With this production of Les Troyens in Valencia, Fura dels Baus with director Carlus Padrissa has created a visually stunning production, along the same lines as theirprevious Nibelungen Ring, with essentially the same strenghts and weaknesses.
There is plenty of Star Wars in this production, which
ends with Aeneas, himself a visitor from another planet, failing to recognize the paradise which is Carthage, and instead leaves for Mars.
Troy is a dark and doomed place: Skeletons fill the
shores, dark threatening clouds and post-war smoking images fill the screen. Additional elements: Barbed wires, an eerie boxing contest, Cassandra being wheeled in an out in
wheelchair. The Troyan horse is metallic and menacing. VIRUS ALERT!! pops up on
the screen just before the final breakdown.
On the contrary, Carthage an idealised place, modelled
upon the particle accelerator in CERN (near Geneva), dominated by large red-and-grey tubes and with images of
wind-mills in the background and . A clean society relying on natural energy resources, obviously. However, all may not
be that well perhaps: Several uncanny images shows us the human dogs tracing
their prey in the Royal Hunt.
The costume designer Chu Uroz dresses most of the
characters as ice hockey players or well-padded aliens, thus making the same
mistakes he made in the Nibelungen Ring (anyone still remember Brünnhildesbreastplates?) by distancing the characters from any human interaction. Dido
simply looks silly with her odd three knot hair style and the lack of interaction
between Dido and Aeneas is appalling.
At times, the images are stunning. But the lasting
impression is that of a cold production where the ultimate weakness lies in the
failure to find a balance between imagery and human interaction.
Perhaps a stronger cast could have carried this staging.
However, unfortunately we are presented with weak performances from all three
protagonists, worst in fact from Lance Ryan, who is massively overparted as
Anaeas, no matter how many excuses one may wish to make for him, well knowing how tough the part is.
Elisabete Matos has heft, but no beauty of tone and is no
match for colleagues such as Anna Caterina Antonacci and Eva-Maria Westbroek
(not yet on DVD). Daniela Barcellona struggles as well with a vibrato that
borders on the offensive, though not as bad as Zlata Bulicheva´s as Anna.
It is far from enough that minor parts are well taken care of with Stephen Milling and
Gabriele Viviani, especially since Valery Gergiev also disappoints
in the pit. Though the orchestra seemed to love him and he received a massive
ovation, being very much an on-or-off conductor, this was definitely a day off, where he entirely failed to bring out the grandness in Berlioz´ score.
The bottom line (scale of 1-5, 3=average):
Elisabete Matos: 3
Daniela Barcellona: 3
Lance Ryan: 2
Fura dels Baus´ production: 3-4
Valery Gergiev: 3
Overall impression: 3
Overall impression: 3
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