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The Jewish Chronicle

Review: Niobe, Regina Di Tebe

A discovery not worth making

September 28, 2010 10:16
Niobe, Regina di Tebe: the revival is “a waste of time, money and talent”

By

Stephen Pollard,

Stephen Pollard

1 min read

One of the most alluring of artistic myths is that of the lost masterpiece. With paintings it is sometimes true; there have even been great novels that have laid undiscovered for decades.

Niobe, Regina di Tebe is an opera by the obscure Italian composer, Agostino Steffani, which was first performed in Munich in 1688. It circulated around Europe for a few years and was then never heard again, until a revival in Germany in 2008.

Had that run of performances been left alone then they might perhaps have been filed under the label "operatic curio"; one should never criticise artists for experimentation and curiosity.

But for some reason - even more inexplicable now that it has been performed here - the Royal Opera decided that the 2008 revival should be repeated on the main stage at Covent Garden for a run of six performances, with a cast of fine baroque singers and a specially imported orchestra.