Virtual Farm Boy

You can take the boy off the farm, but you can't take the farm out of the boy.

Tag: Richard Strauss

A weekend at Opera Theatre of St. Louis

I was in St. Louis this past weekend to attend three performances at the Opera Theatre of St. Louis, founded in 1976 with a mission of performing standard as well as new and unusual works in English, with casts of young American singers.  The noted British stage director Colin Graham was the artistic director until just a few years ago, shortly before his death.  As a protege of Benjamin Britten, Graham was responsible for presenting many of Britten’s works in St. Louis, including the four-act version of Billy Budd and Gloriana (with Christine Brewer, in 2005, which was my first encounter with the company).

This season was typical, with Mozart’s Il Pastor Fido, Puccini’s La Boheme, Richard Strauss’s Salome, and John Corigliano’s The Ghosts of Versailles, in a newly revised version designed for smaller opera theaters than the Metropolitan Opera, which commissioned the work and first performed it in 1991.  In the space of two days, I saw the Corigliano, Strauss and Puccini works.

La Boheme is Puccini’s weepy masterpiece.  I don’t feel like I’ve had a satisfying performance unless my eyes get moist at the end.  This was no exception, with a talented young cast that looked the part of the young Parisians.  The production was imaginative, funny and touching.

I had real reservations about Salome:  how would it work in a small theater the size of the Loretto-Hilton at Webster University, where Opera Theatre performs? The role Salome was being performed by Kelly Kaduce, a local favorite, having previously performed as Cio-Cio San in Madama Butterfly and as the title character in David Carlson’s Anna Karenina (recently released on CD).  I am happy to report that she was not swallowed alive by the part itself or the orchestra.  (Strauss famously commented the role of Salome requires the body of a 16-year-old and the voice of Brunnhilde, a virtually impossible physical and vocal combination.)  Kelly Kaduce was convincing as the Judaean princess who falls in lust with John the Baptist and demands the Baptist’s head on a silver platter after Salome agrees to dance the “dance of the seven veils” for her pedophile step-father King Herod, while her mother, Herodias watches.  Kelly Kaduce’s voice rode the waves of the the orchestra sound, but she was also surprisingly intimate when necessary.  Just as La Boheme should make one weepy, Salome should make the audience feel like they should go out for a collective brisk walk at the end of Salome’s twenty-minute final scene in which she fondles and makes out with the severed head of John the Baptist.  (I’ve never before witnessed a severed head used as a sex toy.) Ms. Kaduce’s antics with the head make no secret that this is a horny, spoiled teenage girl who gets what she wants.  The whole opera had the necessary creepiness to be effective.  A word about the staging: the libretto (based on Oscar Wilde’s play of the same name, originally written in French, translated into German for the opera libretto, and here performed in English) calls for John the Baptist to be in a dark cistern below the stage floor.  The St. Louis theater does not have that capability, so the director Séan Curran and stage designer Bruno Schwengl, came up with an imaginative solution, a huge round plate at the back of the stage that is removed to reveal an iris-like aperture that opens and closes to reveal John the Baptist (and later to admit the executioner into the Baptist’s dungeon.)  Gregory Dahl was hunky and commanding vocally as John the Baptist (although, dressed in loin cloth, it was hard to disguise the fact that this desert prophet had not missed any meals.)  Michael Hayes and Maria Zifchak were effective as Herod and Herodias.  This was a very compelling and memorable afternoon of music theater.  Kelly Kaduce would likely never sing the role in a house as large as the Met, but she made a brilliant impression here.  When she was on the stage (which is most of the time) she was the center of attention.

My real reason for traveling to St. Louis was to see John Corigliano’s The Ghosts of Versailles, which had received its first monumental production at the Met, directed by Colin Graham, in 1991, and for which no expense was spared, technically or musically.  It was revived once at the Met, appeared at the Chicago Lyric Opera and perhaps once in Europe, then fell off the map:  it was simply too expensive to produce.  The Met performers included such stars as Teresa Stratas and Renee Fleming, as well as many more (there are 25 named parts in the opera, plus a huge orchestra, large chorus, dancers, and more. The Met production used every bit of the Met’s enormous technical capability.)  The plot is far too complicated to tell here, but you can find it here.

