Gounod’s Faust has a particular place in my affections.
In the early 1950s, having attended one of Gigli’s farewell
concerts - only Frank Sinatra managed more - and being used
to listening to opera arias at home, my parents took me to my
first live opera, a performance of Faust performed by
Sadler’s Wells in Manchester. The cast was memorable. Harvey
Allan as Mephisto, Roland Jones in the eponymous role and the
redoubtable Amy Shuard as Marguerite. The production was made
more memorable by the use of ultra-violet light. Mephistopheles
flashing and glowing eye effects remain with me in memory sixty
years on. In those far away 1950s Gounod’s Faust was
one of the most popular operas in the repertoire. A new production
at New York’s Metropolitan Opera in 2004, where the work had
not been seen for a number of years, was the 714th - no less
- by the Met since 1883; no wonder it was once called the Faustspielhaus!
Rather suddenly it seemed to fall out of fashion among those
in control of opera houses. It was deemed rather trite by cerebral
conductors and critics who clamoured for new works and a move
away dependence on those from the 19th century. A production
at English National Opera in 1985 restored the spoken dialogue
to reveal a significantly different work, an Opéra comique.
It did not, however, presage a revival of interest. My last
live performance of Faust was by Opera North in 1991
with an excellent cast of Richard Van Allan, Anne Dawson and
Arthur Davies. Whilst not as memorable as my first, the production
was sensible and recognisable although it did not include, presumably
because of cost, the ballet. Meanwhile whilst the Verdi renaissance
now has all his twenty-eight titles on CD and the welcome Rossini
renaissance has gathered pace, Faust continued to gather
dust.
Faust was composed for the Théâtre Lyrique in Paris in
the opéra comique tradition with spoken dialogue. However,
Gounod’s intentions were butchered by the management and the
diva with the result that the premiere in 1859 was not as the
composer intended. Over the next ten years, as Faust
was seen and acclaimed all over the world, Gounod added to and
amended the score to meet the needs of various singers and managements.
The ballet was added for production at the Paris Opéra. In consequence
there is no definitive version of the work. With much autograph
material in private hands none seems likely. The timing of this
performance indicates some cuts to normal fully-staged versions
and certainly is not as complete as many CD recordings such
as that on Teldec (4509 90872). Contemporary reviews questioned
some cuts, and their rationale, particularly the omission of
Marguerite’s Ils ne revient pas and Siébel’s Si le
bonheur.
When Covent Garden announced this production under Antonio Pappano,
its Musical Director, I thought it might presage renewed interest
in the work. It has hardly seemed so. When it was announced
that it was to be broadcast on terrestrial television in the
UK by the BBC - not something that happened very often - I didn't
feel like Nostradamus in predicting a DVD version. It is just
that it has been a long time coming. Perhaps its appearance
on EMI rather than Covent Garden’s own Opus Arte indicates delicate
negotiations relating to artists’ contracts. Anyway, filmed
in High Definition it is technically superb viewing via
my Panasonic up-scaling Blu Ray player and latest LCD/LED television.
This Covent Garden production is set and dressed in the time
of the work's composition rather than the medieval period of
Goethe's conception and Gounod's intention. The late Patrick
Connor’s booklet essay gives a picture of Paris in the period
before Baron Haussman’s revitalisation of parts of the city
during the Second Empire. The purpose of the essay is questionable
given that Marguerite is here somewhat idiosyncratically and
exquisitely dressed and coifed. It also seems to be in contradiction
of the production’s set and milieu as well as the dress of the
other locals. A note on the chequered early history of the opera,
and its change from an opéra comique, would have been
more germane. Nonetheless the other costumes and sets were such
that I could easily recognise the opera as Faust. Méphistophélès’s
six costumes, including appearing in drag complete with tiara
in the Walpurgis Night (May Day night) scene (Disc 2 Ch.9) is
a little over the top. The acrobats and dancers in the Kermase
(Easter Fair) with its Cabaret Enfer is well done with
the chorus singing a vigorous student drinking song (Disc 1
Ch.5 as they do later in the Soldiers’ Chorus (Disc 2 Ch.3).
