‘But here comes Unulfo, oh God!’: Modern Stagings of Rodelinda

Lawrence Zazzo

The argument for historically-informed singing and playing of Handel’s operas, if not always on original instruments, has been almost universally accepted. However, opinions about how to stage Handel’s operas in the modern era still vary widely. Few directors advocate directorial intervention on the level of the musical ‘text’ to the degree of Oskar Hagen, whose revival of Rodelinda in 1920 in Göttingen was the first modern revival of any Handel opera. Hagen made Bertarido and Unulfo bass roles, cut every da capo and all of the arias for Unulfo and Eduige on the grounds that they were subsidiary to the main plot, and even sliced and diced ritornelli within arias, or inserted arias and ‘pantomime’ scenes from other Handel operas.

I have been involved in three productions of Rodelinda: the Karlsruhe Handel Festival in 1998, conducted by Trevor Pinnock and directed by Ulrich Peters; a revival of the Glyndebourne production in 2000 conducted by Harry Bicket and originally directed by Jean-Marie Villégier; and most recently a new production at the Teatro Real Madrid, conducted by Ivor Bolton and directed by Claus Guth. All are lovely productions, but all are influenced by Regietheater and take varying degrees of directorial licence. In all three I played Unulfo, a character who often bears the brunt of cuts, changes and extreme depictions, and a character of whom I have grown fond over the years. The following will, through the eyes of Unulfo, give my own personal perspective on these three productions, and in so doing highlight the challenges and rewards for the modern director in staging Rodelinda and Baroque opera in general.

A potential difficulty in presenting Unulfo is his somewhat ambiguous status, a result of Handel and Haym’s conflation of two unfortunately similarly-named characters from an earlier source libretto by Antonio Salvi. Is Unulfo a servant, a nobleman, a friend to Bertarido, or all three (with all the potential contradictions that implies, for both 18th-century and modern audiences)? Furthermore, he exhibits no ‘character arc’ – his traits of fidelity, optimism, and constancy are unwaveringly present from beginning to end. He is almost annoyingly practical, insistent on status but manhandling Bertarido when he is foolishly at risk of revealing himself, and almost comically more concerned in Act 3 about getting Bertarido out of his dungeon prison than staunching his own stab wound. Finally, a potential dramatic kiss of death (at least in modern terms): he is not paired romantically with any other character.

But does this all really make him uninteresting? Handel did not seem to think so, giving him three substantial arias, while the villain Garibaldo has only two. Unulfo’s final aria, ‘Un zeffiro spiro’, was originally assigned to Eduige by Salvi, whose third aria ‘Quanto piu fiera’ Handel sets in a rather perfunctory way. Ulrich Peters’s 1998 Karlsruhe production presented the most muscular, high-status Unulfo, taking the character’s dramatis personae designation as a ‘signor Lombardo’ (Lombard nobleman) seriously and depicting Unulfo as a sword-bearing, obviously proven fighting lieutenant, as he probably would have been in 7th-century Lombardy. In Peters’s staging of Unulfo’s first aria, ‘Sono i colpi’, Unulfo heroically and physically prevents Bertarido from killing himself. Peters’s romantic pairing of Unulfo with Eduige in Act 3 is not in the original plot and might be thought of as Hagenesque directorial licence, but it does solve the often unbelievable denouement of Grimoaldo’s reunion with Eduige in the lieto fine (often a true problem in Baroque opera). But is Unulfo’s confirmed bachelor status really a problem that needs a solution? Only if erotic relationships are privileged over friendships (more on this later).

Yet another solution to the ‘problem’ of Unulfo is that taken at Glyndebourne – comic relief. Villégier introduces comic elements in all three of Unulfo’s arias, in an otherwise well-thought-out, uncut and beautiful production, which aligns the Baroque aesthetic with that of silent film of the 20s. A gag involving drinking brandy in the first aria falls flat, and Unulfo’s second aria demotes the character to a mere valet, as he folds Bertarido’s evening wear into a briefcase and shines his shoes. This may make him cheerfully Chaplinesque (certainly another reference for Villégier), but the amount of comedy diminishes not just Unulfo but Bertarido – Unulfo is depicted as a Pollyanna or Pangloss, almost gleefully oblivious of the danger not only Bertarido and Rodelinda are in, but now himself, having revealed his thoughts to Garibaldo. The most successful staging of the three is his last, ‘Un zeffiro spirò’, which seems to take its cue from the music, the recorders and bubbling bassoons complementing the hushed secrecy of Unulfo and Eduige. and the tea-trolley wheels and the exits and entrances of most of the characters echoing the rolling triplets in the bass, which suggest the acceleration of the plot at this point.

