Women's Voices
'Die Frau ohne Schatten'
at the Strauss Festival in Leipzig,
reviewed by GIUSEPPE PENNISI
Die Frau ohne Schatten is seldom performed outside the German
speaking world
because of the tremendous means it requires: twenty four principals, a
huge orchestra (with
violas and cellos in
double sections as well as the violins,
mostly quadruple winds,
extensive percussion including
glass
harmonica, and offstage woodwind
septet, a dozen extra brass, a wind
machine and a thunder machine), a double chorus and a
children's
chorus. No less demanding are the staging requirements: eleven changes of
set (in three acts, lasting about four hours), most of them without even
a short intermission — there are seven intermezzi, all on the same
leitmotif) and a series of special effects, including singers
descending from an upper stage to a lower stage, fountains and waterfalls
appearing on the stage, an earthquake, a fire, and
one of the protagonists being
turned into a statue.
Leipzig Opera House, with advertising for Wagner's 'Ring'. Photo © 2016
Ida Zenna. Click on the image for higher resolution
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A scene from 'Die Frau ohne Schatten' at Leipzig Opera. Photo © 2014
Kirsten Nijhof. Click on the image for higher resolution
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The opera was
conceived after the 'useless carnage', as Pope Benedict XVI called World War I, in a
letter to all governments involved in the conflict. The message is also
valid now, especially in Europe where
births are declining. The time of the action,
however, is not set in a mythical Oriental world but in Germany at an
undefined period: the
Imperial Palace and
dining room recall Bismarck's times, whereas the low cost housing seems
to belong to the nineteen fifties. This blend fits the score quite
well — a huge expressionistic picture with a few set pieces.
The protagonists are two women in
search for child
bearing happiness: One an ethereal spirit (The
Empress) and the other an all too real woman (the
Dyer's Wife, ie
'Die Frau'). Apart from their baffled husbands and the ambiguous nurse,
the other characters
provide only colors and celestial commentaries. In his old age, Richard Strauss, who considered Die Frau as his best and
most beloved
opera, attempted to compose a 'chamber music' version with
a smaller orchestra, fewer characters but the same philosophical message.
Nothing of this attempt survives.
Ulf Schirmer mastered the one-hundred-and-ten-strong
orchestra quite well, with some moments for a few soloists (violin, cello and bassoon). On
the evening I was
in the theatre, 18 June 2017, one
of the protagonists (Jennifer Wilson as 'Die Frau') turned sick just a
few hours before the opera started. She was replaced by one of the
world's best singers of this role, Elena Pankratova, who sang on
the side of the stage because she did not know the staging. An actress played the part on
stage.
Elena Pankratova. Photo © S Hoppe. Click on the image for higher
resolution
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Strauss had a
special liking for women's voices. In Die
Frau ohne Schatten there is a real apotheosis of women's voices in
the three major roles: a dramatic soprano ('Die
Frau'), a lyric
soprano (The Empress, Simone Schneider) and a mezzo
descending to the register of an alto (The
Nurse, Karin Lovelius). The intertwining of their voices (and of twelve
other women on stage) produced an excellent outcome, also thanks to the conductor Ulf
Schirmer and the Leipzig Opera House
acoustics.
In the men's group, I'm giving a special mention
to baritone Franz
Grundheber (Barak, the dyer) who is also a first class actor. In
an engrossing manner he juxtaposes his simple and genuine suffering with
the pains of the Emperor, at
the moment when both believe that they have been betrayed by their
respective wives.
Franz Grundheber
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