Donizetti Lucia di Lammermoor
English National Opera / cond. Paul Daniel
"ENO's most compelling production for a very long time."
Anna Picard, Independent on Sunday, February 2008
"an enthralling production…"
"David Alden's absorbing production, which updates the gruesome story to the era of the Brontë novels. The Ashton family fortunes have failed, leaving them in a dilapidated manse where Calvinist religion and sexual repression go hand in hand."
"a highly intelligent and sensitive interpretation."
Rupert Christensen, The Daily Telegraph, February 2008
"This Lucia is not so much a wronged woman as a vulnerable girl. She's tossed, trussed and sacrificed like a pawn in a macho stand-off between two men - brother and lover - obsessed with avenging ancient wrongs inflicted on ancestors whose portraits they constantly revere. That's the crux of David Alden's absorbing, Expressionist production… Alden treats the chorus brilliantly. A macabre bunch in top hats, they leer voyeuristically through windows then rifle through family documents and finally form a silently applauding audience as bloodstained Lucia goes into full unhinged mode…"
5 STARS
Richard Morrisson, The Times, February 2008
"…the spotlight falls on the director and conductor - David Alden and Paul Daniel, working together here for the first time - and the result is enthralling…Many aspects of Walter Scott's story - the hardship of the Ashton family, the low position of women in society, the psychological pressure brought to bear on poor Lucia - deliver a punch to the solar plexus as rarely before."
Richard Fairman, Financial Times, February 2008
"All credit, then, to director David Alden…for sweeping the stereotypes and accretions aside from this dark, revisionist new production of the work for ENO…"
Barry Millington, Evening Standard, February 2008
"David Alden's characteristically intense staging….Very Alden. And very compelling."
"…a chilling Alden coup…"
Edward Seckerson, The Independent, February 2008
Rossini La Donna del Lago
Garsington Opera / cond. David Parry
"It's a huge coup for Garsington Opera to tempt a director of David Alden's international standing to work there, and the result is one of the finest productions the summer season in the Oxfordshire countryside has ever presented… Alden's enthusiasm for the piece and his skill in bringing it to life make the best possible case for [La Donna del Lago's] return to the repertory… this beautifully detailed staging delineates the emotional truths of the drama perfectly"
Andrew Clements, The Guardian, June 2007
Janácek Jenufa
Washington National Opera / cond. Jiri Belohlavek
"The production, which was first performed at the English National Opera last fall and then brought to Houston before coming here, is already famous. And rightly so: I cannot imagine a more affecting and appropriate "Jenufa." The updating to the present day seems utterly natural, without any directorial affectation, and such time-tested theatrical gestures as the throwing of a chair or the smashing of a window here take on the painful immediacy of body blows. This is great music drama. Whether you end up "liking" it or not, you will never forget it."
Tim Page, Washington Post, May 2007
Janácek Jenufa
English National Opera / cond. Mikhail Agrest
"There are some nights at the opera when director and designer, cast and conductor, composer and masterpiece coalesce into something so powerful, so affecting, so right as to transcend memories of the most vivid previous productions. Such is the thrilling case with David Alden's new staging of Janacek's first great opera, Jenufa, a welcome new jewel in English National Opera's somewhat tarnished crown."
Anthony Holden, The Observer, October 2006
"Alden's staging is still highly effective, and it's not just due to the robustness of Janacek's gripping score. Alden establishes the opera's complicated web of relationships…with impressive efficiency."
Warwick Thompson, October 2006
"David Alden has created a production which breathes warmth and humanity into Janacek's bleak tale…Touches of humour broadened the emotional palette. All was beautifully judged on stage."
Fiona Maddocks, Evening Standard, October 2006
"Alden…directs his cast, generating a truthfulness of gesture and a tension of relationship."
Andrew Clark, Financial Times, October 2006
"David Alden's profound new staging of Janácek's first great opera."
Richard Morrison, The Times, October 2006
Handel Ariodante
English National Opera / cond. Christopher Moulds
"That Alden takes this work so very seriously was evident from the fact that, for the fourth time, he returned to revive this seminal ENO show. I believe that Ariodante is Handel's greatest opera, and this is the only production I have seen which treats its dramaturgy and characters as worthy of a theatre director's attention. And what expressive acting performances Alden has enticed from succeeding casts!"
Hugh Canning, Opera, August 2006
"David Alden's production is a work of genius, full of clever references to the style of staging found in Handel's times."
Dominic McHugh, MusicIMH.com, June 2006
"As for Alden's production, it continues to dazzle (a stage-within-a-stage to differentiate operatic convention from raw reality) and startle (the cast spitting half-masticated apples on the heroine). But dull it never is."
Richard Morrison, The Times, June 2006
"David Alden's wonderfully inventive, intelligent production manages to turn this formulaic tragedy of errors into a moving tribute to the redemptive staying power of love. Now revived for the third time, Alden's suave production ranks alongside Jonathan Miller's Covent Garden Cosi fan tutte as one of my most rewarding nights at the opera during my four years in this job."