Minor characters like Unulfo are especially important in the absence of supernumeraries, which were very much a part of 18th-century stagings of Baroque operas but are often completely absent in modern revivals (usually due to cost and time constraints). A contemporary prompt book for the 1720 Radamisto in the V&A Museum lists at least 26 supernumeraries – 10 women and 16 to 18 men. In their roles as attendants, servants or soldiers, they served to promote or demote the changing status of the principals onstage with them. Minor characters like Unulfo can, in the absence of such supernumeraries or a chorus, be even more effective in this role, not only in establishing status but in offering commentary and contrast, enriching the depiction of the ‘principal’ characters by serving as a kind of moral weather-gauge. In Rodelinda, Bertarido is not necessarily a very likeable character, too quickly doubting Rodelinda and too self-pitying. But his obvious affection for Unulfo, and Unulfo’s unflagging devotion, redeems him. In Act 2 scene VII, when Bertarido and Rodelinda are brought together for the very first time, Bertarido kneels before embracing her and asks for forgiveness – clearly an echo of Unulfo’s similar act of obeisance in Act 1 at meeting Bertarido, which seems overly formal at the time but pays dividends later here. Has Bertarido learned – or relearned – proper conduct, from Unulfo? Heavily cutting Unulfo’s role, as many directors do, diminishes not only him but also his ‘reflectee’, Bertarido.

Like Unulfo, Rodelida’s son Flavio is also a gauge of a director’s attention to detail – one could call this silent character the most unsuperfluous of supernumeraries. A key part of the plot, Flavio forms the backbone of Claus Guth’s 2016 Teatro Real Madrid production, which takes place in an Escherian nightmare of a Georgian house surrounded by a lunar landscape. With its staircases and hallways going nowhere or turning in upon themselves as the set revolves, the house is for Guth a synecdoche of our tiny planet on which we must all get along. It is also a simulacrum of Flavio’s psyche – its many rooms locations of trauma for this boy who has witnessed God-knows-what and whose house has been invaded by an evil stepfather. While Guth reduces Unulfo’s social status, as at Glyndebourne, to that of a servant or butler, his relationship with the tormented Flavio as a kind of substitute father or uncle is touching, and serves as a contrast to the somewhat blinkered romantic or dynastic preoccupations of all the characters, including at times even Rodelinda herself.

Male friendships like that of Bertarido and Unulfo are extremely rare in Handel’s operas and oratorios. Other than Bertarido and Unulfo in Rodelinda, I can find only Arasse and Siroe in Siroe, Micah and Samson in Samson, and Didymus and Septimius in Theodora. In fact, they are rare in opera in general (La Bohème being a notable exception), as opera plots tend to privilege the erotic, the familial, or the antagonistic over the amicable: if you are not a lover or father or baddy, you are just not interesting. But this relative rarity is all the more reason for such relationships to be celebrated and explored. Handel, as we know, never married, and the character or even existence of any romantic attachments are as hotly debated as the Regietheater stagings of his operas. In his will, as Ellen Harris has described in Handel: A Life with Friends (2016), Handel reveals a large network of friends, both male and female. As it was for Handel, characters like Unulfo could and should be an invitation, not an obstacle, to modern directors.


Lawrence Zazzo is an internationally renowned counter-tenor. He is also Head of Performance and Lecturer in Music at Newcastle University. This article is based on his presentation at a Study Afternoon held in April 2018, organised by the Handel Institute in association with the Cambridge Handel Opera production of Rodelinda.

The Bubble Reputation: Virtue, Reason and Sexual Politics in Rodelinda

Thelma Lovell

Handel’s Rodelinda can be read on several levels: as a drama of conflicting passions; an advertisement for political stability; and a study in changing values from the warrior ideal of leadership to the heroism of devotion and self-sacrifice. Like all the best morality tales, it weaves its improving message into the texture of human interaction, in order to steer us towards the convergence of reason, power and virtue. The opera finds one form of closure in a triumphant vocal concerto (Mio caro bene) for the eponymous heroine who ends up with the winning hand in a game of high political stakes. But there is a further type of closure in the final chorus: a communal sigh of relief at the general rightness of things.

