MONTEVERDI IL RITORNO
D'ULISSE IN PATRIA Klaus Michael Grüber/Nikolaus
Harnoncourt Premiere 24 February 2002 Opernhaus, Zurich
Rolf LIEBERMANN
MEDEA Jorge Lavalli/ Daniel Klajner
21 February 2002 Opera Bastille, Paris
VERDI AIDA
Robert Wilson/Antonio Pappano 17 February 2002 La Monnaie,
Brussels
Easy travel across the Channel and by Europe's renowned train services
makes opera fancying for the British abroad affordable and pleasurable.
With a favourable exchange rate, seat prices are generally lower than
in UK. Three operas set in the ancient world seen in Europe during February
provoked thoughts about the different approaches to operatic production
now current.
MONTEVERDI IL
RITORNO D'ULISSE IN PATRIA Nikolaus Harnoncourt/Klaus
Michael Grüber Opernhaus, Zurich
The earliest of them was the 72 year old Monteverdi's Il
Ritorno d'Ulisse in Patria of 1640. Nikolaus Harnoncourt,
who first directed it as long ago as 1967, considers the radical innovations
in new opera of the 1600s to have been as important and revolutionary
as the early 20th C assault upon tonality.
Klaus Michael Grüber's new production (assisted by Ellen Hammer)
supports Monteverdi's aim to put the human drama in the foreground and
individualise characters through musical forms. The sets (Gilles Aillaud
with Bernard Michel) have an apt simplicity, eschewing fussy detail
and spectacular effects. The colours are cool, predominantly white,
blue and black, transporting us to a modern day, rather poor Greek village.
Penelope's residence is shown as a stark white wall, like a child's
depiction of an oracular face, with windows and the doorway opening
blacked out. The cobbled ground, which revolves to indicate distance
and the passage of time, is painted blue and white, with the face of
a God in the foreground. Attention is focussed and concentrated upon
the protagonists. Eva Dessecker's costumes are updated and relevant,
with Penelope in simple black, like the widow of twenty years she feels
herself to be, and she is surrounded by village characters we could
have met on holiday.
The complex story of human fate at the mercy of Time, Fortune and Love
is not always clarified by this staging and at times we were as confused
as the principal players, some of whom are in and out of disguise. A
clean-shaven Ulisse ( is deposited on the shore from a small boat, which
is immediately seen to break up in the storm. Seeming confused as to
who and where he is, Ulisse is soon cloaked and disguised as a bearded
elder by Minerva, she herself appearing as a jaunty shepherdess. A couple
of argumentative old men prove to be Jupiter and Neptune, the latter's
tri-partite beard his trident. There is a reunion of father and son.
Reality
becomes tenuous, with Penelope's importunate suitors become puppeteers,
their gaudy puppets ridiculous, and each in turn too weak to draw what
purports to be Ulisse's famous bow (echoes of the suitors in The
Merchant of Venice and of Walkure). Ulisse alone does
so easily, and then in pique destroys the puppets, thereby revealing
his identity, which Penelope is however slow to accept. His cloak and
bearded facial disguise are removed to reveal a surprisingly youthful
man in a workaday pullover, not the stuff of legend. Were the legendary
exploits fantasies, a case of amnesia rather than heroic deeds, we begin
to wonder irreverently?
The singing of a large cast led by Dietrich Henschel, doubling
as Ulisse and Human Frailty, and Vesselina Kasarova as Penelope,
is generally good though a little variable. Two young lovers duet cheerfully,
the lanky Roger Widmer over-keen to show off his big tenor voice at
the expense of his partner Malin Hartelius. Several minor characters
have the limelight for lengthy solo scenes, one of them the comic relief
character Iro, a buffoon who in this production is also proprietor of
the travelling puppet show. Penelope's part lies rather low to display
Kasarova's characterful and dramatic mezzo to best advantage, but she
conveys her grief and withdrawal from the life around her with convincing
gestures and semi-stylised poses. The crucial recognition scene between
husband and faithful wife was however less moving than I recall it in
Pierre Audi's production at the newly opened Amsterdam Operatheater,
now many years ago.
Before Monteverdi's innovations, intricate vocal lines and highly developed
polyphony had obscured words until they were incomprehensible. His reforms
gave back the primacy of text, and in Orfeo he restored the balance;
for Ulisse , 33 years after Orfeo, he set stories of Homer,
the details of which were known to cultured opera goers, so that every
character was immediately recognisable. This is no longer so, therefore
it is all the more important to make the words readily 'available',
by whatever means.
Harnoncourt uses a fairly large orchestra with his familiar tight control,
and has varied continuo instrumentations for the singers, reserving
trumpets for scenes with the rather endearing Gods. The playing is tidy
and idiomatic and this version accords well with our expectations. The
original source is so sketchy that different versions have proliferated
and will no doubt continue to do so. It is believed that the lack of
printed scores reflects the advanced improvisational skills of the time,
and also Monteverdi's desire to prevent unauthorised copying; for like
considerations, Harnoncourt withheld the parts of his earlier realisation
of Ulisse!
