April 28, 2010

Ignited

Reflections on Götterdämmerung, Los Angeles Opera
by Nancy Cantwell

Conceived of first and executed last Götterdämmerung, brings to a conclusion the weighty and consummate Der Ring des Nibelungen by Richard Wagner. Last week I had the extraordinary happenstance to attend two performances of this Los Angeles Opera’s production featuring the baton of James Conlon with sets and direction by Achim Freyer. This is a really big show that attracts opera pilgrims from far and wide and I jumped at the chance for a second go around. Thrilled to settle into my splendid founders seat, I was set to experience a most satisfying, up close reprise.

First impressions were allowed to settle down and reformulate with a second viewing, but there are certain things that you just can’t escape with this production. First and most impressive is what a sad fate becomes the child hero Siegfried, sung by John Treleaven, whose voice did not really seem up to the task at hand, but whose performance was pitch perfect. While Siegfried’s music soars, his actions speak to a heroism forged not by some God wisdom, but more that of an ignoble spoiled lesser avatar. As one audience member put it, “what can you expect when you look at the gene pool.” Ill begotten chromosomes aside, Siegfried’s clown like hair, cartoon body and slouchy demeanor all serve to heighten the buffoonish behavior that make him such an easy target for the far more wily Hagen (portrayed deliciously by Eric Halverson). Even the Tarnhelm, the magic helmet that Siegfried procures as part of the booty having slain the Giant turned Dragon Fafner, references more Harpo’s top-hat than a transformative device worthy of such acts of courage. Of course the most treasured procession garnered from Fafner’s hoard is the ring itself and it is at the beginning of act three when the Rheinmaidens try to convince Siegfried to return the stolen gold that we hear him at his most fallen from grace: siegfried

“In water and on land
I am now learning women’s ways:
if their cajolery does not convince,
they scare with threats;
and if one dares to defy these,
they start to scold.

And yet,
had I not given Gutrune my word,
I would cheerfully have chosen for myself
one of these pretty women!”

Hardly noble truths to be spoken even under the influence! But such is the curse of the ring. Following his final demise at the hands of Hagen, Wagner gives our woeful protagonist the most regal and valiant funeral march sublimely performed by the opera orchestra as lead by Conlon. Clearly the composer’s sympathies lie with Siegfried, whose hero identity in the time when the Gods reign no more, is assimilated and subjugated to the frailties man.

theend We are talking about the end-of-time here and Achim Freyer pulls out all the stops to delight and amaze. Every retelling is accompanied by its according symbols. The set is resplendent with Wotan eyeballs, light saber swords, an ever present inverted Loge, incendiary scrim projections and cardboard costumes that behave badly. There is a outright sense of humor expressed as well. Cute bear heads pop up, affectionate taps on the noggin are exchanged, as well as a very Groucho like performance given by Richard Paul Fink as Alberich complete with cigar and tuxedo. Freyer also gave the lighting a character of its own, spotlighting different props repeatedly like a backdrop drone accompaniment to a melodious raga. The final disarray spectacular was worthy of the apocalyptic demise of the Gods. A simultaneous rising and drowning finishing with a literal blinding light. I find it paradoxical that Freyer, a master of German expressionist angst, utilized the Las Vegas based production group Stage Technologies to accomplish this Wagnerian feat, but I’m in favor of what ever works at the end of the universe… and this truly did.

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Ultimately it is Brünnhilde who awakens to the enormity, the global endemic scourge of the ring. My favorite production magic takes place in the final act when Brünnhilde sends Wotan’s vigilant ravens back to Valhalla with word of the ring’s return to the Rheinmaidens. The cardboard bird cutouts that have been acting as a shield for the prompters throughout the production are lifted as the ravens are projected onto the scrim and gloriously take flight. It is here in the “Immolation” scene, that closely parallels Isolde’s Liebestod, when cleansed by fire and inspired by compassion, Brünnhilde plants the seeds of a new world order and Wagner becomes transcendent. Having been witness to to this arising twice and having had a opportunity to sort out the staging I was able to concentrate fully on Linda Watson’s masterful delivery in service of this final transformation. It is the kind of stuff that makes converts of even the most ardent opera atheists.

