The work is set to the original musical poems of Arnold Schoenberg, an odd work for a small instrumental ensemble and singer—performing in a half-spoken Sprechstimme style. Pierrot (Joshua Junker) encounters fellow stock characters Columbine (Natalia Osipova) and Brighella (Patricio Revé) in a moonlit adventure of lusty discovery and sexual mishaps. Pierrot, pure and white and perhaps a little slow, is a pathetic figure, toyed with like a fool for Brighella and Columbine’s kicks. It’s a dark, cautionary tale, with a moral that vindictive couples in open relationships are best avoided. How little has changed since 1962.
Tetley’s language here is largely classical, with a few allusions to the fleshier modern techniques of the era. He seems less interested in laying a clear story out for us, after all the Schoenberg score and its libretto are anything but lucid and straight-forward. It’s more like a dream, in the unromantic sense, a meandering narrative in a quasi-familiar landscape (if you’re familiar at all with Commedia dell’Arte). If not, the work may look more like the evening entertainment for a clown orgy, including shibari and restraints, but it's Valentine’s Day, who am I to judge?
Great site