Handel’s contemporaries shunned “Theodora”. But it is a masterpiece

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Handel’s contemporaries shunned “Theodora”. But it is a masterpiece
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Handel’s “Theodora” looks forward to a time beyond divisions of faith

Luck was against him: a pair of minor earthquakes had kept music-lovers at home. But “Theodora” was anyway a tough sell—a stately, sombre drama about a virtuous Christian heroine, martyred for her faith under a despotic Roman governor. “Never mind,” the German-born maestro reportedly quipped of the disappointing house; “the music will sound better.”

By May of the same year, Handel had bounced back. Charity performances of his earlier oratorio, “Messiah”, established it as the hall-filling favourite it remains. Yet he had packed the long-neglected “Theodora” with ravishing music at least the equal of its more famous forerunner. The composer rated “He saw the lovely youth”, sung by a chorus of persecuted Christians, above “Hallelujah” in “Messiah”.

On January 31st the Royal Opera House will welcome “Theodora” back to the Covent Garden stage for the first time since that ill-starred debut. As Handel’s less-celebrated music-dramas returned to favour in the late 20th century, singers learned to love the oratorio’s ardour and tenderness. Its crowning triumph came in 1996, when the maverick director Peter Sellars staged it at the Glyndebourne Festival.

Katie Mitchell, the director of the new production, promises a feminist reading of a work that has the bravery of unbowed women at its heart. Handel’s settings, from a libretto by Thomas Morell, lend a spellbinding loveliness to this tale of conscience and resistance. Harry Bicket, the conductor, describes it as “heartfelt, introspective, achingly beautiful music”, about “people who are struggling with absolute moral problems”.

It has taken more than a quarter of a millennium. But with its enduring emotions, set to music that stops time, Handel’s grave and warm late masterpiece deserves its Covent Garden applause.This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline "He on wings could rise"

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