look not only fresh and appealing but pertinent to our times.

Brecht's prickly story has a split personality. On one side of the stage, we see a Depression-Era family of itinerant farmers scraping out a living "beside the Mississippi in Louisiana." The dream of these dirt-poor, Bible-spouting folk is to own their own house. Since neither the mother (David Morrison in a granny dress) nor the father (Iain Paton), nor the two brothers (Damian Thantrey, Peter Van Hulle) can find a decent job, they decide to send Ana, the only girl in the family, out into the world to earn money for them.

Ana has two sides to her. Ana I (the show-stealing Nadine Livingston) is cynical, greedy and conniving. Ana II (the dancer Kirsty Pollock) is beautiful, naive and pliant.

With her family singing lustily in barber-shop quartet fashion about the glories of God and Christian values, the Anas go deeper and deeper into sin, epitomized by several scenes in Hollywood, where Ana II becomes a star of trashy films (directed by the Stroheim-like Ana I).

Commenting all the while on this topsy-turvy morality tale is Weill's music, which makes liberal use of American pop tunes and gospel hymns, always with his trademark dissonance and caustic humor.

Backed up by a full orchestra and resplendent production values, Seven Deadly Sins packs a surprisingly powerful wallop for such a short, seemingly-dated work.

Cast: 
Nadine Livingston, David Morrison, Iain Paton, Damian Thantrey, Peter Van Hulle, Kirsty Pollock, Peter Baldwin, Nicole Owens.
Technical: 
Set: Janis Hart; Lighting: Grahame Gardner; Conductor: Jessica Cottis.
Miscellaneous: 
Upcoming Scottish Opera productions in 2011/2012 include <I>The Barber of Seville, Hansel & Gretel, The Rake's Progress, Tosca, Greek, Orpheus in the Underworld, Betrothal in a Monastery</I> and Opera Highlights.
Critic: 
Willard Manus
Date Reviewed: 
August 2011