The orchestral playing under Pappano's is variably paced with
some rather fast tempi at times, but overall the dramatic portrayal
is outstanding as is the contribution of the chorus, so important
in this opera. The solo singing is more mixed but never less
than good. Alagna as Faust is a little dry-toned at the start,
but his idiomatic French is easy and fluent and his portrayal
believable as an old stooped man regretting his lost youth,
albeit in close-up his face could have been more lined (Disc
1 (Ch.1-2). His transformation into the ardent young virile
Faust after Méphistophélès has shown him a vision of Marguerite
is well managed and his skipping a cartwheel a bonus as to the
wasted energy of youth (Chs.3-4). Alagna delivers an eloquently
phrased Salut! Demeure chaste et pure, (Ch.14) which
is rapturously received. As Marguerite, Angela Gheorghiu is
rather too knowing in The King of Thule and somewhat
over-avaricious as she surveyed the jewels (Chs. 16-17). Nonetheless
her singing is fluent, pure-toned, eloquently phrased throughout
and with a nice trill. Some of the best singing of the evening
comes from Simon Keenlyside, in a consummately acted portrayal
of Valentin, Marguerite's brother. His Avant de quitter
(Ch.6) is smooth, full-bodied and rounded of tone; it is a major
vocal highlight of the performance whilst his duet with Sophie
Koch’s Siébel through to Valentin’s death (Disc 2 Chs.4-7) is
a sung and acted highlight. The Méphistophélès of Bryn Terfel
is, as one might expect of this Welshman of the theatre, a histrionic
tour de force. His size, stage presence and flexibility
of facial expression suit the part like a glove. His French
is good and both Song of the Golden calf and Serenade
(Disc 1 Ch.7 and disc 2 CH.5) are well phrased and expressive.
However, in the ultimate analysis his sonorous bass-baritone,
no matter how well he colours his tone, lacks the sheer heft
that a full bass could give the part although on DVD his acting
powers obscure that deficiency in some degree. His limitation
is most evident, maybe not helped by his costume either, when
Méphistophélès taunts Marguerite as she comes to pray and his
demons dance around; the brief scene does not chill the spine
or make the hairs stand up as it should (Disc 2 Chs.1-2).
McVicar is renowned as an innovative director and the production
revels in a gothic, seamy Second French Empire setting. As with
most modern producers there are seemingly illogical idiosyncrasies
such as Siébel having a wooden leg and yet being required to
push and ride a bicycle. Similarly, a bearded hairy-chested
Terfel in drag is largely pointless; it would have been better
if he had looked a little more like a traditional Old Nick at
that point as he raises the spirits of hell for Walpurgis Night.
As to this Mephisto’s attempt at a bit of nooky with Martha,
I thought it was only others that Méphistophélès led into temptation
in pursuit of their souls.
Although the booklet gives the essay in English and a brief
synopsis in French and German as well as English, there are
no mentions of the set or costume designers which I provide
above. Likewise the lack of Chapter details in the booklet is
a serious deficiency not obviated by the brief synopsis. These
act details are as follows; Act 1, Disc 1 Chs. 1-4. Act 2, Chs.5-10.
Act 3. Chs.11-23. The final two acts are on disc two with Act
4 on Chs. 1-7 and act 5 on Chs. 8-15.
Competition on DVD is sparse. Faust has fared badly in
respect of reasonably modern versions with an acceptable cast.
The VAI version recorded in Japan in 1973 has embedded Japanese
subtitles that remain on screen. However, its cast of Alfredo
Kraus, Nicolai Ghiaurov and Renata Scotto would be difficult
to match today (see review).
The 1985 Vienna production by Ken Russell, the enfant terrible
of English music films, is issued by DG. It features Bénackova’s
vocally admired Marguerite, Ruggero Raimondi camping up Méphistophélès
and Francisco Araiza in the title role (00440 073 4108).
Robert J Farr