Scottish Opera – Britten’s Albert Herring ★★★★

Scottish Opera brings Britten’s Albert Herring to the Lammermuir Festival ahead of a short tour

This time last year, East Lothian’s Lammermuir Festival was facing funding cuts that threatened its future. But the organisers have walked what they call a ‘path of miracles’, and the festival has returned in 2024 with a hugely imaginative programme, popping up in venues throughout the
county.

And what could be a more joyous contribution to the proceedings than Scottish Opera’s new production of Benjamin Britten’s comic opera, Albert Herring. Centered around a Suffolk market town festival, here it was playing for two nights in the market town of Haddington. It’s subject?
Finding a creative solution when an annual festival is under threat!

Images by Sally Jubb

The local worthies of Loxford have gathered to choose the year’s May Queen. Only, there is no young woman virtuous enough to meet the exacting standards of the organising committee, headed up by the formidable Lady Billows. Albert Herring was Britten’s second ‘chamber opera’ (here even more small-scale, accompanied by just 13 virtuosic instrumentalists of the Orchestra of Scottish Opera). It could hardly have found a better setting than Haddington’s municipal Corn Exchange, a venue seamlessly transformed into a slightly tatty village hall.

The May Queen nominations committee is a wonderful mix of the pompous, the self-righteous, and ever so slightly hypocritical. None more so than Lady Billows, here played by Susan Bullock, conveying magnificently the castigating moral superiority of a small-time Mary Whitehouse while
channeling her inner Dame Edna Everidge. To her, everyone defers.

The mayor, the vicar, the school’s head teacher and the local bobby all put forward suggestions – each one dismissed by Lady Billows’ sidekick, Florence, who has insider knowledge on just about everyone, from feckless farm girls to the young woman who dares open her door to the postie while still in her nightie. It’s only when PC Budd (Edward Jowle) puts forward the un-heard-of proposal that the festival could have a May King instead that a solution comes into view.

The plot now opens out to include the rest of the community – its bored youth, its randy local shop assistants (Sid and Nancy) and, critically, Albert Herring, the greengrocer’s assistant. Consistently described as rather ‘simple’, Albert is deemed innocent enough (for which read naïve and inexperienced) to be just the pure-as-pure representative the community festivities need. Albert protests but his mother, eager to get her hands on the £25 prize that goes with the position, pushes him into the May King role.

All is well until Sid and Nancy conspire to spike Albert’s lemonade at the May Day feast. Their action, less out of malice than a desire to loosen the poor boy up, has unintended consequences. Albert goes AWOL and the whole community fears him dead, but (spoiler alert – this is a comedy, remember) when the wayward May King returns home after a night on the town the offended town worthies turn their back on him while Albert decides to enjoy his new-found freedom from tight-laced moral judgement.

This is a delightful production that fully matches the wit of Eric Crozier’s libretto and the kaleidoscope of musical styles Britten harnesses to characterize each group and individual. Daisy Evans’ impish direction matches Britten toe to toe, with broad individual characterisations, some delightfully-choreographed moments when the town worthies move as one, and touching depths of emotion, not least from Chloe Harris’s Nancy as she realises her prank may have had tragic consequences.

The cast draws together the highly experienced (Bullock and, as the mayor, the larger-than-life Jamie MacDougall) with a number of Scottish Opera Emerging Artists – notable among them Jowle, vocally and physically in tune with Britten’s nod to Gilbert and Sullivan, and Kira Kaplan as Miss Wordsworth, a self-assured flame to the vicar’s colourful moth.

As Florence, Jane Monari has the tricky task of setting the opera’s tone. She was a little underpowered in the opening scenes, though who wouldn’t seem so alongside Bullock? Likewise, as Albert, Glen Cunningham takes time to make his presence felt. He appears, first, more petulant and frustrated than naïve, so that when he eventually embraces his wild side and puts Lady Billows in her place (and here Cunningham’s vocal agility is completely captivating), we have to wonder whether he was never in fact so innocent, but has been playing the town worthies all along.

The decision for the village hall to multi-task as Albert’s shop and, later, Mrs Herring’s house, made clever use of a relatively small playing space but was a little confusing (a jumble sale in the greengrocer’s? unexpected references to Mrs H’s bedroom upstairs?). Nor does the updating of characters and costumes to unspecific but relatively recent times entirely pay off. The town’s young people are even less innocent than Albert, playing instead to the caricature of ‘the youth of today’, and the suggestion that Albert is tied to his mother’s apron strings is lost to Christine Sjölander’s leggings, eye shadow, and designs on the upright constable.

Yet, by blurring the lines, as this production does, between socially conservative ‘traditional, family values’ and a very human desire for truthful self-expression, what Evans and her players successfully remind us is that there is always more to individuals than first appearances. The worm will turn, the unruly youth will show empathy, the bobby will be caught with his trousers down – and even Lady Billows will lace her tea with a little something when she thinks no-one is looking.

Scottish Opera – Britten’s Albert Herring was reviewed at the Lammermuir Festival

A delightful production with touching depths of emotion ★★ 4 stars

Scottish Opera – Britten’s Albert Herring Tickets

Scottish Opera – Britten’s Albert Herring continues to tour

Festival Theatre Edinburgh: 13 November 2024Theatre Royal Glasgow: 18 & 22 October 2024

Author Profile

The Recs LW