The Guardian: An explosive act of violence: why Britten’s Rape of Lucretia speaks to our brutal times

11 Nov 2022 | Press

actors on stage
Anne Marie Stanley (Lucretia) Anthony Reed (Collatinus) BPA ROH The Rape of Lucretia © Camilla Greenwell 2022 2027-1 Photograph: Camilla Greenwell

Finally, directing is about drawing the best from performers: a function not only of rigorous and precise work, but also of a supportive and safe rehearsal room. We worked closely with intimacy coordinator Ita O’Brien and movement director Sarita Piotrowski on making scenes that honour the truth and continued relevance of this story, while respecting human feelings of discomfort and vulnerability. In the old days, performers and audience alike had merely to accept traumatic material: today we place similar emphasis on alerting our audience to what they will see and hear, treating subjects with the sensitivity they deserve.

The Rape of Lucretia will never be an opera like Carmen or The Marriage of Figaro, drawing in large crowds. It is a strange, unsettling, at times unbearably private piece, but it will remain a work whose originality and unique force will continue to trouble audiences for as long as the awful crime at its centre blights humankind.

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