Haym’s libretto is based on Corneille’s Pertharite, which flopped spectacularly on its appearance in 1652. Pertharite is the uxorious hero who puts emotional attachment before worldly status; he is prepared to sacrifice his life so that his wife may marry the usurper Grimoald and hence keep the crown for herself. Rodélinde, on the other hand, is driven by the imperatives of birth, breeding, and the absolute necessity of distancing herself from the upstart regime. Initially unimpressed by the husband who returns as a distinctly unregal fugitive, she eventually accepts him – helped by the fact that Grimoald acknowledges the courage of Pertharite and his authentic moral claim to the throne: 

But the man who believes me a tyrant and nobly stands up to me,
However weak he may be does not have a slave’s heart; 
He displays a great soul that rises above calamity 
And makes up in courage what it lacks in fortune.

All suitably high-minded, not least on the part of Grimoald; Rodélinde apologises for misjudging him, and everything is restored to its proper place. Pertharite has the last word, proclaiming that ‘reputation (la gloire) is the sole prize of the noble virtues’ – yet the truism is evidently enlarged to include the integrity of the inner rather than solely the outer person. The mid-17th-century French public was perhaps not ready for this shift in conventional heroic values.

Let us consider the Handelian version, which again is far more interesting than the story of a long-suffering bereft female as the plaything of destiny. Two couples battle to maintain their own version of reality. Both of the men are kings yet (in different ways) not so. The usurper Grimoaldo fails to convince either himself or others of his new identity, while the deposed Bertarido is first imagined dead and then when he reappears simply fails to look or act with the expected dominance. His shabby demeanour attracts the scorn and disbelief of Grimoaldo, in whose scheme of things position must be signalled by outward show. The women are in a similar bind: Rodelinda was – and still feels herself to be – queen, though this is technically untrue; and Eduige is ambitious to step into Rodelinda’s shoes by marrying the actual, though inauthentic, ruler Grimoaldo. And though the female characters could not be overt political agents, they are able to operate the levers of power at one remove. Sexuality is part of the game for all four characters. 

Rodelinda’s opening cavatina strikes a pose of tragedy and rhetorical hauteur. It is a courtly lament for a queen conscious of her status, yet as she sings of her loneliness (e qui sola) the texture becomes closer and warmer; this is a suffering human being. Even so, reputation trumps all: the furious energy of her rejection of the crass Grimoaldo is fuelled by a mix of grief and an objection to becoming déclassée: gloria is not limited to chastity. Despite her iron will, Rodelinda exists in a context of other people and circumstances that she cannot entirely control but must try to read. Chief amongst these is of course Grimoaldo, whose weak point is his need to persuade himself and others of his newly-acquired authority. He begins badly, for what sort of hero is turned down by the woman he loves (or in this case, the trophy wife he thinks he deserves)? He does at least have the satisfaction of discarding his old love Eduige, who longs to share the throne with him. Staccato pomposity (Io già t’amai) proclaims that self-image is his driver. Similarly, he preens himself before Garibaldo in the jaunty Se per te: ‘I am king and with my protection you have nothing to fear, not even from my future wife’. 

It is a different story when he has been wrong-footed by Rodelinda’s terrifying condition of marriage, i.e. that he should murder her son. (In fact, Haym gives us a softer version than Corneille: in the original, Rodélinde offers to join in the murder of the boy.) Grimoaldo’s Prigionera ho l’alma in pena tells us through its repeated melodic phrases – as if rooted to the spot – that he is trapped. He cannot be the Darwinian lion who kills the cubs of his defeated rival, for (as Rodelinda points out) this would cause him to lose his gloria: a king’s standing rests on his moral reputation – his soft power – as much as compulsion. The contrary argument is made by Garibaldo, ostensibly henchman but actually Grimoaldo’s dark alter ego. Unlike the other characters, Grimoaldo never diverges from one version of reality: a crude realpolitik represented musically by great strides and uncompromising bare textures.

The game-changer in the drama is the resurrected presence of Bertarido: he pauses at his supposed funeral monument to rail at its untruthfulness. He is very much alive, and through stately dotted rhythms Handel lets us know that he is genuine royalty. The musical shock is the transition to E major in Dove sei as if, like Bertarido, we are entering a strange new world with its centre of gravity altered from the C major of the overture. From this point onwards, Bertarido and Rodelinda seem to share a private tonal domain, full of pain and confusion – as for instance  in the B minor of Ombre, piante, the E major of Morrai, sì, and perhaps especially the F sharp minor of Io t’abbraccio. Furthermore, the lyrical simplicity of Dove sei tells us that this king is full of sensibility, without the pretension of Grimoaldo. His strength is that of the inner rather than the outer man. 