Anthony Holden, The Observer, June 2006
"David Alden's Ariodante was hailed for its searing intensity."
Richard Fairman, The Financial Times, June 2006
"David Alden's lively yet elegant staging"
Rupert Christiansen, The Telegraph, June 2006
Handel Rodelinda
San Francisco Opera / cond. Roy Goodman
“Even more surprising was the staging itself. Designed by Paul Steinberg and directed by David Alden, the production, co-owned by San Francisco Opera and Bavarian State Opera, gave Handel’s drama of love, betrayal and political intrigue a film noir setting straight out of the 1940s. This accomplished two things: it replaced the usual castle-and-brocades look of the opera to a stark, dangerous and familiar landscape. It also gave the audience a way in to the complex plot, making the characters seem like people we’d seen before rather than figures from a distant past. (…) The effect is aptly unsettling. Noone could deny that Alden’s staging made a forceful impact.”
Georgia Rowe, Contra Costa Times, September 2005
Cavalli La Calisto
Bayerische Staatsoper, Munich / cond. Ivor Bolton
“How does one go about awakening a 355-year-old sleeping masterpiece? One engages a director such as David Alden, who revitalises, sweeping cobwebs away with assurance. Alden has inspired his characters to superb interaction, infusing the story of Diana’s guiltless follower Calisto with great feeling for the character’s tragedy. In serious episodes, his portrayal of sexual desire is subtle, sensuous.”
Jeffrey Leipsic, Opera News, August 2005
Monteverdi L’incoronazione di Poppea
Opéra National de Paris / cond. Ivor Bolton
(co-production with Bayerische Staatsoper & Welsh National Opera)
“Alden’s production is fantastically musical, where every gesture is in sympathy with Monteverdi’s dramatic rhythm. He has transformed his opera singers into great actors, capable of playing comedy or tragedy; burlesque or violence; both physical and sensual. Alden has created Shakespearian characters, not hesitating to emphasise Monteverdi’s mixing of genres that made his work so daring. But Alden is also sensitive to the balance between the grotesque and the serious; between self-indulgence and realism.”
Christian Merlin, Le Figaro, January 2005
“It is with relief that I turn to Alden’s Poppea, which at least is clearly the work of a director with both ideas and the ability to convey them to singer-actors. Alden is one of the few producers to have read the text carefully enough to realize that Ottone’s would-be beloved is not the sweet and innocent creature usually portrayed. She is an accomplice before the fact in the attempt on Poppea’s life, redeemed only by her willingness to take responsibility for the crime. Alden’s direction of the scenes between Antonacci’s Poppea and David Daniel’s Nerone had an electrifying erotic charge.”
Hugh Canning, Opera, May 2005
“David Alden’s staging is amusing, alive, insolent; both modern and baroque in spirit.”
Mihaï de Brancovan, Revue des deux mondes, March 2005
“The situations are treated allegorically, as was Monteverdi’s original intention, but with a smoothly perfect modern reading: abstract set, evening dress, rich lighting and absolute precision in the acting.”
Scènes magazine, March 2005
“David Alden’s staging is a surprising patchwork of influences and references. The piece escapes from Antiquity to become a post-modern adventure that has lost its bearings in a foreign world, under the influence of passion. Irony and individualism have taken over, each in its own way.”
Bertrand Dermoncourt, L’Express, February 2005
“American director David Alden’s production of L’incoronazione di Poppea at the Opéra Garnier could hardly be accused of being either traditional or innocent. The vision of depraved antiquity that he conjured up with his frequent collaborators Paul Steinberg (sets) and Buki Shiff (costumes) drew vociferous cheers from audience and critics.”
Rebecca Brite, Opera japonica, February 2005
“A bold and imaginative staging married to a coherent artistic project. The American Director has employed authentic Baroquerie, using modern means for symbolic purposes. He also knows how to emphasise the key moments by evacuating the stage of kitsch accessories and minimalist sets, allowing the singing alone to shine.”
Pierre Gervasoni, Le Monde, January 2005
Wagner Ring Cycle
Bayerische Staatsoper, Munich
„Matti Salminen is an outspoken admirer of David Alden’s Munich Ring, which he has described as the most intellectually stimulating since Chéreau.”
John Allison, Opera, March 2005
Berg Lulu, Bayerische Staatsoper
Munich / cond. Michael Boder
“Visually and aurally, the audience is spellbound from the beginning to the end of the piece, which is a very rare experience in opera.”
IF, Opernnetz, May 2004
“Alden recreates the characters and their entanglements with sensitive precision; he digs into Wedekind’s protagonists and sees how Berg gave them flesh with his music. He finds meaningful expressions for desire, devotion, independence, exploitation and tyranny in a contemporary setting, and never mocks Berg’s sorrow and violence. The audience experiences the opera itself, and not a self-important director’s commentary. Most unusual.“
Klaus Adam, Schwäbische Zeitung &
Salzburger Nachrichten, April 2004
“This is the first time that Alden has staged a modern opera in Munich, and his
Lulu has proved a great success. Alden achieves not only a precise psychoanalysis, but exciting music theatre as well: drama with elements of the pop video, social satire and horror films. This
Lulu is a hyper- realistic nightmare. There is a certain over-exagerrated comic book humour, but the laughter quickly freezes on your lips as the mood turns.”
