Vancouver Opera's La Bohème: A Timeless Hit Since 1896
Vancouver Opera's La Bohème: A Timeless Hit Since 1896

Vancouver Opera's 2026 production of La Bohème concludes the season with an extended five-performance run, partly double-cast, that opened Saturday at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre. This old-fashioned proposition is a conspicuous success that should charm existing fans and win the approbation of opera newcomers.

A Mythic Operaland

Though supposedly set in 1830s Paris, Bohème occupies a mythic Operaland where love at first sight is the norm and implausible plot twists can be resolved in a few bars of exquisite music. Unlike VO's last Bohème, a pretentious overblown conceit that tried to impose meta-narratives and forced novelty, this is a “what you see is what you get” staging, which accepts that crushing poverty, disease, kindness, and love can be the stuff of bourgeois entertainment.

Puccini's Incomparable Score

When you strip away the comic antics of a quartet of supposedly starving bohemians and an extravagant Christmas Eve on the Left Bank, Bohème is a rather restrained, pastel tale that has maintained its place in the repertoire for more than a century because of one thing alone: Puccini's incomparable score, which, if handled with care and respect, moves us every time.

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Respect is the key word of director Brenna Corner's staging. There is lots of good stuff in her handling of Rudolfo and his pals in the first and fourth acts, but it never shouts “Look at me, aren’t I a clever director?” The big second act is fun, but when we need visual quiet to hear the lead singers deliver, Corner pays them and the score the compliment of letting them get on with Puccini's music.

Exceptional Conducting

Care is what VO conductor emeritus Jonathan Darlington provides. Here, we have a conductor of exceptional gifts, a magician in the pit, creating an assured balance and a sumptuous but exactly calibrated sound. How we have missed him.

The Cast

The geometry of the tale centres on two couples. Saturday's leads were Jonelle Sills as Mimi and Matthew White as Rudolfo, backed by a subsidiary couple of Musetta, sung by Lara Ciekiewicz, and Marcello, delivered with confidence and great good humour by baritone Gregory Dahl. Then there is a trio of Rudolfo's artist pals and a smattering of tiny roles for five other male voices. Though one rarely becomes aware of it, this is an opera short on women's roles, which makes it vital to get Mimi and Musetta right.

Production Structure

If the strategy of the cast of characters is brilliant, so is the trajectory of the piece. For this production, Acts 1 and 2 are combined before the intermission, with Acts 3 and 4 following. Stage setups impose necessary pauses in the action, so to keep audiences from becoming restless, a slowly unfolding projected text fills in the gaps on the storyline while the stage crew does their work. Act 1 is fun and games in the garret, plus the meet cute of our principals; Act 2 is all grand set pieces, including Musetta's big solo turn.

When: April 25-May 4
Where: Queen Elizabeth Theatre
Tickets: vancouveropera.ca

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