Speranza
Met premieres Francois Girard’s striking new ‘Parsifal’ with glorious cast,
superb conducting
In Wagner’s “Parsifal,”
the leader of the Knights of the Holy Grail suffers from an agonizing wound that
will not heal.
In Francois Girard’s vision of the opera, this wound afflicts the
earth itself, etching a widening crevice that tears society apart and threatens
the survival of mankind.
The French-Canadian director’s starkly modern and
thought-provoking staging, first seen last year in Lyon, France, premiered at
the Metropolitan Opera on Friday night.
Though traditionalists may object, this
is a “Parsifal: dramma mistico in tre atti” to treasure, elevated to the highest musical level by the
solemnity and sweep of Daniele Gatti’s conducting and the dedication of a dream
cast of singing actors, headed by tenor Jonas Kaufmann in the title
heroic role.
From the opening notes of the prelude, Girard attempts to make the
audience see themselves in the events on stage.
A mirrored curtain reflects back
at us a blurred image of the auditorium where we are sitting.
Behind the curtain
we soon see the chorus, the men stripping off jackets and shoes and remaining
dressed in everyday attire of white shirts and dark pants.
Once the curtain
rises on Michael Levine’s set, the stage is a desolate, perhaps post-apocalyptic
landscape with a narrow river running down the centre.
The men are seated in a
circle of chairs on the right, while the women have been banished to the
left.
When the wounded AMFORTAS is carried in to seek relief by bathing in
the river, it turns to blood — a grim reminder that no water can cleanse him of
his sin.
AMFORTAS once allowed the temptress KUNDRY to seduce him and, while locked in
her embrace, was stabbed with his own spear by the sorcerer KLINGSOR.
At the
end of Act 1, the river widens into a chasm, and Parsifal, the “innocent fool”
who will redeem Amfortas, descends into Klingsor’s lair.
First Percival (Old French: perce-le-vale) must fend off
the Flower Maidens, here imagined as spear-carrying warriors in sleeveless white
dresses.
Then Kundry attempts to seduce him on a bed whose sheets turn red as
Girard floods the stage with 16,000 gallons of fake blood.
Parsifal, overcome by
compassion for Amfortas’ suffering, resists Kundry, destroys Klingsor and
reclaims the holy spear.
Girard’s staging in Act 3 is breathtaking in its
simplicity, beginning with Parsifal’s return to the knights.
First just the very
tip of his spear appears in the background, growing taller as the exhausted hero
staggers up a hill.
Finally PARSIFAL appears, shrouded in a kind of monk’s habit.
Not
until later does his reveal his face and the close-cropped, graying hair that
has replaced his curly locks.
Parsifal heals Amfortas with the spear, and by
baptizing the penitent Kundry, he also heals the rift in society.
At last the
women are able to cross the divide, and Girard underscores the reconciliation by
having Parsifal choose Kundry to uncover the Grail.
Integral to the
production are the video projections by Peter Flaherty, a constantly shifting
array of multicoloured shapes that sometimes resemble storm clouds, a moonscape
or even contours of the female body.
Kaufmann, more than most Parsifals,
looks and acts the part of a callow youth to perfection in the opening scene.
Vocally, he rises to the stirring climaxes in Act 2 with his customary thrilling
tone, then seems to deliberately hold back in Act 3, giving many of his phrases
a hushed, worshipful quality.
To bass Rene Pape falls the longest role in
this or just about any opera, the knight Gurnemanz who doubles as narrator and
father figure. Pape pours out unstinting rich, velvety sound, but just as
important, his is a deeply felt interpretation: His joy at the miracle that has
brought Parsifal back and saved the knights brings tears to his eyes — and
ours.
As fine as Kaufmann and Pape are, the revelation of the night is
baritone Peter Mattei, tackling the role of Amfortas for the first time. When
has any singer so powerfully expressed the suffering of this tormented character
while producing burnished sounds of such breathtaking beauty? His monologues in
the first and final acts are the musical and dramatic highlights of the
evening.
As Kundry, soprano Katarina Dalayman rises to the challenge of the
seduction scene with a fearless performance, her singing blemished only by a
couple of troublesome high notes. Baritone Evgeny Nikitin blusters his way with
suitable menace through the role of Klingsor, and debuting bass Runi Brattaberg
makes the most of the brief offstage utterances of Amfortas’ father,
Titurel.
Gatti, conducting without a score, is clearly enraptured by the Met
orchestra’s ability to spin a glorious web of sound. On opening night, the
players returned the compliment, remaining in the pit while he took his bows on
stage with the cast and production team. As always at a Met premiere of an
adventurous production, there were a few boos for the director, but they were
drowned out by cheers.
There are six more performances through March 8,
including a live high-definition broadcast to movie theaters around the world on
March 2. Asher Fisch takes over as conductor for the last two performances.
(c) Associated Press.
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