Swift and Corrosive
GIUSEPPE PENNISI takes a sniff
at Shostakovich's 'The Nose'
The Nose by Dmitri Shostakovich is performed less often than
it should be, even though there is now a revival outside the Russian Federation. In the last two years, I
reviewed a high tech production seen in Aix-en-Provence, Lyon and New York and soon reaching La Scala [The Quality of Mercy, 14 July
2011] and
the traditional low cost but effective Moscow Chamber Opera staging [Full of Irony, 26 February
2011].
The former is an international production signed by William
Kentridge and by very well known conductors (eg Kazushi Onu). The latter
is a very functional production by Boris Pokrovskij (and slightly updated
by his successors) with a completely Russian cast.
I saw a new Zurich Opernhaus / Rome Teatro dell'Opera joint venture on its 27
January 2013 opening night. The plot is the surrealist tale of a
pompous military officer losing his nose in the barber's shop -- it gets cut out
merely by chance -- and searching desperately for it throughout St Petersburg. Meantime, the nose had
disguised itself as a State Counselor. The search for the nose -- and the
nose's attempt to have its own personality -- became a pretext for an
abrasive satire of society. In the Cyrillic alphabet, if
the letters meaning 'nose' are inverted, they
become the word 'dream'; thus, the search could be
an unreachable dream.
A scene from Shostakovich's 'The Nose' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. Photo © 2013 Laura Ferrari.
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After its initial
triumph in a small secondary St Petersburg theatre on 18 January 1930 and a short revival the
following year, the opera disappeared from the Russian scene until 1974 because of the
difficulties Shostakovich had with Stalin and his entourage. It was
staged almost simultaneously in Düsseldorf (in German) and in Florence and Rome (in Italian) in 1964 with considerable success. Theatre managers considered
it a daunting enterprise to produce twelve short scenes in three acts (the opera
lasts less than two hours), in well known St Petersburg locations around
1880 (from the huge Cathedral of Our Lady of Kazan to the Summer Garden, and from avenues to
artisans' shops).
Andrey Popov as Stiepàn and Paulo Szot as Kovalyov in Shostakovich's
'The Nose' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. Photo © 2013 Laura Ferrari.
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Peter Stein (stage director), Ferdinand Wögerbauer (stage sets), Anna Maria Heinreich (costumes) and Lia Tsolaki (choreography -- in addition to thirty singers, there are some twenty dancers and mimes), move the very
swift and corrosive action -- a bitter-sweet satire of
bureaucracy and middle class. The cast entails at least
thirty singers in sixty-two different roles (the concert piece in scene seven has
twenty-one singers on stage) with the ability not only to master difficult vocal skills (melologue, polyphony, hyper-acute tonalities) but
also to act and to dance effectively.
A scene from Shostakovich's 'The Nose' at Teatro dell'Opera di Roma. Photo © 2013 Laura Ferrari.
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In Rome, an
international cast was headed up by Paulo Szot as the protagonist Kovalyov; many were Russians,
some quite well known Italians, some, for the smaller roles,
members of the Rome Opera Chorus. It worked quite well due to
the musical direction of the young Argentine conductor Alejo Pérez who handled the balance between a crowded stage and a
score for a small chamber orchestra where, into a basic Slavic approach, Shostakovich inserts jazz, atonality, and traditional instruments such as the domra, balalaika
and flexatone. The Nose had, as it should always have, the right
tint of Alban Berg's Wozzeck in reverse or upside-down; musically, both of them are experimental and abrasive in their social critique: while Berg is sad and gloomy,
Shostakovich in The Nose is airy, bold, full of irony and somewhat dreamy. With its
applause, the audience showed that it had had a lot
of fun.
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