The new revised performing edition, capably conducted by Brooklyn Philharmonic conductor Michael Christie, was a brilliant success.  The score reflects the three levels of the opera: atmospherics for the ghosts, including Marie Antoinette, Louis XVI and the playwright Beaumarchais, that inhabit Versailles; pseudo-Mozartian/Rossinian music for the “opera within an opera” that is presented for the Queen; and “realistic” music for the scenes that take place during the blending of time of the opera and the French revolution.  There are so many moments of extraordinary beauty:  Marie Antoinette’s phrase first set to the text “There once was a golden bird” which returns time and again, seeming to represent how the queen was caught up in events not of her choosing; Beaumarchais’s phrase “I risk my soul for you, Antonia”, in which he declares his love for the Queen; the comic music of Figaro, Rosina, Cherubino and the other characters of Beaumarchais’s “opera.”

The soprano Maria Kanyova was perfect as Marie Antoinette.  At first she almost seemed to be channeling Teresa Stratas, who originated the role. (I suspect, however, that this was more the fact of the vocal writing than any conscious attempt to sound like Stratas.)  Ms. Kanyova’s acting was impeccable.  At the end, when she is a tiny figure alone, center stage, reaching out her arms to be joined for eternity with her true love, the playwright Beaumarchais, it was a simple, but spine-tingling moment that I will carry with me for a long time.  It was an astonishing coup de théatre.

The character Beaumarchais is second only to Marie Antoinette in importance in the opera.  Baritone James Westman commanded his role in its many aspects, both musical and dramatic.  There was not a weak link in the entire huge cast.  The staging took advantage of the limitations of the small stage–all of the Met’s grandeur wasn’t necessary.  This new look at the opera made us examine the relationships among the characters.  I agree with critic Sarah Bryan Miller in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that this was a “must-see evening in the theater.”

My two experiences, separated by four years, confirm that opera is very alive and well in St. Louis.  The three performances that I attended were all sold out, and the company seems to have a strong fundraising community upon which to draw.  May they continue to thrive.

Söderström, Von Stade, Battle in a great operatic moment

One day recently George and I were trying to figure out who the stars were in a performance of Strauss’s Der Rosenkavalier that we saw when the Metropolitan Opera was on tour in Cleveland in the early ’80s.  I remembered for sure that the Marschallin was Elisabeth Söderström, and I thought that Octavian was probably Frederica Von Stade, but I didn’t remember who sang Sophie.

He then uncovered an amazing reference site at the Met’s web site: a database of every performance and performer under the Met’s auspices, including tour performers.  In that site he was able to determine that the performers were (as I thought) Söderström, Von Stade, and Kathleen Battle as Sophie.  They were the Rosenkavalier trio of the day.

Then in best Web 2.0 fashion, he found on Youtube a video of the great final trio from the opera from a Met gala of the time (the 100th anniversary celebration of the Met).  The best five minutes in all of opera (despite Von Stade’s really unfortunate dress):

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k0KvIGx1Kwg]

Met HD Video Broadcast: Karita Mattila as Salomé

Karita Mattila a Salomé

Karita Mattila a Salomé

Today was the Met’s first Saturday afternoon video broadcast for the season.  I saw it at the Cinemark Theaters in Valley View, south of downtown Cleveland.  I started going to that theater last season, because the one closest to me was always packed and unpleasant.  Others have discovered it as well, because there was a much larger group, but all gray-hairs.  I was amongst the youngest in the audience.

The opera was Richard Strauss’s Salomé, with Karita Mattila in the title role; Ildikó Komlósi as Herodias; Juha Uusitalo as John the Baptist; Kim Begley as Herod; and Joseph Kaiser as Narroboth. Patrick Summers conducted. The production was by Jügen Flimm, with sets and costumes by Santo Loquasto.  The period was updated from biblical times to (perhaps) World War I, with Herod and his guests in evening dress.  Herodias was in a  glamorous black and green off-the-shoulder gown and was made up as if she was Elizabeth Taylor in the “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” era.  Fellow Salomé Deborah Voigt was the host, introducing Mattila before the performance (who words to the audience were that she was going out “to kick ass.”)  And she did—it was a stunning performance.   The camera was able to focus on the degredation.  The only snort of laughter was when Salomé describes Jokanaan as “gaunt”.  Mr. Uusitalo looked as if he’d never missed a good meal.  He did not have the vocal force and magnificence of some great Jokanaans of the past (for example, Bryn Terfel most recently), but he was decent.