In Zurich, Italian is the least spoken of the Swiss languages and the
Homer text in Giacomo Badoaro's libretto is often quite complex. Without
full comprehension there were inevitable longeurs in what was a long
evening (three hours with one interval). Monteverdi achieves lucidity
by thinning the accompanying textures, but at Zurich his best endeavours
are unfortunately thwarted. The vexed issue of surtitles came to the
fore for us again as we watched, often quite confused despite having
read the synopsis, and it was a topic of interval discussion. We met
with agreement that surtitles would not have interfered with the staged
drama's impact and rather would have helped substantially; people are
by now used to having a choice of text languages on DVD and surtitles
are increasingly provided in opera houses after earlier purist resistance,
which becomes harder to sustain when the sense is so often far from
clear even with opera in native language. I would rate this Ulisse
as worth seeing but not meriting a substantial special journey.
ROLF LIEBERMANN MEDEA
Jorge Lavalli/ Daniel Klajner Opera Bastille, Paris
Rolf
Liebermann (1910-1999) was responsible for the Hamburg Opera when
it was at the forefront of contemporary opera during the great years
of 1959-73, and again from 1985-88. Between those spells, from 1973-1980
he was administrator-general in charge of Paris Opera. He died in Paris,
having just completed Medea, the last of his five operas
and it is there that it has been premiered in the German of Ursula Haas's
libretto. Precisely 70 mins in duration without interval, this production
by Jorge Lavalli had visually impressive moments in its deployment
of the Opera Bastille's stage machinery, but it was short on emotional
resonance. Credit is due to Paris Opera for mounting this out of the
way recent opera as a change from the usual war-horses, and to the large
audience at the Bastille who appeared well satisfied.
Graciela Galan's costumes for the black women of Colchide were fetching,
though not ideally designed for the big rape scene. The white populous
was depicted simplistically in white from top to toe. The various sexualities
of Medea's matriarchal sect and the Greeks were depicted with coy understatement,
no nudity for the pre-sacrificial fertility celebration or gang rape
nor for the fairly explicit homoerotic love scene between the men which
preluded Medea's revenge. It was a nice touch to depict a warm shower
with dry ice, but the promised final conflagration was regrettably left
to our imagination. The best image was the first with the virgin celebrants
stuck up on Agostino Pace's walls before sliding down one by one on
wires, which remained invisible until they moved into the action, still
encumbered like Peter Pan.
The music, from gamelan (Prince of the Pagodas!) to generalised,
rather soft-edged 20 C modernism, was in the safe hands of Daniel
Klajner, who had conducted Medea in Berne, but unfortunately
little was of a kind to linger in the memory. The chief principals and
supporting soloists put across their parts manfully and womanfully to
limited effect, but there were some powerful choruses and interesting
orchestral interludes. The problem, as so often with contemporary opera,
was with the singing line, ungrateful save for the young Creon, with
whom Jason was besotted, and who had the best part. The confident Philadelphian
counter tenor Lawrence Zazzo, who made his debut as Oberon at London's
Royal Academy of Music, is a name to note.
VERDI AIDA Robert Wilson
/ Antonio Pappano February 2002 La Monnaie, Brussels
Medea was a costly production, as one has come to expect from
major international opera houses, and it brought to mind, by contrast,
other treatments of ancient mythology such as Birtwistle's multi-layered
exploration of the Orpheus legends or, a few days earlier, the radical
rethinking of the Egyptian/Ethiopian confrontation in Verdi's Aida,
premiered lavishly in Cairo 1871, and now at Brussels virtually reinvented
by Robert Wilson, triumphantly making it relevant to our
times.
Aida is a problem opera, holding its place in the popularity
stakes with its opportunities for grandiose display on the largest scale,
rather than the central human drama, which has often taken second place.
Wilson has blown away both the 19th C tradition of fantastical orientalist
fantasies, as represented in the Scala, Milan DVD with Pavarotti (Arthaus
100 058), and dispensed with the sort of gratuitous cruelty in the
exercise of power in David Pountney's sometimes incomprehensible production
for Munich
State Opera, which all but suffocated the music. Wilson has stripped
the work to its core elements of emotional conflict and ethical choices.
His pared down, but highly sophisticated, staging has created space
for the music to speak on equal terms with the visual spectacle. The
characters, dressed simply, move formally at a measured pace, maintaining
statuesque hieratic poses and hand positions which suggest images familiar
from ancient Egyptian art. I found myself comfortably accepting this
alien mode of representation immediately, its strangeness a relief from
the usual operatic stock gestures, gripping attention and helping to
universalise the drama that passed before us, affecting rather than
distancing.
This production places Aida in a defamiliarised ancient world
which accentuates ever present human conundrums and conflicts. Wilson
has created a stunningly beautiful stage picture for the Nile Scene.
Warm earth colours indicate the desert beyond a peaceful band of water
in the middle distance, the whole suffused with heavenly blue lighting,
a perfect counterpoint to the human distress and tragedy unfolding.
The casting was notable, the singers working as a team, never upstaging
each other, holding onto high notes or exaggerating climaxes of familiar
arias. Ildiko Komlosi (Amneris) made a notable debut at Brussels,
substituting for the indisposed Elena Zaremba and fitting in easily
with Norma Fantini (Aida), Johan Botha (Radames) and Mark
S. Doss (Amonasro). Antonio Pappano elicited playing of the
highest order, breathlessly intense with sobbing violins underscoring
Aida's grief and quiet passages which held the audience spellbound.
This was a production which has lodged in the memory permanently and
will come to mind whenever one sees Aida in the future; it is
a co-production with the Royal Opera, Covent Garden and Londoners should
not miss seeing it there at the earliest opportunity, when Antonio Pappano
will be established as Music Director.
Peter Grahame Woolf