A few final ponderings. Götterdämmerung feels like two operas in one due to all the back fill story telling that goes on and on even into the final aria. Just as Freyer shows us the rise and fall of Valhalla in the final scene so does Wagner seem to wrap up the backward and forwards plotting. The crossing of the Nothung sword and Hagens spear was a gratuitous poke at spirituality. Gratuitous too was the send up in the background of some time stamped computer code. Was he trying make a stab at seeming up to date with digital relevance? Michelle DeYoung was absolutely superb as Waltraute and in the first evening’s performance far out shined compatriots with more stage time. At the start of act two you can hear the beginnings of Parsifal that make you thirst for more. One never really becomes emotionally attached nor drained due to the lack of human physiognomy in the costuming and makeup. Which brings me to a final observation. There was a twinge of misogyny all around. Pendulous breasts painted on like targets were the predominant choice for the portrayal of womanhood. And all the while the congenitally unhappy Hagen sits atop his dead mother whose headless pink body, red teats and heeled shoes face the flooring in submission? Which set my mind off in another direction, in memory of another designer who has also been thought misogynist on occasion and that is the late, brilliant and troubled fashion designer, Alexander McQueen. So here from McQueen’s fall 2009 Ready to Wear collection a strange confluence or coincidence of thought processes at work. So eerily similar are these creations to that of Achim and Amanda Fryer, they fatefully share the same iconography. Please click on images to enlarge.

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December 30, 2009

More Post iTs for 2009

A Round Up of Stuff I Just Never Got Around To Talking About
By Nancy Cantwell

Alrighty then. It’s a year end list, but there is still some timely stuff that just needs to be said.
Bear with me…it’s brief.

1. The American Express “Don’t Take Chances, Take Charge” commercial. Smartest ever. Personal favorite is when the stove lights on fire with worry.

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2. The Los Angeles Opera finally got around to Wagner’s Ring Cycle. We went. What can I say? I agree with Rita, “The Ride of the Valkyries” was great as were Linda Watson (Brünnhilde) and Ekaterina Semenchuk (Frika). But I fear they were the best of it. We assembled at dinner to discuss and came up with this: The Achim Freyer Petting Zoo. I wanted to do live action or rather just a live corral of painted pets in front of the Music Center, but would have settled for a Photoshop version. Needless to say, I think that the Petting Zoo was one of the great ideas of 2009 that never got acted on. Probably a few more off those out there. Send me yours!

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3. The Orphan movie billboard campaign. So many people wanted to talk about it…mostly how creeped-out they were, but we seemingly just couldn’t get enough of it.

4. The return of Nau. One of my favorite clothing lines. Great looking with all the right stuff: Sustainable Business Practices, Environmental Friendly Clothing, Social Responsiblity. You are gonna feel good about the way you look!

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5. For you business folks out there, Dilbert still has chops.

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6. Lastly, one from my Shazam list…this is such a hard choice. I tend to tag trance/dance music which is not exactly a quick listen and I promised brevity. And…I have to cop to True Blood as being my shameless vampire obsession.
So here you go, from the great Slim Harpo, Strange Love.

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December 26, 2009

Post iTs for 2009

Five Fav’s from 2009
by Rita Valencia

Always bold, Rita Valencia looks back on 2009 and hand picks some beauties!

1. Mad Men, Season 3, Episode 6, A Man Walks Into an Advertising Agency.
Anybody up for a little lawn mowing?

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2. My New Kindle with computer-voice man reading Dante’s Inferno.

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3. The Ride of the Valkyries scene in Act Three of Achim Freyer’s Die Walküre at L.A.Opera.

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4. Tom’s Vegan Wrap Boots

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5. Caryl Churchill’s Seven Jewish Children, a play for Gaza (which is in no way “anti-Semitic”).

Watch Jennie Stoller perform Caryl Churchill’s play, Seven Jewish Children- A Play for Gaza, which was written in response to the situation in Gaza in January 2009. This link will also give you the access to the written play. No children appear in the play. The speakers are adults, the parents and if you like other relations of the children. The lines can be shared out in any way you like among those characters. The characters are different in each small scene as the time and child are different. Please feel free to download the play. This play can be read or performed anywhere by any number of people.

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April 12, 2009

Take That!

home_bot_02Achim Freyer’s Redemption through Geometry, Metaphysics and Light Sabers
by Rita Valencia

Although I am focusing on design and direction in these notes on LA OPERA’s Ring Cycle, it would be a travesty here not to applaud the spectacular vocal performances last night. I would single out Anja Kampe, whose performance was jaw-droppingly powerful, tender and transfixing…but then that would leave out Placido Domingo’s powerful, expertly polished performance with its subtly Italianate flourishes so right for the part of Seigmund; or Linda Watson’s spectacular Brunnhilde. Eric Halvarson (Hunding) has a basso so profound I would be terrified to be in the same room with him singing, and Vitalj Kowaljow performed a nuanced and complex Wotan. Michelle DeYoung ’s power mezzo gave Fricka some real muscle, and the ensemble of Walkuries was as exciting a moment in opera as I can recall.

