frozen in a bed of chance
by Douglas Messerli
Julia Migenes Le Vie en Rose / Directed
by Peter Medak, Odyssey Theatre Ensemble / the performance I saw was on
Thursday, November 14, 2019
At some point in her performances of French chansons
last evening, opera singer, theater performer, and Grammy winner Julia Migenes
revealed that if she were to perform all of her most-loved chansons, we might
be in the Odyssey Theatre space for at least 4 days.
I
might actually have loved to do that, hearing a world that has only been
revealed to me previously by a handful of records. And Migenes’ incredible
soprano voice and her French-language intonations were so perfect that, along
with her very deep knowledge of the genre, it might have been so revelatory
that it would have completely altered concepts in the US of the depth and range
of what is now generally perceived a lovely, almost chanted, but not incredibly
important songs of love and loss in Paris. And I’m particularly sad to hear
that this is her final musical tour, representing her retirement from singing
in general.
Consequently, I feel honored to have been able to hear her sing last night works from several of the most noted singers of chansons, including works by Maurice Yvain, Georges Moustaki, Léo Ferré, Francis Lai, Michel Legrand sung by noted singers such as Edith Piaf, Charles Aznovour, Jacques Brel and others.
The red-haired beauty not only interprets these with great finesse, but
provides her audience with a short-course about who the composers and singers
were: the fact that Piaf, for instance, had begun her career as a
street-singer, in a sense a kind of prostitute, which helps us comprehend why
she might, in her song “Milord,” wish to invite it a man, addressing him with
honor in order to lure him to her table:
Come on my Lord
Sit at my table
It’s so cold outside
Here is so comfortable
Let yourself be, Milord
And take your ease
Your sorrows on my heart
And your feet on a
chair
I know you, Milord
Your never saw me
I am only a girl from
the port
A shadow of the street
Or
why the popular singer Mistinguett, drowned in Ostrich feathers she and her
male dancers wore, might wish to sing the sad now well-known English-language
version of “Mon Homme,” made popular her by Billy Holliday and, later, Barbara
Streisand:
Oh, my man I love him
so
He’ll never know
All my life is just
despair
But I don’t care
When he takes me in
his arms
The world is bright,
all right
What’s the difference
if I say
I’ll go away, When I know
I’ll come back on my
knees some day?
Migenes not only explains these songs, singing them with great
reverence, but shows us pictures of the composers on the covers. She even
threatened, quite hilariously, to have appeared as did Mistinguett, in Ostrich
feathers, but she might also need ten or more male dances, lots of feathers,
and net stocking up to her waist, along with a bustier. As lovely as Migenes
is, it is hard to imagine her in such a costume.
The
great singer even gives us glimpses of her own operatic career in Austria
singing Lulu, a nearly impossible score with the singers move in
different registers and directions from the orchestra, and, after her on-stage
murder by Jack the Ripper, enjoying a kind of decompression by hearing the The
Doobie Brothers, whom she brilliantly compares to the music of Charles
Aznavour, who, she insists, so compacted his lyrics that he left the rest of
the lyrical passages just for the musicians. She sang two songs by Aznavour—an
early supporter of the LBGT community—whose “Hier Encore” notes:
Yesterday still, I was
twenty, I was wasting time
Believing to stop it
And to hold him back,
even ahead of him
I just ran out of breath
Ignoring the past,
conjugating in the future
I preceded from me any
conversation
And gave my opinion that
I wanted the good
To criticize the world
casually
Time, obviously, is a major issue in these chansons, particularly in the
music of Ferrè, whose son “Avec Le Temps” begins with a lament on how “With
time goes everything goes away / We forget the face and we forget the voice.
The heart when it beats more / It’s not worth going further / You have to let
it go and that’s fine.” It sounds a bit like Alzheimer’s disease to me.
Oddly, Migenes is particularly brilliant singing the male-composed love
songs such as the endlessly chain-smoking Jacques Brel’s “Les Paumés du Petit
Martin” and “La Chanson des Vieux Amant,” followed by her excellent pianist
Victoria H. Kirsch’s lovely piano rendition, as Migenes temporarily leaves the
stage, of one of his standards.
Her last song, Michel Legrand and Jacques Demy’s grand paen to love from
The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, reiterates just how time is at the center of
the French chansons.
If it takes forever I
will wait for you
For a thousand summers I
will wait for you
Till you’re here beside
me, till I’m touching you
And forevermore sharing
your love.
For any of us who has seen the film, however, know, the singer does not
wait for her lover, who’s been sent off into the French military. She marries a
wealthy suitor instead of waiting for her gasoline-station owner-lover. Love in
these songs is always a thing of chance, a fleeting glance as Francis Lai and
Pierre Barouh suggest in “A Man and a Woman.”
In performing these iconic and often ironic songs, Migenes, with
director Peter Medak, has indeed taken a chance that might help you fall in
love with the French chant-songs. I’ll never hear any of them again in the same
way.
Los Angeles, November 15, 2019
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and
Performance (November 2019).
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