Royal Opera House
Musetta (Danielle de Niese) at Café Momus Images: Catherine Ashmore/ROH 2018 |
Marcello – Etienne Dupuis
Rodolfo – Matthew Polenzani
Colline – Fernando Radó
Schaunard – Duncan Rock
Benoît – Jeremy White
Mimì – Maria Agresta
Parpignol – Andrew Macnair
Musetta – Danielle de Niese
Alcindoro – Wyn Pencarreg
Customs Officer – John Morrissey
Sergeant – Thomas Barnard
Richard Jones (director)
Julia Burbach (revival
director)
Stewart Laing (director)
Mimi Jordan Sherin (lighting)
Sarah Fahie, Danielle Urbas
(movement)
Tiffin Boys’ Choir
Tiffin’s Children’s Chorus
Royal Opera Chorus (chorus director: William Spaulding)
Nicola Luisotti (conductor)
Schaunard (Duncan Rock), Colline (Fernanrdo Radó), Marcello (Etienne Dupuis), Rodolfo (Matthew Polenzani) |
Poor Puccini. He suffers more
than any other composer I know from being treated as a box-office draw. (Dmitri Tcherniakov notwithstanding, Carmen is
perhaps not so dissimilar; yet, given its status as the sole Bizet opera worth
staging – Lord preserve us from the tedium of another Pearl Fishers – the situation remains different.) The requirement,
however, for making at least four of his operas so unfailing a draw seems to be
to prevent anything but the most ‘traditional’ of stagings from seeing the
light of day. I have no idea what Claus Guth’s recent Bohème was like, but thank goodness the Paris Opéra showed itself
willing to do something different with the work. Stefan Herheim’s superlative,
death-haunted production for Oslo remains hors
concours. Otherwise, ‘major houses’ remain not so much unwilling to
experiment as adamantly opposed.
I wondered, then, what Richard
Jones might make of the same opera. My sense, whilst away, was that reception of
its first outing had not generally been favourable. A sign of hope, perhaps?
Alas not. I have never been less moved, even when I maintained a frostier
stance towards Puccini than I do now, by a performance of La bohème. Indeed, given that I was not so much as slightly moved
even once, such would have been impossible. That cannot have been entirely the
production’s fault, but it bore greater responsibility than anything else. Now
a Brechtian, post-dramatic Bohème
might be a fascinating prospect indeed: imagine what Achim Freyer (when on
form) or Frank Castorf might do with, or to, the work. I know that Peter
Konwitschny has staged it too, although I have yet, alas, to catch up with that
production. Try as I might, though, I could find no edge, no critique. This
seems merely cynical – and merely cynical in just about the worst way.
The first act is stark, or at
least its design is. A basic roof frame is a little more suggestive of a garret
than often one sees, although the fact that one sees no sleeping quarters is,
within a realistic framework, perhaps a little odd. (I shall return to that.)
There is not much more to it, yet often there is not: other than everyone
shivering. I presume the slightly repellent hair – is it meant to look dirty or
just nasty? – of the students is intended to convey poverty or slovenliness, or
both, but am not sure. Snow falls throughout, though, in a seemingly
sentimental fashion, as if to appease those who wanted ‘traditional’
atmosphere. Perhaps they are being sent up, but I am afraid I found little sign
of that. Even if they were, should they be?
A seemingly obscene amount of money is then expended on designs for the second act: as if to say, ‘you thought you had the germs of an austere concept, so I’ll show you’. Lavish shopping arcades – nineteenth-century Paris, I suppose, yet hardly suggestive of Walter Benjamin – whirl around for a little while centre-stage, then are banished, so that the action can take place. It is all very chocolate-box musical comedy, yet seemingly not with irony. (And even if it is, why?) Café Momus is more Michelin-starred restaurant than a place for Bohemian encounters. There is little attempt, so far as I can ascertain, to suggest either that the characters are genuinely poor, or that they are privileged boys playing at being poor. It all just seems ill-thought-through. There is worse, though. Musetta, robbed of the elegance her music suggests, is merely a drunk, who climbs on the table and, with difficulty, delivers herself of her underwear to throw around. Perhaps there is a plausible non-misogynist reading of what we saw; if so, it passed me by. Snow continues to fall.
