Already seen at the Met and Amsterdam, this inspired production of Lulu, one of Alban Berg’s two seminal operas of the 20th century with designs and direction by the renowned South African artist William Kentridge, arrives at the ENO.

The pairing works brilliantly. Kentridge, holding a concurrent exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery in London, is known for his animated films of pen and ink drawings which he erases and appends frame by frame. Here he projects drawings onto the set to provide a monochrome, period expressionist decor while at the same time commenting on the action, either depicting it or revealing the characters’ innermost thoughts. This technique also speaks to the heart of the opera: how Lulu, the object of desire, offers all things to all men in an ever-shifting set of identities projected onto her – a multiplicity of possibilities.

Excellent Brenda Rae makes a suitably capricious femme fatale, surrounded a very strong cast of those helplessly pulled into Lulu’s death-dealing orbit, including Willard White operating his particular brand of authoritative menace, and American bass-baritone James Morris as her first husband and nemesis Jack the Ripper.