Speranza
G.B. Shaw on Parsifal in Bayreuth
"To enjoy Parsifal, either as a listener or an executant,
one must be either a fanatic or a philosopher. To enjoy Tristan it is only
necessary to have had one serious love affair."
[G.B. Shaw in The Star, 6
August 1889]
The much-boasted staging is marred by obsolete contrivances
which would astonish us at the Lyceum as much as a return to candle-lighting or
half-price at nine o'clock.
Mr Mansfield playing Richard III in the dress of
Garrick, or Mr Irving Hamlet in that of Kemble, would seem modern and original
compared with the unspeakable ball-room costume which Madame Materna dons to
fascinate Parsifal in the second act.
The magic flower garden
would be simply
the most horribly vulgar and foolish transformation scene ever allowed to escape
from a provincial pantomime, were it not recommended to mercy by a certain
enormous naïveté and a pleasantly childish love of magnified red blossoms and
trailing creepers.
[The Star, 1 August 1889]
Sketch of the Grail Shrine by
Anton Schnittenheim, Bayreuth 1882.
©RW-Gedenkstätte.
Marianne Brandt as Kundry in Act 2, Bayreuth 1882,
reclining on the "Gower St. sofa". ©Richard- Wagner-
Gedenkstätte.
to the canvas set piece and Gower-st. sofa
visibly pulled on to the stage with Madame Materna seductively reposed on it,
the steam from a copper under the boards which filled the house with a smell of
laundry and melted axillary gutta-percha linings, the indescribable
impossibility of the wigs and beards, the characterless historical-school
draperies of the knights, the obvious wire connexion of the electric light which
glowed in the ruby bowl of the Holy Grail, and the senseless violation of
Wagner's directions by allowing Gurnemanz and Parsifal to walk off the stage
whilst the panoramic change of scene was taking place in the first act.
Obviously the absence of the two men who are supposed to be traversing the
landscape reduces the exhibition to the alternative absurdities of the trees
taking a walk or the auditorium turning round.
All these faults show the danger
of allowing to any theatre, however imposing its associations, the ruinous
privilege of exemption from vigilant and implacable criticism.
The performance
of Parsifal on Sunday last suffered additionally from Herr Grüning executing a
hornpipe on the appearance of Klingsor with the sacred spear.
But this was
introduced not as an act of whimsical defiance, but under pressure of the
desperate necessity of disentangling Parsifal's ankle from the snapped string on
which the spear was presently to have flown at him.
[The Star, 1 August
1889]
Flower Maiden costume by Paul von Joukowsky,
Bayreuth 1882.
Impressive as
the first Grail scene is, nine-tenths of its effect would be lost without the
"innocent fool" gazing dumbly at it in the corner, only to be hustled out as a
goose when it is over. His appearance on the rampart of Klingsor's castle,
looking down in wonder at the flower maidens in the enchanted garden, is also a
memorable point.
And that long kiss of Kundry's from which he learns so much is
one of those pregnant simplicities which stare the world in the face for
centuries and yet are never pointed out except by great men.
[The Star, 7
August 1889]
The work produced a great effect - an effect in some cases of
disgust and repulsion, in others of awe and even of ecstasy; but in all cases a
powerful effect.
The perfect smoothness with which the panoramic changes of
scenery in the first and third acts worked, the clever changes from dusk to full
light, the beauty of the temple of the Grail, the smooth and thoroughly
rehearsed choral singing, the magic of the orchestra, and above all, of course,
that prodigious coup de théâtre, the celebration of the Holy Communion on the
stage, with the sacred chalice glowing with ruby light, and the Holy Ghost
descending in the form of a dove in dazzling celestial radiance, could not fail
to affect very deeply an audience of the somewhat cathedrally class (if I may
use the expression) which alone can afford to go to Bayreuth.
There was an
English bishop present yesterday.
I shall not mention his see, lest I should get
him into trouble.
[The Star, 20 July 1894]
Amalie
Materna, Emil Scaria and Hermann Winkelmann. © Richard- Wagner-
Gedenkstätte.
The bass, who was rather flustered, perhaps from
nervousness, was especially brutal in his treatment of the music of Gurnemanz;
and it struck me that if he had been a trombone player in the band, instead of
the singer, the conductor, Levi of Munich, would have remonstrated. Indeed, I
presently heard a trombone player, who was helping with the fanfares outside the
theatre between the acts, pulled up by the sub-conductor for being 'a little too
strong'.
Accordingly, having the opportunity of exchanging a few words with Levi
afterwards, I expressed my opinion about the bass in question. Levi appeared
surprised and, declaring that the singer had the best bass voice in Germany,
challenged me to find anyone who could sing the part better, to which I could
only respond with sufficient emphasis by offering to sing it better myself, upon
which he gave me up as a lunatic.
[The World, 1 August 1894]
Saturday, February 23, 2013
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