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Would you buy an opera from this man?
Last night I braved a blast of wintry Toronto weather to take in the Canadian Opera Company’s Tristan und Isolde. The production opened on January 29 with what was, by all accounts a strong cast, with Ben Heppner and Melanie Diener in the title roles. (See here, here or here.) But I heard the “B cast,” featuring tenor Michael Baba and soprano Margaret Jane Wray.

This Tristan is the brainchild of the brilliantly inventive director Peter Sellars, and was originally staged at the Paris Opéra in 2005. (We haven’t had any T und I in Toronto since 1987, so it was certainly high time for some more!) Embracing and expanding Wagner’s concept of the Gesamtkunstwerk, Sellars added cinema to the operatic mix in a big way.


The stage was dominated by a large projection screen that provided a running commentary – sometimes explicit, sometimes implicit – on the events of the opera. The projected images were vivid, imaginative and slickly produced: there were plenty of spectacular seascapes, and even a little full-frontal nudity to enliven the longueurs of Wagner. In short, the projections were pretty clearly the focus of Sellars’ interest and attention. At their best they were engaging and fascinating – but at their worst they were a distraction.

By comparison, the cast was reduced to a secondary role in a kind of concert performance that (even by Wagnerian standards) was static and minimal in its stage action.


What struck me most about the musical side of this performance was the emphasis placed on the lyrical, rather than the dramatic, aspects of Wagner’s score. In the hands of conductor Johannes Debus, the COC Orchestra gave a subtle, fluid, well-paced and well-balanced performance. (Kudos to Lesley Young for her splendid English Horn solo!) Similarly, the cast avoided bravura in favour of a kinder, gentler, interpretation.

All of this would have been quite lovely – except, as the opera progressed, the decision not to push the singers too hard seemed at least partly a response to the vocal abilities of the principals.

Act I went reasonably well. But in the heightened tensions of Act II it became apparent that neither our Tristan nor our Isolde had much of a dramatic edge to their voices. Sustained fortes seemed to lie outside their comfort zones: Wray displayed an unpleasant “hooty” quality, and Baba struggled unheroically with intonation issues whenever Wagner’s writing was forceful and chromatically challenging at the same time.

Wray’s and Baba’s limitations were underscored when Franz-Josef Selig, as King Marke, walked on stage and showed them how it’s done. His weighty and rock-solid bass voice came as a welcome relief, and injected some much-needed emotional impact into the production.


Act III fared better – although here it seemed that Wray and Baba stayed out of trouble by carefully pacing themselves. The end result was both musically and dramatically underwhelming.

As Kurwenal, Alan Held (who impressed audiences last year in the COC’s Florentine Tragedy / Gianni Schicchi double bill) used his clear, strong bass-baritone to fine effect. Soprano Daveda Karanas, as Brangäne, also gave a worthy performance.

All considered, it was an “interesting” production, and well worth seeing. But it fell short of the transcendent experience that Tristan und Isolde can be.


© Colin Eatock 2013
 


Comments

02/11/2013 14:21

Totally agree with you about Friday night. Opening night with Heppner and Diener singing was a transcendent experience. Quite overwhelming in fact.

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Karin
02/18/2013 19:49

I think you were kind. This Friday Tristan was a most unpleasant experience for a Wagner lover. I think it was a good think to get distracted by the video because the lead singers were soooooo terrible. Where does the COC find them. Wray has never done an Isolde (only a Sieglinde, much easier), and Baba only one (not so good) Tristan on a secondary stage in Salzburg. Bad choices, or bad luck, that is the question. And then the conductor is replaced by someone who has never done a Tristan either. How can you win?? Why bother putting on a Tristan if you can't get a decent cast?? Surely the director must have cost a bundle. I guess it was good for Heppner, because he could shine amidst such incompetence. Na ja....
Karin

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