Simon Parris: Man in Chair
Simon Parris
Victorian Opera: The Capulets and The Montagues review
Expectations built steadily to Pratt’s entrance, with Juliet the last of the five characters to step on stage. Having celebrated her own wedding just last month, Pratt looked luminous in fluffy white bridal gown with luxurious gold wrap. While the role of Juliet does not provide quite the level of vocal fireworks as heard in other bel canto works, Pratt was nonetheless in exquisite voice, her performance again characterised by meticulous preparation and incredible interpolated high notes.
Sydney Morning Herald
Bridget Davies
Romeo and Juliet soar in VO's Bellini without the bells and whistles
Pratt was at her pianissimo best in the opera's most famous piece, Oh Quante volte. She often gets the aria we're all waiting for and she doesn't disappoint. The stage was flooded with soft pink light as we were introduced to Giulietta, and Pratt began her signature virtuosic masterclass. It's a special moment when a soprano can fill a cavernous auditorium with notes so high and so quiet they make an audience lean in and gasp in awe as the singer descends. Pratt is that sort of special.
Limelight
Patricia Maunder
The Capulets and the Montagues
The other Australian doing great things overseas, though performing with Victorian Opera for the fifth consecutive year, Jessica Pratt also brought tremendous drama to the role of Giulietta, both as singer and actress. Even the way she turned the pages of music expressed emotion and, if I’m not mistaken, Pratt wiped away genuine tears during Hulcup’s powerful finale, as the suicidal Romeo grieves for the seemingly dead Giulietta.
Though the role has less of the coloratura fireworks that made her performance in 2017’s La Sonnambula so extraordinary, she nevertheless delivered a masterclass in bel canto singing, from almost whispered phrases of extraordinary substance to towering top notes, strong and pure. Her Act I duet with Hulcup was the concert’s highlight, their voices in gorgeous harmony, as if made for each other. Pratt wore a spectacularly full-skirted white gown and gold wrap for Act I, in which Giulietta dreads her impending marriage to Tebaldo, then returned in an only slightly more subdued shimmering black ensemble for the fatal second act.