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SEEN
AND HEARD INTERNATIONAL OPERA REVIEW
Massenet, Thaїs :
Soloists, Metropolitan Opera Chorus and Orchestra,
Jesús López-Cobos (conductor) Metropolitan Opera, New
York 2.1.2009 (MB)
Cast:
Cenobite
monks – Daniel Clark Smith, Roger Andrews, Kurt
Phinney, Richard Pearson, Craig Montgomery
Palémon – Alain Vernhes
Athanaël – Thomas Hampson
Guard – Trevor Scheunemann
Crobyle – Alyson Cambridge
Myrtale – Ginger Costa-Jackson
Nicias – Michael Schade
Thaïs – Renée Fleming
La Charmeuse – Leah Partridge
Albine – Maria Zifchak
Solo dancer – Zahra Hashemian
Violin solo – David Chan
Production:
John Cox
(producer)
Christian Lacroix (costumes for Renée Fleming)
Duane Schuler (lighting)
Sara Jo Slate (choreographer)
Renée Fleming as Thaïs
Before coming to
the production, it is worth commenting upon the score itself. It has
odd moments, such as the offstage music at the beginning of the
second scene of Act II – very well performed. There is also some
slightly more interesting music by the oasis in the third act,
although it is hardly ‘superbly effective’, to quote the wildly
enthusiastic programme note by Thomas May. For the most part,
however, it is insipid, with the odd very watered-down Wagnerism.
Pelléas this is not, in any sense. Sometimes, such music can sound
better than it is. I imagine that Sir Thomas Beecham might have
worked some magic upon it. Jesús López-Cobos did not, seeming
content to let it flow, or sometimes drag. The playing of the Met
orchestra sounded routine; it is easy to sympathise. More worryingly
still, so in thrall did the conductor seem to Fleming that he often
appeared to be following her rather than vice versa. And what we
might charitably term her tempo fluctuations were more than a little
on the arbitrary side
Thomas Hampson as Athanaël
If ever a work
cried out for Regietheater it was this: a new twist just might have
granted some dramatic credibility to what is at best kitsch, but
more often plain uninteresting. As the reader may have guessed, such
was not to be in this production shipped in from the Lyric Opera of
Chicago. John Cox had us veer between poster-paint scenes of the
Egyptian desert and an Alexandria that more or less resembled modern
Las Vegas. The cast seemed more or less left to fend for themselves,
for the real point of the production seemed to be to showcase the
dress designs of Christian Lacroix. They might have worked wonders
for a fundraising operatic gala but they had little connection with
anything else that was going on. Fleming’s countless changes of
wardrobe – they probably were not that many, yet their focal nature
made it seem as if they were – resembled the behaviour of a
television hostess for an awards ceremony. The last one was almost –
but not quite – surreally inappropriate for someone who had entered
a convent and was on her deathbed. All too lengthy scene changes,
not only between but even within acts, dissipated what little
dramatic tension there might have been. And certain members of the
audience seemed unable even to listen, applauding before numbers had
finished, perhaps most bizarrely during the celebrated violin
Méditation. What happened once the Méditation had come to an end
verged upon the incredible. Not only was there applause, but
López-Cobos joined in and summoned the soloist to his feet in the
pit. Was this a post-modern take upon performance, reception, and so
on? It would have been irritating or worse if it had been, but it
just appeared to be part of the same ‘gala experience’. If the
performers and production team do not even try to take the work
seriously, it is a little much to ask others to do so.
What of the
singing? That was better, though hardly outstanding. Fleming at her
best sounded at her best but her diction was variable and she
exhibited some surprisingly ropy intonation. Thomas Hampson was more
dramatically credible as Athanaël. During the first act, his
performance sometimes tended towards crudity, but it might be argued
that this was not inappropriate for the character. Later on, he
became more mellifluous, although his French did not always sound
idiomatic. Michael Schade was better in that respect as Nicias, even
though he sometimes sounded a little out of vocal sorts. (I am not
sure that I can blame him; he would surely have preferred to be
singing Tamino.) It was quite a relief to hear the French style –
both verbal and musical – of Alain Vernhes’s Palémon. I was not
surprised when consulting the programme afterwards to discover that
the role had been assumed by a Frenchman. Maria Zifchak’s small
contribution as Albine was therefore all the more to be cherished,
since she had no such native advantage.
What I cannot
understand, though, is why one would choose this work if one were
Renée Fleming. It seems difficult to believe that there was any
other reason for its revival. And yet, surely there are so many
other, more gratifying roles in which she could have excelled. Much
as I may deplore it, I can understand the cult of the singer, but it
is an odd cult indeed if the music and the drama are so uninvolving.
Thaïs or the Marschallin? I should have thought that decision would
be, as many Americans like to say, a ‘no-brainer’.
Mark Berry
Pictures © Ken Howard / Metropolitan Opera
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