With some trepidation I approached the second installment of Achim Freyer’s aggressively designed Ring Cycle. I came prepared for the Tacky, Ornate and Silly and was delighted to find a thoughtful execution which had a fine sense of human scale and movement that was carefully calibrated to the music. The slow motion choreography is a signature of Freyer’s style and here it works brilliantly as a visual complement to the story and score, in contrast to the imposed stiffness that was so awkward in Das Rheingold. There was still some silly stuff: a heavy reliance on light sabers that reminded me of the toy department at the now defunct Kmart on San Fernando Road, but I cannot really fault Freyer for that–I doubt that he has shopping for young boys at KMart in his lexicon. (He has a daughter Amanda, who is his co-costume designer.) And he probably is unfamiliar with the local connotation of a large eyeball he places high stage left–one can’t expect him to be familiar with L.A.’s Lowbrow Art movement which years ago took the emblem for one of its own. As The Ring plays out, I am sure that the style of this idiosyncratic designer/director will become less chafing to some in the audience, especially as his thoughtfulness and conceptual mastery of The Ring’s resplendently layered matrix of mythos and narrative is fully revealed.

lrg-23-walkuere_bp_036Die Walkurie opens with a dark dreamscape centered on a large rotating clockface disk upon which a solitary black figure moves in an excruciatingly slow clockwise orbit, dragging with it the hand of the clock–a white illuminated tube–which turns on the spindle of a tall glowing blue tube. These two projectiles form the central thematic objects–literally poles–on which the story turns: the blue tube stands in for the magic sword which Wotan has planted in the tree outside Seiglinde’s home, for only a true hero to extract, and the white glowing tube represents Wotan’s spear, upon which is written the law. An emblem of heroism, the sword is double-edged. On the one hand it represents empowerment of the Hero, who is the soldier of forces of love, hope and freedom of humankind; this sword will enable the twin lovers Siegmund and Seiglinde to successfully escape Seiglinde’s cruel ogre of a spouse, Hunding. The other edge of the sword is its function to enable the more destructive and venal desire of Wotan, arming the hero to get back the Ring. Just as the sword is double edged, so is the Hero, who is both a vehicle for goodness and innocence, and also the most brazen and foolish evil. The second “narrative pole” of the myth’s geometry is the spear upon which the Law is written. Law plays a crucial role in the story that unfolds. It is the law written on that spear which thwarts Wotan’s desire to obtain the Ring. The giant Fafner’s claim upon it is legal and binding–a chafing worry for Wotan whose doomed desire for the Ring subverts every action he takes. The Law drives the force with which Fricka commands Wotan to bend to her will in her vendetta against Wotan’s beloved children, Seigmund and Seiglinde. Their love is verboten: breaking laws of marriage and against incest. Even though we know that Fricka is motivated by more petty motives of envy and spite, the Law is on her side, and the law is binding.lrg-21-walkuere_bp_017

That these two objects form a clockwork has deep significance to the story: the abstracted timepiece reminds us that each scene we see unfold has its roots in actions of the past and will have deep ramifications in the future. Using two poles as a geometric analog to the pivotal narrative forces is a brilliant design strategy, as is the clockface with its circumambulating figure who moves clockwise when the action is moving forward, and counterclockwise when the drama is reflecting on past actions. Freyer uses the rotation of this clock as choreographic device, creating the illusion of flowing movement, with the actors moving hardly at all. It becomes the long space strangers must traverse to become lovers in the slow arousal of lust between Sieglinde and Siegmund in the first act. In the stunning climactic scene of the ride of the Valkyries, it becomes a demented carousel spinning strange broken bicycle horses ridden by the enchanting and wild females who are palpably gleeful in their performance.

The stage does occasionally creak when it rotates though–which wasn’t anywhere near as distracting as the cell phone that went off in the first act or the man who tried to sing along with the Valkyries who was sitting next to my friend Martin. Now if only Freyer would lose that dangling igloo shaped castle that he uses for Valhalla…he’d have a whole-hearted fan.