It was Karita Mattila’s show, however. She threw herself into the part, sliding around on the stage using her body as much as her voice.  She was first in a slinky white negligee/formal dress, and in the final scene with the head of John the Baptist she was in a black bathrobe.  Her voice was variously sensuous, powerful, strident, but she acted the part.  It was an incredible achievement.  It had been previously announced that the movie theater audience would not see Mattila “take it all off” at the end of the “Dance of the Seven Veils.”  We saw her topless with her arms covering her breasts, but at the climax of the dance, we saw instead a close-up of Herod’s face in ecstasy.

The final scene, in which Salomé makes out with the severed head of John the Baptist, was riveting, alternating adoring and abhorring her victim and object of her lust.  Her sexual energy built until the point at which she kisses his mouth.  She is left audibly panting in post-sexual-climax exhaustion, with mouth and lips covered with blood.  At the end of the opera, Herod orders Salomé to be killed.  The scene is usually staged with soldiers crushing the Princess;  in this case, the same black slave executioner pulls his sword and Salomé rips open her gown before the blackout.

As one should at a performance of this opera, I felt exhausted and filthy at the end. It is easy to see why the opera caused a scandal at its premiere in 1905 and why it was banned in some cities.  Over a hundred years later it is still shocking.

Great pictures from "Rosenkavalier"

I found a link to this great slide show of pictures from the recent performance of “Der Rosenkavalier” at Severance Hall.

John the Baptist v. Salomé

The Revised Common Lectionary Gospel reading for today (Year B, Proper 10 (15)) is Mark 6:14-29, which is the story of how John the Baptist comes to be beheaded by King Herod, at the behest of Herod’s stepdaughter (called Herodias in the gospel, but known in legend as Salomé, daughter of Herod’s wife Herodias).

This story was famously turned into a scandalous play, Salomé, in French by Oscar Wilde in 1894, subsequently translated into English by Wilde’s boyfriend Lord Alfred Douglas. Richard Strauss then created an opera based on a German translation of Wilde’s original French play and first performed in 1905. The opera caused an equal sensation not only for it’s subject matter but for the extraordinarily chromatic and sensuous music. (I once read a comment to the effect that if the stage action fully replicated what was going on in the orchestra, the vice squad would close down the performance.)

It was interesting to compare the biblical version of the story with Wilde’s elaboration. The general outline is the same: Herod coaxes Salomé to dance for him, and in return she extracts an oath that he will grant her any wish. Upon the completion of the dance, she demands for the head of John the Baptist on a platter. In the Bible, the request for the John’s head is prompted by Salomé’s mother Herodias. In the Wilde play and the Strauss opera, Salomé becomes enamored of John the Baptist, and when he rejects her advances, she becomes sexually obsessed with him. The final twenty-minute scene of the opera consists of Salomé making caressing and finally kissing John’s severed head. This act repulses Herod, who commands the soldiers to kill Salomé.

No wonder the good folks of 1894 and 1905 were shocked. Oddly enough, however, Salomé is practically my first memory of opera, listening in the early ’60s to a Metropolitan Opera radio broadcast. At this point, I have no idea who the singers might have been. But the story made an impact. (What was my mother thinking, letting me listen to such a thing?)

Salomé continues to be one of my favorite operas. The title character needs the body and presence of a sixteen-year-old and the dramatic soprano voice of a Valkyrie to carry over Strauss’s enormous orchestrations. The famous “Dance of the Seven Veils” is a high-end striptease. Unfortunately, usually the two characteristics don’t meet up in the same person. The famous Swedish soprano Birgit Nilsson had the voice, but the aspect of her oversize Nordic hausfrau required more than minimal willing suspension of disbelief. Most recently at the Met the Finnish soprano Karita Mattila “took it all off,” both looking and sounding great too. The American Catherine Malfitano made a success of the role on stage, in recording and DVD.

I’ve lately been listening to a Chandos recording from the late ’90s featuring the Royal Danish Opera and the soprano Inge Nielsen. No, she’s not a household name, but she’s got the goods when it comes to Salomé. Her voice is not heroic, but it cuts like a laser over the top of the orchestra. She is also able to act with her voice. She’s convincing as the Jewish princess.

So if you want an over the top evening of entertainment, find a copy of the DVD with Catherine Malfitano (conducted by former Cleveland Orchestra director Christoph von Dohnanhi), get the popcorn or meatballs and have a blast. Then go for a brisk walk when it’s over.

  • Virtualfarmboy.com is Timothy Robson's personal blog. He was raised on a farm in Iowa in the '50s and '60s, but for most of the past 30 years he has lived in Cleveland, Ohio. He is trained as a classical musician and as a librarian, but his interests range far and wide. "You can take the boy off the farm, but you can't take the farm out of the boy."
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