Death in Venice ( Tod in Venedig ): A
Dance of Death by John Neumeier
A film for television directed by Thomas Grimm
Music: Johann Sebastian Bach, Richard Wagner
Choreography, Staging: John Neumeier
Set: Peter Schmidt
Costumes: John Neumeier, Peter Schmidt
Lighting Concept: John Neumeier
Cast:
Gustav von Aschenbach: Lloyd Riggins
Tadzio's mother: Laura Cazzaniga
Tadzio: Edvin Revazov
Frederick the Great: Ivan Urban
La Barbarina: Hélène Bouchet
Aschenbach's Concepts: Silvia Azzoni, Alexandre Riabko
The Hairdresser: Jirí Bubenícek
The Guitar Player: Otto Bubenícek
A young Aschenbach: Anton Alexandrov
Jaschu, Tadzio's friend: Arsen Megrabian
Hamburg Ballett
rec. live, Festspielhaus, Baden-Baden, 2004
Bonus: Another Love Death [Der andere Liebestod], a film by Norbert
Beilharz, including an interview with John Neumeier and rehearsal footage
Picture format: NTSC 4:3
Sound format: PCM Stereo
Region code: 0 (Worldwide)
Subtitles (Bonus only): German, English, French
ARTHAUS DVD 101-622 [123:00 (Ballet) + 59:00 (Bonus)]
A modern myth, as it were, Thomas Mann’s novella Death in Venice
(Der Tod in Venedig, 1912)takes its inspiration from art. It also
continues to stimulate adaptations in which the themes of the story to resonate
in various ways. In addition to the references to classical myth, Mann himself
acknowledged the physical description of his hero Gustav Aschenbach resembled
the face of Gustav Mahler. This served to connect his story to a contemporary
musician, albeit without biographical overtones. The story acquired new life
as a film by Visconti (1971) and as an opera by Britten (1973). In transforming
the story into ballet, choreographer John Neumeier uses movement for its execution.
The result is a work which stands well on its own. It re-envisions the story
and offers interpretations of the music Neumeier used in this new context.
As with his other ballets, notably the ones based on the music of Mahler, Neumeier
chose significant works for the score. In Death in Venice Neumeier makes
use of music by Bach and Wagner: Bach’s Musical Offering, BWV 1079;
the Bourrée from Bach’s Suite for Lute, BWV 996; various excerpts
from Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde, including the famous prelude
to Act 1 and the third-act Liebestod; the “Bacchanale” from
Tannhaüser) extracts from the Wesendonck-Lieder; and Webern’s
orchestration of the six-voiced ricercar from Bach’s Musical Offering.
The choices underscore the two aesthetic poles of Mann’s story. As Neumeier
stated in the notes published with the DVD, “When I decided to translate
the novella into dance, I knew from the beginning that I would use the music
of Johann Sebastian Bach for the rational, intellectual, Apollonian world of
strict order that characterizes Aschenbach’s creations. ...” For
the contrasting Dionysian world, the logical choice was Wagner. Neumeier’s
selections from nineteenth-century operas are appropriate to this version of
Death in Venice.
Neumeier’s scenario hinges on the depiction of Gustav Aschenbach as an
esteemed choreographer. He is neither the writer Mann described in his story
(and in Britten’s libretto) nor the composer in Visconti’s film.
The action is shifted to the eighteenth-century court of Frederick the Great.
In the course of completing a ballet for the Prussian court, Aschenbach encourages
a mysterious stranger, whose arrival prompts the choreographer to leave Germany.
Aschenbach finds himself in Venice, where he encounters the Polish youth Tadzio
and becomes infatuated with the boy. This inspires Dionysian dreams in Aschenbach’s
psyche. As he wakes to real life in Venice, a cholera epidemic strikes the city.
Instead of fleeing, Aschenbach stays. His unfinished ballet entitled “Frederick
the Great” is his legacy after dying in Venice. This follows the outlines
of Mann’s story, including the unfinished Frederick the Great. The history
of the monarch in Mann’s novella becomes a ballet in Neumeier’s
adaptation, a detail which suggests autobiographical elements.
Neumeier’s use of the famous novella as a point of departure sets the
bar high for creating dance that translates the story effectively. Neumeier
succeeds in meeting the challenge with his medium becoming an apt vehicle for
retelling Mann’s story. In this regard the element of abstraction works
well within the structure, so that it is possible to enter into the concept
of communicating the narrative through dance. Thus, the choreography in the
opening scene projects the textures and motion found in a fugue by Bach. This
in turn suggests the kinds of abstract dances associated with the fictional
protagonist (here portrayed convincingly by Lloyd Riggins). Neumeier’s
own facility at choreography is evident in the contrastingly passionate dances
that underscore Aschenbach’s fascination with Tadzio. He is, after all,
responding to the music. The selection of pieces is another masterstroke which
serves as the means to connect dance and narrative. The musical element stands
apart from the way Visconti used the Adagietto from Mahler’s Fifth
Symphony throughout the film Death in Venice. In the latter the recurrence
of the same music in various contexts differs from the ways in which Neumeier
juxtaposed different kinds of works in his ballet. Wisely he avoids the inclusion
of any Mahler; no suggestion of any intertextual element between this new ballet
and Visconti’s film. While Neumeier uses a number of pieces, the choreography
allows them to cohere and this video usefully shows how this works. With stage
direction as nimble as would occur with a play, the sense of timing found in
this performance merits attention for the way it allows the entire structure
to flow with easy eloquence.
As ballet, this conception of the story works well on various levels. The evocation
of the eighteenth century milieu is readily found in the music. The use of selected
props prevents the ballet from becoming a costume drama; the use of tricorn
hats and period jackets is sufficient in this regard. Likewise, the mirroring
that is part of the choreography throughout the ballet sets up the climactic
scene between Aschenbach and Tadzio. This aspect of dance further connects the
treatment of fugue in the first part of the ballet with the intimate scene at
the end. At the same time, the element of music stands out in the treatment
of the music and the visual reminders of scores. The use of Peters editions
of Bach’s music as a prop not only presents the name of the composer unquestionably
on the stage, but also suggest the kind of reverence for the score that parallels
the way the book of scripture functions in a liturgical setting.
A modern work of art, Neumeier’s ballet merits attention for its convincing
translation of Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice in dance. With a cast
and production shaped by Neumeier, the video offers an authentic rendering of
the 2004 ballet for future audiences to appreciate. It is moving for the way
the story becomes vivid without a single word of dialogue. Neumeier’s
Death in Venice demonstrates the choreographer’s mastery of the
genre.
James L. Zychowicz
Neumeier’s Death in Venice demonstrates the choreographer’s
mastery.
Tracklist
Opening Credits / Introduction [2:01]
Creation and Fame [27:48]
On the Brink of Exhaustion [10:37]
A Sensation of Swimming-The Journey to Venice [3:33]
The Silent Encounter -Hôtel des Bains [19:15]
In Elysium-On the Lido [23:01]
A Dionysian Dream [7:27]
Metamorphosis [5:37]
Dance of death-cholera in Venice [5:55]
The Pure Sound of the Piano: Decision and Farewell [8:09]
Liebestod [7:23]
Credits [1:28]