Musically, even over the course of just over four hours (which seemed shorter in both halves than it actually was), it was a beautiful evening, with Valery Gergiev showing why he is the leading conductor of this repertory, shaping the orchestra's narrative to the scope of his singers. The cast varied broadly, although even where vocal strength waned enough dramatic presence remained on the stage to make the characters work, even if the singing and accompanying orchestra were almost inaudible. As expected from their turn together in Eugene Onegin the previous weekend, Alexey Markov was all polish and internal turmoil as Prince Andrei and Ekaterina Semenchuk's sultry presence made you wish that Prokofiev had written more for Hélène. Irina Mataeva was a pretty and flighty Natasha, but without the heft necessary to the part's greatest demands, while Ekaterina Krapivina was an appropriately matched Sonya (although it was odd to see her return later as Marshal Murat's Adjutant and as Matryosha, the gypsy girl who gives up her fur coat to Anatol for his gift to Natasha -- the problem with the necessary evil of multiple casting the small roles).
Among the other larger roles, Irina Bogacheva was having too much fun as Madame Akhrosimova, Natasha and Sonya's imperious godmother, the sort of knowing performance with vocal goods to back it up that comes from a singer who has been around long enough to have been named to the order "For Services to the Fatherland" and a "People's Artist of the Soviet Union." It was once again the tenors who were least pleasing, including Sergei Skorokhodov as a bratty Anatol and the leathery and occasionally cracking Alexei Steblianko as Pierre. Alexander Nikitin had a memorable presence more physical than vocal as Napoleon, and poor Gennady Bezzubenkov had the palest sound as Field Marshall Kutuzov, making his triumphant hymn to Moscow a sotto voce affair. (On a related note, I had never noticed how much the principal theme from James Horner's soundtrack for the movie Glory resembles Kutuzov's Moscow aria.)
Anne Midgette, Valiant, if uneven, ode to Tolstoy: Mariinsky offers War and Peace (Washington Post, March 8) Tim Smith, Mariinsky Theatre wraps up Kennedy Center visit with explosive 'War and Peace' (Baltimore Sun, March 8) Anthony Tommasini, A Sprawling Novel’s Turn as an Epic Opera: 52 Soloists and 1 Horse (New York Times, December 12, 2007) ---, 'War and Peace' Opens; Mishap Raises Concerns (New York Times, February 16, 2002) |
The costumes (Tatiana Noginova) were colorful and remarkably detailed, especially the many uniforms of the second half. Konchalovsky's stage direction is at times disturbingly heavy-handed, matching the nationalistic fervor of the libretto, something that can make one a little uncomfortable in relation to, for example, the history of someone like Gergiev's politics. No one rode a horse onstage this time, although to have a dwarf dressed as Napoleon cross the stage, point his finger and mock the Russian prisoners, and just as inexplicably leave the stage was a Twin Peaks moment that made no sense in the midst of what is, we are surely meant otherwise to think, a serious and tragic series of events. The Mariinsky Chorus, which had sounded so potent in the concert performances, did not rise to the occasion, perhaps out of exhaustion.
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