Speranza
Parsifal in Wolfgang Wagner's Staging at Bayreuth
The Bayreuth production that
was staged for the last time for the 2001 Festival was directed by the late
Wolfgang Wagner, with choreography by Iván Markó, costumes by Reinhard Heinrich,
technical direction by Gerd Zimmerman and lighting by Manfred Voss.
For those
who judge a production of any of Richard Wagner's dramas by adherence to the
composer's stage directions -- and even for those who are not troubled by any
divergences from them -- this production has much to recommend it. Apart from
two elements of the staging, to be discussed below, Wolfgang Wagner's production
followed his grandfathers' stage directions for all of the first act, most of
the second and much of the third. Most of what Richard Wagner asked for was made
visible and little that might be considered superfluous was added.
Technical
Challenges
All of the technical challenges of the work were addressed by the
production team. As in the original production, which was in use at Bayreuth
from 1882 until 1933 with little modification, the Grail glows. Admittedly, with
the progress of stage technology, it is now a red laser rather than an electric
bulb that provides the light. The spear glows too, bright white in the second
act and red at the tip in the final scene of the last act; but rather too
brightly, giving the appearance of a child's toy. The swan flew across the stage
and then back from the wings, convincingly, to land in the centre of the stage.
The spear did not exactly fly, but the effect was neatly done: Klingsor's tower
was a suspended cage; as he dropped his spear, Parsifal reached up and grasped a
duplicate at the bottom of the cage, which glowed white like a neon tube, giving
the illusion that Klingsor had thrown the spear and Parsifal had caught it.
There was no suggestion however that the spear had stopped in mid-air, as the
stage directions demand.
Musical Deeds Made Visible
ut Parsifal is not
about conjuring tricks. The essential elements of the staging should support the
dramatic action in the same way as the orchestra should support the singers.
Passages of music are closely connected with the stage action: for example, when
the music describes Kundry's hair falling, the stage directions ask that we
should see her untie the hair and allow it to fall; in this production, her hair
was already untied and she merely pulled it over her shoulder, observing the
spirit if not the letter of Richard Wagner's stage direction.
he stage
picture should gradually change during the transformation music of the outer
acts, as the characters proceed from the forest to the Hall of the Grail. These
transformation scenes were the least satisfactory parts of this production,
perhaps because the forest scenes did not have the feel of a forest, so that the
transformation appeared to take us from one rocky chamber to another rocky
chamber.
I tell him those [Zürich] years had been a sort of labyrinth, into
which, like Parsifal, he had been lured by an evil curse, but inwardly he had
never lost his way, he had preserved his ideals pure and intact, as P[arsifal]
had his lance. "I have remained true to my law", he answers, referring to the
Bhagavad-Gita. In the course of the conversation he also said, "One must assume
that Kundry's curse loses its power when she awakes and this awakening attracts
Parsifal, all kinds of mysterious relationships like that". To which I: "The
wicked world was the Kundry's curse which lured you into the labyrinth".
[Cosima's Diary, entry for 22 June 1878]
Into the Labyrinth
curious
feature of the staging is the tiled floor, which is most easily seen in the
Grail scenes. The floor presents a labyrinth, similar to the floor of the
Sculpture Park in Oslo. As the knights process, they follow the paths of the
labyrinth: paths that no sinner can find, perhaps, the continuation of those
that the chosen follow to the Grail temple. At the centre of the labyrinth, in
the Grail scenes, is the Grail shrine; in the same place in act 2, Kundry. This
is the one stroke of genius in the staging.
Reservations
Petrified Forests
and Flowerless Meadows
olfgang Wagner's staging fails in two respects.
Firstly, even the most superficial reading of the text shows that Nature plays
an important role in this work: the natural world of forest and meadow in the
outer acts, an unnatural luxuriance in Klingsor's magic garden in the central
act. So it is a disappointment to find no trees in the opening scene; then not a
single petal in the second act; and no blade of grass or flora of any kind in
the last act. In place of organic nature, Wolfgang Wagner gives us rock
crystals. They are definitely rocks, not even fossilised trees: natural but
cold, hard and dead. Some are removed and others rotated during the
transformation music, to produce a Hall of the Grail that would not be out of
place in a production of Die Zauberflöte. Nature (or at least, organic nature)
is absent from start to finish; the entire story seems to take place in a rocky
waste land. The nearest that the second act comes to showing flowers is in the
Busby Berkeley-like dance sequences for the Magic Maidens. They are dressed in
classical shifts, similar to those designed by Daniela Thode for the 1933
production. The nearest that the third act comes to showing a meadow is a
yellow-green carpet, without a flower in sight. There is no indication of a
hermit's hut, only some kind of irrigation channel leading to a small pool, with
flat rocks on either side. (More recently an elegant fountain has been added
upstage).
Two Domains?
he second deficiency is of contrast between the
domain of the Grail and that of Klingsor. Any kind of contrast would be better
than none and the more the better. None is what Wolfgang Wagner provides: all
that he does is to rearrange the rock pillars. Klingsor appears in his cage,
looking demonic in a red silk dressing gown and with white "horns" in his hair,
with the spear and his magic mirror, in which he sees the approach of a new
victim. Kundry arises at his command from a hole in the stage at the centre of
the maze. There is no noticeable change in the set as the scene supposedly
changes to the magic garden. At the appropriate point, the maidens move aside to
reveal Kundry reclining on a platform that looks suspiciously like the Grail
shrine. She is wearing a white dress, which she later removes to reveal a brown
robe. At the end of the act, there is no castle to collapse, although Klingsor's
cage quickly disappears upstage, and there is no garden to wither. This weakens
the cataclysmic ending of this act, when Richard Wagner's music clearly shows
that something important has happened as the spear moved in the sign of the
Cross.
Ending the Music-Drama
Video clip on YouTube
ne of the
challenges facing a director of Parsifal is to find a satisfactory ending.
Modern directors seem to have ideological difficulties in following Richard
Wagner's instructions and usually provide an alternative ending. Wolfgang
Wagner's ending is novel and rather puzzling. In modern productions it has
become accepted that it is Kundry, rather than the squires, who opens the Grail
shrine. In this production, instead of handing the Grail across to Parsifal, she
elevates the chalice herself. The Grail glows red and the company, including
Gurnemanz and Amfortas, kneel. Parsifal remains standing behind the shrine and
Kundry stands facing him over the shrine, her back to the audience (strongly
suggesting a Catholic priest facing East while celebrating Mass). Then Parsifal
steps forward and receives the Grail from Kundry. Now it is his turn to elevate
the Grail, which shines with an intense white light. The scene ends with
Parsifal holding the Grail, which illuminates the stage, Kundry still standing
and facing him. One by one, the knights rise to their feet; when all are
standing, the curtain falls.
hat are we supposed to make of this ending?
Instead of the redeeming blood of the Saviour, is it the cold, white light of
reason -- or of truth -- or of reality -- that Parsifal has brought to the
community? Is this a Parsifal of the Enlightenment?
Saturday, February 23, 2013
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment