Here are the rest of the Berlin reviews. Please note
that the reviewers submitted their opinions in the
form of complete essays, and I extracted paragraphs
pertaining to individual operas for compare-and-contrast
purposes. So if anything seems stilted or out of context,
that's my fault and not the reviewers'.
Lohengrin
Jean Scarr:
I was in Berlin February 5-6-7 for the Wagner Festival at the Deutsche Oper. I saw Die Meistersinger, Lohengrin and Rienzi. The casting was strong throughout. Of particular note was the superb chorus, which serves as a vital ingredient in all three works and especially in Lohengrin and Rienzi.
The twenty-year old Götz Friedrich production was pleasure to see after dealing with Robert Wilson’s Met performances a few years ago. Recently, I was in Houston for their production, which takes place in a ruined library during the 1930's. There may have been no physical swan in Berlin, but its presence was there, especially in the first scene of Act III - a bed and floor runner covered with swan feathers and a huge circular picture of a swan in the background. I would classify the production as traditional with an aura of abstraction hovering about. It will be scrapped after this run. Conducted by Michael Schenwandt and strongly cast (Ben Heppner, Ricarda Merbeth, Waltraud Meier, Eike Wilm Schulte, Anton Keremidtchiev, and Hans-Peter König), this was a musically magical evening.
Terry Quinn:
This was one of the best Lohengrin productions I have seen in a long time, maybe ever. It was beautifully staged with no guessing games on the meanings behind the visual analogies. This 20-year old Götz Friedrich production was a straightforward piece of storytelling with no "improvements’" to what Wagner wanted to say and with beautiful sets and some nice directorial touches. There were two standouts for me. Waltraud Meier as Ortrud, a role that she now owns, and the Deutsche Oper chorus who approached Bayreuth quality with great beauty in the soft passages and spine-tingling glory in the climaxes.
Elsa was sung very well by Ricarda Merbeth, a new name to me, and Ben Heppner was an excellent Lohengrin. They deserved better recognition but were eclipsed by the amazing Meier who is not only a top drawer singer, but a brilliant actress and a master of the evil look.
Terri Stuart:
I can't agree with the others about Heppner's performance. I was in the 1st Rang dead center and Ben gave the most careful, effortful performances I've ever sat through. I was a nervous wreck at the end. The voice was often at the edge of breaking but he'd rein it in. I've seen him a number of times and even twice in recital and gone was the full sound and open voice. Eike Wilm Schulte was about the least effective Telramund I've ever watched the singing just so-so. The costume did him no favors, tight leather pants and an open to the navel black shirt. The women were a triumph - Ricarda Merbeth and the luminous Waltraud Meier. Also noted Kristin Sigmundsson (whom I adore) was indisposed and was replaced by the always wonderful Hans Peter Konig.
Meistersinger
Terri Stuart:
I am also back from Berlin and while there met up with two other WSNC members. I have to state my own opinion because I differ in my opinions about the works we all saw - 3 were the same performances.
I saw Tannhäuser (last 2 acts), Dutchman, Lohengrin, Meistersinger and Rienzi.
First - the two Götz Friedrich productions (Meistersinger and Lohengrin) are the last death rattle of those productions. Good. While I love that Meistersinger on DVD, much of the kitsch and excess was removed for filming. In real time the Meadow Scene was so cluttered and there were enough supers on stage waving banners to create gale winds. The fire juggler nearly incinerated the wig of a super. It was pretty much the same for the Lohengrin. Moths and dust flew all over! Chorus - excellent and on par with the chorus in Bayreuth - possibly they share some of the singers.
Jean Scarr:
Götz Friedrich's Die Meistersinger was the Friday night opus. Again, we have a sane approach to this masterpiece, which is framed by the skyline of Nuremberg, but with the WWII bombed out Nuremberg in the background. (The production is on DVD). James Johnson headed the cast as Sachs. His was a credible portrayal - a youngish looking cobbler who managed to survive the rigors and demands of this role. His second act was truly remarkable, especially during the scene with Beckmesser (Markus Brück). Herr Brück was a marvel with an especially endearing voice for this role. After all, he was a mastersinger! Klaus Florian Vogt sang Walter with clarion voice, seemingly tireless as he progressed through all those "Prize Song" refrains. The Eva of Michaela Kaune; the Magdalena of Ulrike Hetzel; and the David of Paul Kaufmann were all stellar. Donald Runnicles conducted, but unfortunately some of the audience greeted him with boos. Why, I don't know.
