Cleopatra, in the person of Isabel Bayrakdarian, stormed into the First Congregational Church of Berkeley Saturday night, in the company of the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra. Opera found its way to Germany in the early 18th century, and Cleopatra was a favorite character, sharing the stage with one or the other of her famous lovers, Julius Caesar and Mark Antony.
A grand overture from Carl Heinrich Graun's Cleopatra e Cesare opened the concert. Two arias followed: "Tra le procelle assorto" (In the midst of the tempest), from Graun's opera, and "Morte col fiero aspetto" (The ferocious face of death), from Johann Adolf Hasse's Marc'Antonio e Cleopatra. The two were similar in style, swooping up and down in fast, stormy runs. Bayrakdarian gave passionate voice to both, creating a terrific tempest, first in the sea and then in the heart of Cleopatra. Music Director Nicholas McGegan was having a whale of a time, and the audience roared.
It is always gratifying to encounter a singer who explores a variety of repertoires and styles and resists being narrowly typed. Bayrakdarian is such a singer. It is much to McGegan's credit that he is equally adventurous in working with singers who do not fit an "early music" stereotype. While the Philharmonia players toss off virtuoso passages with pinpoint accuracy, flawless intonation, shapely phrasing, and seeming ease, for Bayrakdarian the same kinds of passages involve more evident labor, unnecessary manipulations of face and body, and some degree of hit-or-miss tuning.
But it doesn't matter much, because on both sides there is such intense musicality and powerful dramatic sense. Plus, both sides have excellent instruments at their disposal.
For her first two arias, Bayrakdarian was clad in a dress that made her a kind of mermaid in the foaming sea. After intermission and a costume change (in honor of Caesar), she returned to sing the splendid aria "Piangero la sorte mia" (I shall lament my fate) from Handel's Giulio Cesare. Queen Cleopatra, early in the opera, has been imprisoned by the usurper Ptolemy, and she believes that Caesar has been killed. She expects to die, but also to return as a ghost to torment the tyrant.
Bayrakdarian's ravishing singing of the lament combined strong emotion with great beauty of sound. Her singing of the B section looked and sounded more like "look how fast I can sing and throw myself about" than "I will come back from beyond the grave to destroy him." Yet her return to the lament restored the moving expression of Cleopatra's despair.