Schillertheater
Music Master – Arttu Kataja
Major-Domo – Elisabeth
TrissenaarLackey – David Oštrek
Officer – Sergiu Saplacan
Composer – Katharina Kammerloher
Tenor, Bacchus – Roberto Saccà
Wig-Maker – Adam Kutny
Zerbinetta – Elena Sancho-Pereg
Prima Donna, Ariadne – Anna Samuil
Dancing Master – Manuel Günther
Naiad – Evelin Novak
Dryad – Natalia Skrycka
Echo – Sónia Grané
Harlequin – Gyula Orendt
Truffaldino – Grigory Shkarupa
Scaramuccio – Linard Vrielink
Brighella – Miloš Bulajić
Puppeteer – JARNOTH
Hans Neuenfels (director)
Katrin Lea Tag (set designs)Andrea Schmidt-Futterer (costumes)
Stefan Bolliger (lighting)
Yvonne Gebauer (dramaturgy)
Staatskapelle Berlin
Eun Sun Kim (conductor)
The prospect of a staging from Ariadne auf Naxos from Hans Neuenfels
was exciting indeed. His Bayreuth
Lohengrin is well-nigh
universally acknowledged, usual irreconcilable suspects aside, as a modern
classic. Both Mozart stagings I have seen from him – Salzburg’s Così fan tutte, my first, and La finta giardiniera, here in Berlin
– have been intelligent and probing. There is, of course, a much lengthier
history to his work in spoken theatre and film, as well as his own writing,
indeed in opera too, dating back even beyond his celebrated 1980 Aida for Frankfurt, whose landmark treatment
of the work’s Orientalism outraged not only those aforementioned usual suspects
but, it seems, a good few others aside. What would he do, then, with Strauss,
whose twin musical gods were Mozart and Wagner, here in Ariadne, as so often, set in fruitful competition, contradiction,
and perhaps reconciliation with each other?
Perhaps I should have known to
expect the unexpected, but what I did not really expect was restraint, even conventionality,
albeit shorn of a good deal of the theatricality and metatheatricality that
lies at the heart of most productions – and indeed of the work itself. Such is
largely what we see, or do not see, at least in the Prologue (save for the
sudden, brief reappearance at the end, at the back of the stage, of Troupe
Zerbinetta’s male members, as it were, replete with enormous strap-on dildos,
enthusiastically waved around. I have no idea why in context, but it certainly
attracted attention.) There is otherwise little sense of visual provocation;
Andrea Schmidt-Futterer’s costumes convey a sense of modernity in its chic,
allegedly ‘timeless’ form. Katrin Lea Tag’s set is relatively spare, as in the
Opera proper; there is no sense, as has recently been fashionable (for
instance, Christof
Loy at Covent Garden or Claus Guth in Zurich), of attempting anything with
self-reference to its particular location. I am not sure why it was necessary
for the Major-Domo to extract money from a cash machine, suddenly revealed in
the wall. Maybe it was just underlining a point concerning patronage; maybe it
was a passing hint at vulgarity. (Do the super-rich have such things in their
houses as amusements, or perhaps as safety deposit boxes?) I did not especially care for the performance
of Frau Neuenfels, Elisabeth Trissenaar, in that role; she is an excellent
actress, and was so again here, but her delivery was strangely caricatured, not
least in this otherwise straightforward context. The parody here is surely
pretty much written in; adding more seems a little like caricaturing the musical
caricatures of Mahler’s Fourth Symphony. Otherwise, all is rather as it
‘should’ be, well directed, well presented, but not especially interesting.
In the Opera, that changes
somewhat, yet only somewhat. Another brief baffling moment – to me, at any
rate, although perhaps I was being slow – is the arrival and speedy departure
of an ecclesiastical procession. Again, the designs are not lavish; it is,
after all a desert island. Again, the action is not complicated. There are,
however, certain enigmatic, I should say suggestive, touches – and one
important intervention. Threads are handed out (by the Composer, if I remember
correctly) at the beginning, to Naiad, Dryad, and Echo; they snap, or were
never woven together in the first place, suggesting and yet deconstructing the
Fate of Wagner’s Norns. A mysterious puppeteer (JARNOCH) wanders on and off, on one occasion bearing Grecian masks
(Theseus and Ariadne?), and parading ‘Schicksal’ (destiny) on the back of his
T-shirt. His acts open up rather than close down possibilities for reflection:
just what a production needs. Zerbinetta tries to instruct Ariadne, but the
latter pays heed neither to her song nor to her written slogans.
For it seems that Ariadne has a
death-wish, one which, revealingly, perhaps as an Adornian Rettung (‘rescue’) of the work, is fulfilled. She does not join
Bacchus, but takes her life, highlighting the contradictions of the final
scene, Hofmannsthal’s wish for ‘transformation’ dealt with at least as severely
(and perhaps rightly so) as Strauss’s stubbornly materialist peroration.
Tragedy is reinstated, as many a composer of opera seria – would like. And the Composer joins Ariadne in her
death. Such, after all, is the lot of modernity, after Hegel: art would die and
yet we will not, cannot, let it. We need our modernistic fragments, however
much they refuse to add up. We certainly do not need what Adorno excoriated as
the Happy End, although it is what mere ‘entertainment’ – paid for, because it
gains ‘results’ – will give us. If only this might have been read back into the
relatively disappointing Prologue.
There was much, then, to engage
the mind. What about the ear (insofar as they may be distinguished from one
another)? Anna Samuil, alas, offered a crude performance as Ariadne, her
constant wide vibrato wearing and her acting ability rudimentary. Roberto Saccà’s
Bacchus was better, although workmanlike rather than thrilling. (One cannot
always, or even often, have Jonas Kaufmann, I suppose.) Katharina Kammerloher’s
palpably sincere Composer was more impressive, although her vowels were
sometimes distractingly strange – and she shaded dangerously close towards
sentimentality at the end of the Prologue. Elena Sancho-Pereg, however, made
for an excellent Zerbinetta. The coloratura held no obvious fears for her; just
as important, she presented a more rounded character than one often encounters.
Perhaps Ariadne should have listened to her after all. The other roles were all
well taken, with a fine sense of company, Arttu Kataja’s Music Master, Gyula
Orendt’s Harlequin, and Sergiu Saplacan’s Officer especially pleasing.
Eun Sun Kim’s direction of the
orchestra was mostly competent, yet rarely more than that. She made a somewhat
vulgar meal, surprisingly so, out of the Composer-Zerbinetta duet, otherwise
tended to more of a Kapellmeister’s
approach. The Staatskapelle Berlin sounded glorious, though: darker than, say,
Vienna or Dresden and all the more intriguing for it, not only as Neuenfels’s
staging shifted towards overt tragedy, but all along suggesting an alternative
path to that which we ‘knew’. The players’ soloistic prowess was second to none
throughout, yet they clearly listened to each other too, lengthy experience of
chamber music telling. The musical art of performance, then, lived in the pit
even as we witnessed the representation of its death onstage. Sometimes
Zerbinetta’s ‘neue Gott’ turns out to be the god we have known all along,
transformed.