Photos © Matthias Horn, 2008
Terry Quinn:
There was no ship, the action took place in what looked like a stock exchange. There were two Sentas, only one of whom sang and not all that well, especially at the beginning. Instead of sewing machines the women combed and recombed their hair. Senta cuts Eric’s throat and then her own. The knife was then passed down the line and as the curtain fell the chorus were taking it in turns to use the knife on themselves. This triggered sustained booing from all parts of the house. I for one did not disagree. Enough said.
As we commented on leaving our third Wagner opera of the week, two out of three ain’t bad.
Terri Stuart:
The Flying Dutchman was extremely well sung but the production was just a disaster, in my view. It opened in a commodities trading floor, segued to a theatre back-stage make-up room (I guess the spinning meant rolling up hair on curling irons?) and the finale was a mass-suicide zombie cocktail party with Senta stabbing Erik with scissors, slashing her throat, and handing the scissors to the rest of the women who sequentially slashed their throats as the Dutchman walked away. All of this to the revised redemptive ending - harps plucking away. For whatever reason they stinted on the off-stage chorus for the ghost sailors and they were barely audible. UGH
Photos © Matthias Horn, 2008
Tannhäuser
Terri Stuart:
My train was delayed and so I missed the 1st Act of Tannhäuser so I can't speak to the dramatic arc, but what I saw was pretty good. I couldn't work out the Elizabeth/Venus reincarnation - but not having seen Act 1, I won't discount what the director did. Stephen Gould continues to amaze for his stamina combined with technique that results in glorious singing. It is so wonderful to hear a lieder singer in the role of Wolfram and Dietrich Henschel delivered the goods. Petra Maria Schnitzer was the Elizabeth/Venus - I'm not a fan but apparently she is highly regarded in Berlin. I loved the cold hard, shining but hollow suits of armor which created the basis of this production.
Terry Quinn:
We are now 3 and 1 and, for a while anyway, Eurotrash is taking a back seat. This was an excellent production with no weird gimmicks but imaginative use of the Deutsche Oper’s stage technology. The first two acts were performed on an essentially empty stage with plain drapes at the sides and back. The visual magic was in the extensive use of flying techniques and the multi-level stage lifts. The stage frequently dropped out of sight of those of us in the orchestra seats to reappear populated with Bacchanalian dancers, noblemen and women, Landgraf Herrmann and his knights on horses wheeled around by attendants, and, of course, pilgrims. The flying figures were mostly the Langraf’s knights and the departing demons when Tannhäuser decides to abandon Venus. When the final scene rises into view the stage is filled with hospital beds occupied by pilgrims, presumably recovering from their journey from Rome.
American tenor Stephen Gould sang the title role, Nadja Michael had a powerful voice for one so slim. (I wonder if she will ever manage Brünnhilde?) Reinhard Hagen was convincing as the Landgraf and Dietrich Henschel was Wolfram von Eschenbach. His more lyric tenor voice contrasted well with the other lead singers. Was it his voice or the well acted, tender sympathy shown to the dying Elizabeth that made me more sympathetic to Wolfram than to Tannhäuser?
Once again, the chorus was a standout for me. In place of the more usual off-stage introduction of the Pilgrim’s Chorus, the singers sang or so softly while lying on their beds. But when they sat up for the final chorus, the stepped stage resulted in an amazing wall of sound hitting the audience.
Director Kirsten Harms created a Tannhäuser without irrelevant creativity yet was satisfying to the ear, eye and intellect. I hope that he will take aside his colleague who directed the weird Dutchman and tell her, ‘Now look here, Tatjana…’
Thanks to all the reviewers. It's always fun to see how much folks can disagree on a production!
Stay tuned for Sandra's review of the high-def broadcast of the 2008 Valencia Siegfried.
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