A seemingly obscene amount of money is then expended on designs for the second act: as if to say, ‘you thought you had the germs of an austere concept, so I’ll show you’. Lavish shopping arcades – nineteenth-century Paris, I suppose, yet hardly suggestive of Walter Benjamin – whirl around for a little while centre-stage, then are banished, so that the action can take place. It is all very chocolate-box musical comedy, yet seemingly not with irony. (And even if it is, why?) Café Momus is more Michelin-starred restaurant than a place for Bohemian encounters. There is little attempt, so far as I can ascertain, to suggest either that the characters are genuinely poor, or that they are privileged boys playing at being poor. It all just seems ill-thought-through. There is worse, though. Musetta, robbed of the elegance her music suggests, is merely a drunk, who climbs on the table and, with difficulty, delivers herself of her underwear to throw around. Perhaps there is a plausible non-misogynist reading of what we saw; if so, it passed me by. Snow continues to fall.
As indeed, it does in the
second half: straightforward to a degree. (John
Copley surely accomplished that better – and with far more of a sense of
what the opera is, or at least might be, about.) Everything happens more or
less as it ‘should’, yet with a casualness to the direction that makes one
wonder why anyone bothered. The only real oddity is that, when Mimì arrives, and
a bed has to be found for her, it is merely linen or a blanket, or something.
Again, one might think that intended to convey poverty: have they really been
living like that all that time? It does not seem like it, though, and such an
idea does not seem to cohere with anything else. Perhaps because there is not
anything much else with which to cohere. The work ends: unloved and yet also
uncriticised. It would take a better production than this, however ‘traditional’,
to manage either.
Nicola Luisotti’s conducting
did not help, either – although oddly, it often seemed rather in keeping with
Jones’s vision (or lack thereof). Much, especially in the outer acts, was
marmoreal; much more almost – yet not quite – brutal. The Orchestra of the
Royal Opera House played well enough, yet nothing like what once it could. (To
think, this was once Bernard Haitink’s orchestra – and before that Colin Davis’s.)
Luisotti, who impressed greatly in Il
trittico in 2016, seemed at
times so impatient as to be wishing to be elsewhere – I sympathised – and, when
he did permit something loosely known as ‘emotion’, to be doing so less out of
conviction than from duty: colouring-book Puccini. Structural grip was not lacking,
yet it was mere external, imposed ‘structure’ rather than formal dynamism, content
possessing but a tenuous relationship to the receptacle into which it had been
squeezed. Even the Wagnerisms – a little hint of Tristan there, a Meistersinger-ish
moment there – sounded incidental, certainly not generative. Puccini as
modernist: forget it. As for Luisotti’s reprehensible slowing down so as actually
to invite multiple instances of philistine applause within an act…
Musetta and Mimì (Maria Agresta) |
The cast did a decent enough
job but there was nothing to get too excited about in that respect either. How
much was the responsibility of director and conductor was, in this case,
difficult to tell; yet there must be something a little awry when the most
memorable vocal performances come from an excellent Colline and Schaunard (Fernando Radó and Duncan Rock). Both seemed
far more alert to the drama of words and music than either Jones or Luisotti. Maria
Agresta sang the part of Mimì nicely enough; I am not sure I have anything more
to say about that. Danielle de Niese certainly gave a sincere, committed
performance; she always has done in any role in which I have seen her. Leaving
aside Jones’s perverse portrayal of her in the second act, though, sincerity
was not enough to mask thinness of voice. Matthew Polenzani proved an ardent
enough Rodolfo, Etienne Dupuis likewise as Marcello, but their hearts did not
seem – perhaps understandably – really to be in it. For there was little heart
on display at all here; nor was there anything dramatically on hand, alas, to
replace it.