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April 1, 2009

Here’s Looking at You Wotan

home_bot_02The Dilemma of Watching Wagner – By Rita Valencia

Theatrical eminence Achim Freyer has an astonishing portfolio: please check out the photos of the productions he’s done at his own company Freyer Ensemble.

http://www.freyer-ensemble.de

The task of staging the mythic, grand and otherworldly works of the Ring cycle involves scholarly mastery and a theoretical rigor. Any major opera company needs to engage a theater artist who is credentialed and bears the imprimatur of a cultural establishment. Wagner after all is the epitome of a grand master, a model for the hyperinflation of artistic importance…big themes set to brilliant grandiose music, and backed up by the most refined musical skills that Western culture can provide. The musical experience of Wagner is the rush of mainlining the Profound. Wagner’s work is the musical incarnation of spiritual ecstasy: he has heard something, and his music makes you feel that you heard it too, when you were a god, in the vast millennia bygone.

lrg-1-rheingold_bp_013But the mystery of aural experience translating into the literality of visual theater is inherently problematic. Pop culture has always viewed the theatrics of Wagner opera as slightly absurd. The fat lady with a big open mouth, funny hat and frumpy robe has become a sad visual emblem of general philistine scorn. However ignorant, there is also some truth here. It’s easy to be pompous or tacky or silly in an era where most all the cutting edge artists have all been taken by the cause of irony. For all it matters, my personal choice for a designer would have been Anselm Kiefer, who hasn’t to my knowledge designed any theater, but in the visual art realm he seems the closest analog to Wagner living today. Los Angeles, FINALLY getting a production of the Ring cycle…alas, couldn’t afford George Lucas’ Industrial Light and Magic (thank gods!!!) and mercifully, they didn’t approach Spielberg. Given all this, presenting the Ring constitutes the artistic equivalent of a field of land mines. Enter Achim Freyer, a practitioner of German Expressionistic theater whose career comes with impeccable pedigree.

Some critics praise this production for not being Marxist, Keynesian, etc–implying that it is a disservice to Wagner to politicize the work, presumably by staging it as a contemporary political morality play, spelling out what the mythic tale of greed and moral corruption means in the here and now. The here and now for Wagner may not have been as isolated from the gods as popular and even high culture is today, but within the tradition of German Romanticism there was a deep horror at the alienation from a moral and spiritual groundedness which capitalism in its infancy was instigating. Wagner was as deeply concerned with this as Dostoevsky was in pre-revolutionary Russia. lrg-3-rheingold_bp_023In a similar vein, only a generation or so preceeding, Goethe, in Faust, critiques the concept of a financial system based on paper money (in the little read second act.) The relevance of the Ring cycle today is pretty obvious given the financial crisis. But there is more here than relevance…for serving Wagner means serving the gods and heroes he invokes, and the godless (with a small ‘g’) and mundane realm of current politically engaged art runs the risk of trivializing the authentic grandeur of the work. Reviewing a sampling of the commentary on recent productions of Wagner’s Ring you’ll find consistently problematic attempts at “re-approached” stagings.

This one is also in its way “re-approached,” with a heavy-handed Expressionistic style. I am actually a big fan of the raucously visual, surreal, post-modern, post punk, but this staging amazes in how little sensitivity is shown to the music. There’s a fine line between bold visual style and visual bombast. Wagner calls for extreme theatricality–it’s in the DNA of the work to create an alternate universe of form and color and magic. Freyer would have seemed an appropriate choice, given his resume. The major misstep here was that the opera was fashioned into a Freyer piece, and there was an uneasy competition between music and visual style, in which style was like the ugly gnome who stole the show.

This production was too often crudely rendered and physically cumbersome. There were some “wow” moments– the ethereal Rhinemaidens ensconced in wafting blueness, their images reflected by silent mimes, subtle scrims crossed with soft light beams; there was a cleverly engineered transition from the mountain home of the Gods to the torture mines of Alberich; and an equally amazing flood of blood that heaves and undulates over the stage after the Giants’ fratricide. But these moments were undercut, particularly in the sequences where Wotan and Fricka are stationed in rigid symmetry around their clock faced mountain, stuck into clunky costumes. Key moments of the drama were undercut by just plain bad decisions of stagecraft and design that came off as amateurish or silly. Alberich’s arm comes off as Wotan wrests the ring from him and it bounces comically on the floor. There was an inexplicable cartoon airplane hanging in the sky. Valhalla is represented as a small crude drawing that looks sort of like an igloo with a blue stick of light protruding inexplicably from it. Why did Fricka have to have two (ugly) costumes and on top of that, have to carry one of them around? Major problems with the scale, size and manageability of the costumes distracted from the music. And there were notable instances of neglect: the deterioration of the gods after they lose the golden apples was never addressed at all visually.

The flaws beg the question of whether this practitioner is so confident and pumped up by his successes that he doesn’t sweat the details. And Freyer has an awesome photographer, so we won’t remember any of the stuff that didn’t work.

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