After two world wars had soured western civilization, Mozart's opera buffa Cosi Fan Tutte was revived. Before the middle of the 20th century, the opera was regarded as too indecent and immoral to be comfortably performed. Certainly, the Cosi Fan Tutte's corrosive cynicism and misogyny poses problems even today. For this reason, the Minnesota Opera Company's recent production of the show cheats a bit with respect to the ending, the conclusion to the work that is generally regarded as unsatisfactory and, even, so cheerfully amoral as to make modern audiences uncomfortable. In the Minnesota Opera adaptation, the audience is invited to vote at the end of Act I, selecting one of three outcomes: the two couples resume their relations as depicted in the first scene or the two couples switch partners or the two couples, realizing their amorous sport has irrevocably damaged their relationships, decide to part and go their separate ways. (Mozart, it should be noted, is an advocate for forgiveness in amorous affairs -- he has the men and women forgive one another their transgressions and restores them to the status quo at the outset of the libretto. Of course, Mozart and DaPonte's capricious and sexually promiscuous bagatelle is scored to some of the most beautiful music that the composer ever wrote and the texture of the opera is incredibly lush, voluptuous, and eerily logical.
Cosi Fan Tutte's plot is quite simple and, as I've suggested, worked out like a mathematical theorem. The story turns on the ancient and implausible "test of love" premise -- this is a plot in which a man or several men perversely decide to test the faithfulness of their lovers. This is always a bad idea. The men generally discover that, as far as the women, are concerned one lover is as good as another -- love partners, at least, among the young and uncommitted are, more or less, completely fungible. The plot can take a tragic turn if the jealous men, humiliated by the outcome of the trial of love, decide to murder or beat the women, or end of killing each other. At minimum, the trial of love results in a disenchantment of the concept of romantic love -- despite sighs and pledges of devotion for eternity, human beings are fallible and, inevitably, they follow their desires to the disadvantage of their plighted troth.
In the Minnesota Opera's show, two sisters, Fiodilige ("F") and Dorabella ("D") are said to be from Faribault and engaged respectivly to two dimwitted lovers Guglielmo ("G") and Ferrando ("F"), identified as coming from Anoka. A philosopher says that women are all unfaithful and that he will propose a trial of their fidelity that will result in decisive proof of this proposition within one day. (In this production's imagining, the women are corporate executive types who seem to be running some kind of PR firm. The men are avid gamers and slackers, it seems.) The philosopher, Don Alfonso, tells the girls that their boyfriends, who are soldiers, have been deployed over seas. After much sonorous lamenting, Male F and G depart, only to reappear a minute later as bearded rascals who look like the members of the band ZZ Top. (Mozart described the men as being in disguise as bearded Albanians -- that seems a bit racist and politically incorrect for 2025 and so the boys in disguise are not provided with any ethnic identity. The men lay siege to the women who remain steadfastly faithful. Male F and G, then, up the ante, pretending to swallow arsenic in their despondency. Despina, the women's office manager (she's a saucy maid in DaPonte's libretto), appears in disguise as a quack doctor and uses a static electricity magnet to shock the men, who are pretending to be comatose, into consciousness. This is all very funny and, after a chorus, Act One ends with Don Alfonso's wager still outstanding: the girls have proved their virtue and their lovers feel vindicated.
(Any vote on the plot taken at the opera's half-time would be based on inconclusive evidence: for the first half of the three house opera, the women are true to their vows.)
In the second half of the show, Male F easily woos and wins Fiodiligi -- Male F gloats over the ease with which he seduced G's girlfriend, attributing this to his erotic superiority. In fact Despina, the office manager, has been cajoling the girls into commencing an "innocent" flirtation with the two hirsute lads. D holds out longer, but there's a full moon and the park is full of courting lovers and ultimately she succumbs to G's courting. Despina, pretending to be a notary and squawking like a chicken, appears and draws up marriage contracts for Male F to wed F and G to wed D. In other words, the couples have blithely switched romantic partners. D sings several arias about her loneliness and withstands G's efforts to woo her, but, ultimately, consents to his blandishments. At this point, the hairy-faced G and male F shed their disguises and return from the fictional wars where they were supposedly deployed. Mozart has Don Alfonso counsel forgiveness, Despina is silenced, and the couples revert to their original formation (F with G, D with male F).
The opera is blithe,funny, and tuneful. The staging is a bit limp. There are two thresholds on wheels on stage that look like nothing other than metal detectors at an airport. People keeping passing through these two doorways, taking care to move through them, because there are notional walls enclosing the thresholds -- it's an irritating set and distracting to see the performers walk along strange pathways to always use the metal detector entries. There are no sets to speak of other some office furniture of a particularly bland type. Large blue and green colorfields close off the stage and the scenery and costumes have some of the whimsical brightly colored aspects of the sets famously used at Glyndebourne. The lighting was clear and, also, largely bright. The seduction of Dorabella is staged against a pale purplish night sky in which a big moon is projected. I thought the singing was, by and large, serviceable, but, certainly, not on par with the performers appearing in the Summer Festival in Des Moines.
The audience, apparently, voted to vindicate the two women who are much put upon in this opera by their deceitful lovers. At the end of the show, the women slap their lovers on the face and depart, apparently, rejecting their boyfriends and their grotesque trial of love that has led to all of this confusion. This is, in keeping, with modern criticism that sides with the women against the men who mount this absurd and dangerous game. Mozart has written the last scene with a number of reversals to that, it seems, that any of the three endings that the situation presages could be plausibly staged. (I didn't vote because I couldn't find the amenity to cast my ballot; I wonder how the other shows turned out.) In other period performances of this show, the libretto seems exceptionally confusing and hard to follow. In this production, the two lovers look very different -- one is tall and lanky, the other is short, stocky, and fat. Therefore, it's easy to keep to lovers apart in your mind. Likewise, the women are color-coded with respect to their garments and accessories and so we can distinguish between.them. Despite its length, the show was continuously amusing. My daughter Angelica was enthralled by the whole thing and applauded enthusiastically.