Jürgen Kanold, Südwest Presse, April 2004
“Alden finds the right balance between caricature, irony, slapstick and a dash of romantic melancholy.”
Thomas Heinold, Nürnberger Zeitung, April 2004
Janacek Jenufa
Houston Grand Opera / cond. Dennis Russell Davies
(co-production with English National Opera & Washington Opera)
“David Alden’s stage direction was cogent and well-focussed, attentive to subtleties of movement and posture as signals of social class or self-image.”
Mike Greenberg, Express News, January 2004
“Director David Alden leads the HGO ensemble through this weird Czech affair with a careful hand, maintaining a delicate balance of mortal horror and lyric splendour.”
Chris Brunt, The Daily Cougar, January 2004
Wagner Parsifal
Graz Opera, cond. Philippe Jordan
“David Alden deserved the many shouts of ‘bravo’: he had staged
Parsifal as an exciting story, rather than the usual edifying sleep inducer.”
Ulrich Weinzierl, Die Welt, October 2003
Wagner Tristan and Isolde
English National Opera / cond. Dietfried Bernet
“David Alden’s revival of his 1996 staging remains without doubt a fine achievement. Overall, it is an enlightening take on this operatic Olympus, refreshingly unmorbid.”
John Allison, The Times, May 2003
“The eye becomes oblivious to the scenery because Alden’s careful treatment of movement and character relationships tends to take over as the principal focus. There is a smoothness to the action, a seamless, sensuous sinousness. The stage is used to give space and air to the drama in a way that enhances the opera’s more pensive passages and allows personality to evolve with time.”
Geoffrey Norris, The Daily Telegraph, May 2003
Schreker Der Schatzgräber
Frankfurt Opera / cond. Jonas Alber
“No one is quite as good as the New York star director David Alden at finding new expressions for old myths. In an unfussy manner reminiscent of Jeff Koons, Alden dusted off the Baroque operas of Handel and Monteverdi in Munich, and now, using the same reservoir of images from Hollywood and Disneyland, he has brought Schrecker’s fairytale world of psychological fine detail and sentimental eroticism to life. Alden disarms the accusations that this modern music is pure kitsch from the outset, counter-attacking the taunt by using ironic over-exaggeration. This fantasy overload does not in any way detract from the story – it actually suits it rather well. Alden listens closely to the music and accepts the rocking calm of the peaceful moments, just as much as the choreographic impulses of the music in the crowd scenes.”
Jörg Königsdorf, Der Tagesspiegel, December 2002
“David Alden, a director currently in great demand all over the world, and with a tendancy towards gleeful gravedigging in the more traditional repertoire, freely mixes the realistic and the artificial, and exposes the cracks between the two as bright images unashamedly mid-stage. What can seem quirky in the hands of others seems here perfectly appropriate, where collage is the principle for large expanses of the music too. Fairytales and their own brand of logic (or lack of logic) seem to suit our own barely linear or logically understandable age, and they run in David Alden’s blood.“
Susanne Benda, Stuttgarter Nachrichten, December 2002
“Director David Alden has employed the reference-rich music as a self-service shop; changing Paul Steinberg’s colourful staging from American diner to a Las Vegas neon strip and again to a gigantic, maniac carnival, and reflecting the many underlying pathological and erotic layers of the fairytale with sensitivity and forcefulness.”
Claus Ambrosius, Mainzer Rhein-Zeitung, December 2002
“Is Schreker’s opera a fairytale; a plush story about kings, treasures and love? Or a deep-seated web of relationships and psychological character constellations? According to director David Alden, it is not a question of either/or. His current Frankfurt production has this very ambivalence at its core. Sunday’s premiere was a notable event. Alden allows the different layers of the original material to crash into each other; he plays with them, seizes them and forces them to confront one another. For the New York-born director, the piece is on the one hand an opera that functions on the purely fairy-tale level; telling of love and longing; treasures and kings and queens. He deliberately sets this against the knowing, cynical music as an ironic tension. A directorial trick that works perfectly in Alden’s hands, as he does not rely on the story alone. For Alden,
Der Schatzgräber also contains signs of Sigmund Freud in the psychological reasoning behind the action. Fairy tale on the one hand and the underlying psychological compications on the other. Accordingly, in his reading, Alden sets up opposite poles to the scenes of plot development: moments of reflection in front of the curtain, out of carnival costume. Concentrated observation of the inner motives, free of action.”
Christian Rapp, Giessener Anzeiger, December 2002
Wagner Tannhäuser
Bayerische Staatsoper / cond. Zubin Mehta (1994, DVD ISBN 3-86578-205-1)
“David Alden’s production of
Tannhäuser is a strongly abstracted psychoanalysis with beguiling and perturbing images.”
B Kempen, Das Opernglas, October 2005