Die tote Stadt @ Summer Opera
Michael Hayes (Paul) and Kara Shay Thomson (Marietta) in Die tote Stadt, Summer Opera Theater Company |
The libretto is credited to one Paul Schott, only in the 1970s revealed to be a pseudonym for Korngold's father, the powerful music critic Julius Korngold. The odd, psychological story was drawn from Bruges-la-Morte, a short novel by the Belgian writer Georges Rodenbach. Published only in 1892, it was a notably current choice of subject, which librettist and composer lightened considerably in tone. A man in Bruges (the dead city of the title) struggles to keep the memory of his dead wife, Marie, alive by preserving their house in its exact state like a shrine. A woman who is her uncanny double, an uninhibited dancer named Marietta, shows up in his life and haunts his dreams (this is where the Korngolds changed the details quite a bit).
The singing on Wednesday night was good among the leads, especially tenor Michael Hayes in the role of Paul. It is a voice that has been around, that sounds lived in but with the fortitude to project with confidence and almost all of the high notes. Sadly, there was not much believable chemistry between Hayes and soprano Kara Shay Thomson, making her debut with the company as Marietta/Marie. Her voice opened up in a similar scope, making for an expansive lute song, for example, in the first scene. As Frank/Fritz/Pierrot, Mark Whatley had his own impressive, perhaps overeager debut with the company, while Alexandra Christoforakis's performance as the maid, Brigitta, was sensitive but at times covered. The supporting cast in the second act, with its musical quotations of Meyerbeer and Wagner, made a valiant effort to get past the reduction of numbers to a handful instead of a larger scene.
Anne Midgette, Not Much Depth To 'Die Tote Stadt' (Washington Post, June 16) T. L. Ponick, Lush 'Dead City' revived (Washington Times, June 16) Tim Smith, Korngold's 'Die tote Stadt' gets rare revival in DC (Critical Mass, June 19) |
Die tote Stadt is rife with references to the idea of the resurrection and transformation of bodies. In the second scene, Paul watches Marietta reenact the scene she is dancing at the opera, the Resurrection scene from Meyerbeer's Robert le Diable. In the third act of that grand opera, there is a ballet of debauched nuns who rise from their graves led by their Abbess, Helena. Then, in the third scene, Paul and Marietta hear the Corpus Christi procession through the streets of Bruges. (Although it is not identified as such, the children sing of accompanying Christ's blood in the procession -- the feast is the solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ -- and the monks sing the hymn Pange lingua gloriosi corporis mysterium, usually sung on this feast during the public procession.) References to Salome crop up, too, in the dancing and sexual hunger of Marietta. With such a rich background, this production had an air of the quotidian about it, which was on one hand refreshing and on the other a little too plain.
Die tote Stadt, rare enough that it would be a shame to miss it, will be performed only once more, tomorrow afternoon (June 22, 2:30 pm) at Catholic University's Hartke Theater. The company's second production, Carmen, will be mounted next month (July 20, 23, 27) at Sidney Harman Hall downtown.
3 comments:
SF Opera presents a different production of it this fall in among a season of otherwise greatest hits of the repertory. Should be interesting....
You mean "otherwise greatest hits of the repertory" such as the world premieres of Stewart Wallace and Amy Tan's "The Bonesetter's Daughter" and Jake Heggie and Terrence McNally "Three Decembers (Last Acts)"?
(The Washington NATIONAL Opera, which promised Congress and the American people that it would stage one American opera each and every season, has so far failed to announce the American opera that it plans to stage next season here in the Nation's Capital...)
I was backstage as a chorister and techie in the 1998 production, which the late John Lehmeyer directed. He took the hallucinatory atmosphere as far as it would go, and possibly further: during one instrumental interlude in Act III Paul got strapped to a cross and whipped by two supers in clown costumes.
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