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Tama Matheson as Beethoven in his play, Beethoven: I Shall Hear In Heaven |
Tama Matheson: Beethoven: I Shall Hear In Heaven; Tama Matheson, Jayson Gillham, Quartet Concrète, English Chamber Choir; Opera Holland Park
Reviewed 6 August 2025
Tama Matheson efficient combines spoken drama with music to light up Beethoven’s life in a night each theatrical and musical
Biographies of artists are, in the primary, difficult as a result of in case you are not cautious you’ll be able to lose sight of the important, the act of creation. Writers no less than go away one thing that may be included, however with different artists the written phrase struggles as can something dramatised. Director, playwright and actor Tama Matheson has been extending the way in which we dramatise musicians’ lives by writing performs that incorporate their music, not as easy background however as an integral a part of the theatrical expertise.
Beethoven’s life was eventful sufficient, however a easy recitation or dramatisation of the info would lose sight of the important core of his life, the creation of music, all the pieces else was largely irrelevant. Tama Matheson’s Beethoven: I Shall Hear In Heaven debuted on the Wimbledon Worldwide Music Pageant in 2021 and was nominated for the 2022 RPS Storytelling Award. In it, Matheson combines a dramatised biographical portrait of Beethoven with the person’s music, carried out stay.
Matheson’s Beethoven: I Shall Hear In Heaven performed the primary of two performances at Opera Holland Park on 6 August 2025. Matheson performed Beethoven and was inventive director of the venture and was joined by pianist Jayson Gillham together with actors Robert Maskell and Suzy Kohane, plus Quartet Concrète (Anna Brown, Leon Human, Dominic Stokes, Joseph Barker) and the English Chamber Choir.
Matheson’s set-up for the drama was the presence of two of Beethoven’s buddies, Franz Wegeler (performed by Robert Maskell) and Ferdinand Ries (performed by Suzy Kohane) who produced an early biography of the composer in 1838, ten years after his dying. All through the play, Maskell and Kohane used this set-up to behave as narrators, taking us by way of the story but in addition enjoying all kinds of additional characters, together with Maskell as each Beethoven’s father and his trainer, Haydn, Kohane as a collection of love-interests, and at varied factors each Maskell and Kohane performed Beethoven’s sister-in-law, son of his nephew Carl (performed by Kohane). This was very successfully achieved, and enabled the narration to create varied set items for Matheson’s Beethoven.
There have been a formidable 37 music cues within the piece, primarily music by Beethoven however with some Mozart and Haydn. The music got here primarily from the piano sonatas, piano concertos, string quartets and symphonies, with the symphonic music in deft preparations for piano quintet by Jayson Gillham. The music had varied capabilities, some was diegetic as we heard music that the characters have been enjoying or listening to, some was illustrative as we heard the piece that Matheson’s Beethoven was speaking about and a few was extra temper setting. Generally it was only a snippet, however sometimes the main focus was on a extra prolonged excerpt enabling us to familiarize yourself with the music.
The actors maybe by no means fairly solved the issue of what to do on stage while the music was enjoying, although Matheson’s Beethoven was wont to prowl across the stage in dramatic style. Sometimes the musicians have been concerned within the efficiency too, which was one thing that I believed may usefully have been developed.
With out the presence of the music, the play would have been largely about Beethoven’s altering relationship to his deafness because the situation worsened. It’s, in any case, a necessary piece of drama although his troubled relationship along with his sister-in-law and nephew Carl acquired an essential point out. However as we heard Beethoven’s music too, Matheson managed to efficiently display how the development of his deafness modified the composer’s relationship to his music, resulting in the nice remaining works.
Maybe we have been informed a bit of too typically how a lot of a genius Beethoven was, slightly than being left to work that out for ourselves however Matheson’s resorting to panegyric was maybe comprehensible if he was utilizing up to date biographies as his sources. There was comedy too. The issues Beethoven had when conducting made efficient drama because of his ensuing anger, pondering others have been laughing at him. One other second when a profoundly deaf Beethoven had a dialog with one other deaf man slightly overdid the joke, nonetheless.
Each Maskell and Kohane offered very good assist, slipping out and in of roles in a approach that was very spectacular and really efficient. There was by no means a second if you felt that the narrative was confused, and Matheson as author largely stored the tempo going although there have been a few moments the place the manufacturing dwelled for a bit of too lengthy.
However the centrepiece of the night was Matheson’s personal compelling efficiency as Beethoven, unlikeable and opinionated however Matheson by some means made you could have sympathy with the person. Fortunately the manufacturing didn’t attempt to make an excessive amount of of the dichotomy between the person along with his unsavoury habits and the glory of the music.
The musicians have been a necessary a part of the night, turning from one piece to a different with out turning a hair. Pianist Jayson Gillham successfully gave us a potted model of the whole piano sonatas in thrilling style while Quartet Concrète have been no much less spectacular within the quartets, while all 5 did justice to the symphonic moments. The English Chamber Choir sang two numbers, Elegischer Gesang which is one thing of a rarity and a second from the final motion of Symphony No. 9.
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