Soprano Joélle Harvey as Semele (right).
The original audiences of Handel’s opera Semele, a story full of desire and sensuality set to equally passionate music, were in for a shock. Instead of a traditional Handelian biblical drama, they were confronted with a host of lascivious Roman gods and their deadly plots. Far from being a spiritual drama, Semele is a provocatively secular tale of seduction, adultery, and revenge. “Combining the sexual intrigue of classical myth with the solo virtuosity of Italian opera and the choral splendour of oratorio, Semele is the best of all worlds, a piece that rewrites the theatrical rules,” according to festival organisers.