As the drama progresses, the musical and psychological trajectories of the rival kings intersect. Beginning as the would-be confident reigning monarch, Grimoaldo finds himself more and more out of his depth, ending in the weary defeat of Pastorello d’un povero armento – its E minor a wistful echo of Bertarido’s E major Dove sei. Bertarido himself, on the other hand, follows a tonal path that fluctuates with his personal fortunes but at last, with the restoration of his sword, brings him back to where he truly belongs. The triumphant C major of Se fiera belva is the bright light of power and the world that so far has existed only (as he ruefully declares to his sister Eduige) in his rimembranza.  

The irony is that Bertarido’s privileging of the private over the public was not in itself enough to restore his family or his kingdom. It was rather Eduige’s thwarted passion for Grimoaldo and the desire for vengeance that led her to help Bertarido gain his freedom; it was not virtue pure and simple that caused the virtuous outcome. Eduige’s emotions and actions are crucial to the plot; in her shifts of loyalties she is a foil to the intractable Rodelinda and all too believable. She too has her pride, which caused her to spurn Grimoaldo in his previous merely ducal rank. The weak point for this pair is the craving for a royal status they have never had. In this respect, Rodelinda is always in a stronger position. Her sense of self is rooted in knowing herself to be queen. Yet without Eduige’s help, she would never have emerged triumphant.

A further irony is that Bertarido must in the end use the very force that he has rejected in favour of love. It is the warrior’s joy that he expresses when he is given the means to fight; and it is the warrior’s virtue – the virtue of the sword – that enables the more inward virtues to flourish. His principles oblige him to kill Garibaldo, even though this act potentially places Bertarido’s own life in jeopardy. By this gesture he is taking a comparable risk to Rodelinda’s, when she put her son’s life in the balance. There could be no certainty that Grimoaldo would decide that ‘my enemy’s enemy is my friend’ rather than take the opportunity to remove his competitor. 

This is where drama becomes moral fable, and where we turn to the sixth character: Unulfo. He occupies a half-way house between the stereotypical portrayal of Garibaldo and the psychological complexity of the two couples. He is both participant and commentator – the bridge between stage and audience – and the sort of person upon whom all power structures rest: stability, continuity and prudence are his guiding principles. Here he confronts a dilemma, for he serves the current regime (namely Grimoaldo) yet his sympathies are with Bertarido, both personally and because Bertarido represents the legitimate order. For this reason, when Bertarido makes a physical gesture of affection, Unulfo draws back: kingship is a token of something beyond the human and particular. At the same time, the philosopher/counsellor acts as guide and mentor to his emotionally impulsive chief.

All three of Unulfo’s arias are situated musically close to the ambit of C major, i.e. the ‘real’ world from which the opera is launched and to which it eventually returns. In the first of these (Sono i colpi della sorte) Unulfo urges Bertarido to cultivate inner strength even as he is reeling from the thought that Rodelinda is giving way. A king must temper feeling with self-control. (He gives similar advice to Grimoaldo after the shock of Rodelinda’s bargain: deh richiama, Signor, la tua virtude. In this case, significantly, it falls on deaf ears: Non più. Le voci di virtù non cara amante cor, o pur non sente.) It is Unulfo who leads Garibaldo to expound his ruthless code, as if turning to the audience to ask: ‘Surely you can’t approve of this?’ Yet the circumspect Unulfo needs a nudge to translate his true loyalty from thought to deed. Trusted by Grimoaldo to keep Bertarido under lock and key, he requires impetus from the strong female character of Eduige to understand that principles too are subject to practicalities and hierarchies. His subsequent relief and joy (Un zeffiro spirò) is a musical parallel to Grimoaldo’s earlier confidence in Se per te giungo a godere. There is, too, symbolic meaning in Bertarido’s inadvertent wounding of Unulfo: prudent virtue sometimes has to be sacrificed for a higher good. There is a time for caution, and a time for action.

In the end, Rodelinda seems to fulfil the Enlightenment dream that virtue is also rational self-interest: good in itself, it also leads to the best outcome for all concerned. Neither Rodelinda nor Bertarido had any doubts about this (though they suffered along the way), while Grimoaldo and Eduige eventually came to the same conclusion. The only dissenter – Garibaldo – lay dead and unlamented. But there is realism as well as idealism in Handel: human agency can to some extent escape destiny’s shackles, but not without a little help from chance. 


Thelma Lovell is author of A Mirror to the Human Condition: Music, Language and Meaning in the Sacred Cantatas of J.S. Bach. She lives in Cambridge.