Lohengrin, Berlin State Opera, April 12
th 2009. Production: Stefan
Herheim. Cast: Klaus Florian
Vogt (Lohengrin), Dorothea
Röschmann (Elsa), Michaela
Schuster (
Ortrud),
Gerd Grochowski (
Telramund), Markus
Brück (Herald),
Kwangchul Youn (Heinrich). Conductor: Daniel
Barenboim. Further
information here.
Norwegian director Stefan Herheim has become one of the most sought-after directors after his staging of
Parsifal at the Bayreuth Festival last year.
Some thought Herheim created a masterpiece. Others,
me among them, did not. Though I have greatly admired Stefan
Herheim´s stagings of the past, such as the
brilliant deconstruction of Entführung in Salzburg 2003, the Parsifal was quite simply to overly-intellectual and disorganized as I saw it.
Which also applies to this new
Lohengrin production, though this time to a degree that I actually find
Stefan Herheim more or less has ruined the piece.
The short version of this review is that I do not recall any new staging of any Wagnerian opera, which appealed so little to me than this Lohengrin.
Daniel Barenboim, on the other hand, was sensational.
In fact I have pondered for two days on how to put this on paper in a both civilized and fair manner. And to start with the fairness, I may add that though the
general opinions in the German press on Herheim´s staging were only luke-warm, this review is firmly rooted in the very negative end of the specter. Not to forget, that others found this staging to
be a masterpiece.
To the point: I simply
didn´t understand the concept. It was a confusing,
un-dramatic as well as highly intellectual
mish-mash which brought me nothing. And worst of all: It took all the attention away from the music.
It started well: A
Richard Wagner puppet dances on a tree-trunk during the prelude. A feather drops down and he apparently starts to compose. We then move on to Act 1, opening in present time with groups of people waving banners displaying the three opera houses in Berlin, apparently an allegory of
Brabant with The Herald starting out as the Berlin bear:
All main characters, Ortrud (and possibly Lohengrin) excepted, are puppeteers with a medieval puppet version of their character, which they control. Around the time the horn and helmet clad Lohengrin arrives, the action moves into the medieval times. Still with puppets.
And with the additional twist of all characters wearing naked-body suits with strategically placed figleaves, which they change into at various points, running around the stage.
The explanation? According to the programme booklet,
Stefan Herheim explains that the sin of Eve (eating the forbidden apple thus rebelling against God) in Eden is central to the drama of
Lohengrin. Who am I to say he is not right? However, as engaging theater, in my opinion it fails completely. And has very little connection to the
music drama Lohengrin.
Though the puppet-puppeteer concept does seem rather appropriate for a static piece like Lohengrin,
Stefan Herheim, as I see it, fails to ask (or answer) the central questions of Lohengrin, such as: Where does this man come from? Why must we not know his name etc.? Questions
Peter Konwitschny actually does both ask and answer in his famous Hamburg production, a major inspirational source for
Stefan Herheim.
Readers who admire Konwitschny´s Lohengrin, certainly stand a rather good chance of at least reacting more positively to Herheim´s as I do.
The working relationship between
Daniel Barenboim and
Stefan Herheim was not the best, with
Herheim publicly accusing Daniel
Barenboim, among other things, for
extended abscence during rehearsals (probably rightly).
Daniel Barenboim, on the other hand, publicly disagreed with
Herheim´s decision to stage the prelude, a decision it was
"too late to change" as he put it. A rather strange statement, as one may argue he could have thought about participating in the rehearsals at a point before it became "too late" for changing anything, including the director...
Being the third, and last, performance of this run, the orchestra was simply sensational. Somewhat unusual for
Daniel Barenboim, his tempi were rather brisk. But with an energy and inner sense of the dramatic structures making this easily the best conducted
Lohengrin I have heard.
Of the singers,
Dorothea Röschmann stood out as a simply wonderful and very touching Elsa. With her old-fashioned way of singing, much like that of Elisabeth
Grümmer, the dark colouring of her voice combined with superb, stylish phrasing made for a very moving experience. Unlike her Eva in
last years Meistersinger, Elsa seems to suit her well. She does reach the limit of her voice, but she
doesn´t exceed it.
Klaus Florian Vogt´s Lohengrin has spurred starkly contrasting opinions: Admirers point to his ringing, effortless
topnotes. Detractors point to his monotonous singing. Both sides are right as I see it:
Vogt´s Lohengrin is monotonously sung and acted with the added benefit (?) of an indifferent psychopathic air to his presentation. Though he really does hit those notes, piercing effortlessly through
Barenboim´s orchestra. But contributing to any degree of interpersonal drama he does not. Neither does Stefan
Herheim. At least not on stage..
Beauty of voice or expression is not what
Michaela Schuster offers. However, her over-all portrait of
Ortrud was superb: She clearly inhabited both the comic and desperate sides to the character and delivered a very effective, vocally as well, performance. Accompanied by
Gerd Grochowski´s character
barytone, singing rather well as
Telramund, but having a hard time to penetrate through
Barenboim´s orchestra.
How would
René Pape have looked running around in a naked-body suit with
figleaves and a wooden stick chasing Elsa´s
bridemaids? Fortunately (for him), his illness (
he has now recovered) prevented us from finding out and
Kwangchul Youn delivered a fine performance.
In summary, if you ask how much action and how many intellectual concepts one may put into one Wagner opera, I´d say
Stefan Herheim is the man with the answers. And if anyone should still ask who is the pre-eminent Wagnerian conductor alive, it is
Daniel Barenboim.
Links to
most German and international reviews of the production .
The bottom line (scale of 1-5, 3=average):
Klaus Florian Vogt: 4
Dorothea Röschmann: 4-5
Michaela Schuster: 4
Gerd Grochowski: 4
Kwangchul Youn: 4
Stefan Herheim´s production: 1-2
Daniel Barenboim: 5
Overall impression: ?