Images: Monika Rittershaus Monastatos (Florian Hoffmann) and Pamina (Serena Sáenz) |
Sarastro – René Pape
Tamino – Julian Prégardien
Pamina – Serena Sáenz
Papageno – Florian Teichtmeister
Papagena – Victoria Randem
Queen of the Night – Albina Shagimuratova
Speaker, Second Priest – David Oštrek
Monostatos – Florian Hoffmann
First Lady – Adriane Queiroz
Second Lady – Natalia Skrycka
Third Lady – Constance Heller
First Armoured Man – Jun-Sang
Han
Second Armoured Man – Frederic Jost
First Priest – Andrés Moreno
Garcia
Three Boys – Members of the
Tölz Boys’ Choir
Yuval Sharon (director)
Mimi Lien, Marc Löhrer (set
designs)
Walter Van Beriendonck
(costumes)
Reinhard Traub (lighting)
Hannah Wasileski (video)
Markus Böhm (sound design)
Staatsopernchor Berlin (chorus director: Anna Milukova)
Staatskapelle Berlin
Julien Salemkour (conductor)
As operatic hits go, The Magic Flute takes some beating; it
does even so far as Mozart is concerned. Unquestionably Mozart’s greatest
popular success as composer—it is difficult not to sentimentalise or at least
to dramatise, and say ‘too late’—it saw twenty performances in its first month
alone. Soon almost every German city would have staged the work, usually in
German but even in Italian translation (Giovanni De Gamerra, Mozart’s librettist
for Lucio Silla) as Il flauto magico,
for theatres and cities where that suited prevailing tastes. It had reached as
far as St Petersburg by 1797, only six years after its premiere; Berlin in 1794,
not actually here at the Linden house, but at the nearby Royal National Theatre
on the Gendarmenmarkt (predecessor to Karl Friedrich Schinkel’s Schauspielhaus
or, as it stands today, Konzerthaus). If ever there were a Viennese work, it is
surely this, but it is above all a work for the world—and Berlin takes just
pride in its particular tradition. Schinkel’s celebrated 1816 set designs for the
Court Opera—today’s State Opera—live on, reconstructed in August Everding’s 1994
production: loved by many, though theatrically inert when
I saw it ten years ago. Since then, it has continued in repertoire, reappearing
most seasons, but was earlier this year joined by a companion version from
Yuval Sharon.
Tamino (Julian Prégardien) |
Pamina and Papageno (Florian Teichtmeister) |
As
the curtain rises, we see the outline of a theatre within our theatre.
Characters emerge on strings, seemingly coming to life—like Schikaneder’s
libretto, some might say—with Mozart’s music. Sometimes they are suspended in
mid-air, sometimes on the floor; sometimes they even break free of their
strings (although that nagging question of agency and authority does not seem
quite to be resolved there; perhaps it cannot or should not be). Their appearance,
however, seems more calculated, not unreasonably, to appeal to today’s children
than to older people’s idea of today’s or even yesterday’s children. There is
something of the comic book to them, especially to our heroes Tamino and Pamina—although
rightly, in a cosmos as varied as this, there is considerable costume
variation. I cannot say that I was wild about some of the rewriting and
reordering, but should one approach this as an opera for children—I am far from
convinced one should, yet German tradition looms large—there is warrant enough for
that. The lack of trials of fire and water, however, seems to me a great pity.
Tamino and Pamina retreating into a kitchen (of marriage, presumably) to make a
light evening meal does not seem calculated to appeal to a considerable
proportion of children, fraught questions of gender notwithstanding, let alone
to those of us who might appreciate a little light undercutting, at least, of
the opera’s patriarchy and heteronormativity. Some effort, though, is made at
least to address problems of race, Monastatos, a black robotic toy, has his
treatment discussed by children, as the dialogue veers off-piste.
There
is nevertheless an apt and—I suspect, for the target audience, winning—sense of
theatrical wonder, even when, as on this evening, the stage machinery broke
down part way through the second act, requiring an extra pause to put things
right. Revealing the children, whose recorded voices we have heard throughout
intoning the dialogue at the close, pulling the strings as the theatre is cut
down to size is doubtless necessary, but it deflates any sense of triumph, of
enlightenment, indeed of anything much but children somewhat irritatingly
running around, at the close. I cannot help but wonder whether they would have
been better shown at the start. Moreover, if I am honest, their voices, in
place of those a little more theatrically experienced, did become wearing after
a while.
Dancers and Tamino |
Musically,
the picture was somewhat mixed. Conductor Julien Salemkour seemed strangely
concerned to keep the orchestra down, to limit it as much as possible to mere ‘accompaniment’.
Although it was clearly small in size—I could not see how small from where I
was seated—an unfounded fear of overwhelming the singers seemed paramount.
Either that, or unaccountably, he did not much like the sound of the
Staatskapelle Berlin, which, insofar as one was permitted to hear it, sounded
warm and cultivated as ever. It was a pity, since, a couple of cases aside,
Salemkour adopted sensible tempi and mostly—there are doubtless particular
problems with a staging such as this—kept pit and stage together. If only Daniel
Barenboim would finally conduct this opera here.
Papageno |
I
enjoyed most of the singing, though I wondered whether some had been
understandably inhibited by demands of aerial acrobatics. There was one
peculiar exception, though, with which I had better to deal first. The cast
list declared that Florian Teichtmeister was assuming the role of Papegeno ‘in
the tradition of Emanuel Schikaneder,’ as ‘an actor’. Well, yes and no.
Schikaneder was an actor; he was a good many things, including composer—and singer.
Unless one were to take the view—surely a slander on many singers—that singers
are incapable of acting, it seems a decidedly peculiar virtue, in an opera house, to insist that a
non-singer play the part. Teichtmeister did his best; he can certainly act. Ensembles
in particular were uncomfortable, more through the miking this apparently
necessitated than through any difficulty with pitch. This was surely an idea
that should have been firmly knocked on the head. Otherwise, Julian Prégardien
and Serena Sáenz made for a lovely central couple, both performances palpably
sincere and beautifully sung. That René Pape’s Sarastro is a well-known
quantity should not lead one to take it for granted; evidently, no one did. The
role still suits him perfectly—and perfectly is how he responded to its
requirements. Albina Shagimuratova’s Queen of the Night sounded somewhat
distant on account of her placing onstage—or rather, above stage—but emerged as
bright and precise as anyone has right to expect. If smaller roles made less
impact than often they do, I think that was similarly more for stage than for vocal
reasons.
A
welcome alternative, then, to Mahlerian tradition as Schlamperei? Yes, I think so, albeit with reservations. Sharon’s
production certainly stands worlds away from what by 200 had already become essentially
a non-production, singers were left to fend for themselves in front of ‘beloved’
sets. I was grateful not only for the alternative as such but for the thoughts
it provoked. If nevertheless I felt that it could have gone further
dramatically and conceptually and that technical complications came a little too
close to becoming the point, perhaps I just need to see it again. If the choice
were this or Everding, which I understand will continue to be the case, I
should have no hesitation. Ambition may sometimes exceed achievement, but that is surely the right way around and leaves room for the production to develop: 'tradition' in the truest sense.