the gods fall in love with earth
by Douglas Messerli
Richard Wagner (composer, based on Nordic
texts) Die Walküre / The
Metropolitan Opera live HD performance which I saw with Howard Fox on Saturday,
March 30, 2019
The other day I saw the MET’s production of Wagner’s Die Walküre, an opera I’ve now seen 4 or 5 times. Howard and I watched the previous Metropolitan Opera’s production, Otto Shenk’s 1968 version, at least twice on video (perhaps I saw that one only once, when Howard and I did a marathon viewing over 4 days of the entire Nibelungen cycle at home); we saw the complete Der Ring des Nibelungen, directed by Archim Fryer, at the LA Opera in 2010; and the following year we saw a live-HD production of Robert Lepage’s MET production with Deborah Voight (who played as host to this new production) as Brünnhilde, Jonas Kaufmann, Eva-Maria Westbroek, and Stephanie Blythe. So, despite the glorious new production we saw on Sunday—with Christine Goerke playing the Valkyrie queen, Stuart Skelton as Siegmund, again the superb Eva-Maria Westbroek as Sieglinde, Jaime Barton as Fricka, and Greer Grimsley as Wotan—perhaps I should just remain quiet, allowing the thousands of other voices who have written about this remarkable opera speak for me. I have signed in to talk about it on at least three previous occasions.
Yet the My Year volumes, in which this and the other essays appear, also
serve as a kind of personal memoir of my experiences, and I find it difficult,
accordingly, to not speak out—this time in brief—about one of the most glorious
productions of this opera ever performed. All the singers were at top form,
with Goerke, Westbroek and Grimsley representing the highest levels of vocal
art.
But I don’t need to talk about that given that so many other critics
have acclaimed their performances. It is Grimsley, who in the intermission
suggested that he plays Wotan not simply as a god but as a kind of
Shakespearian tragic figure, who helped me, through his performance, to see
another dimension—surely one discussed endlessly over the years since the opera
premiered in 1870 (the MET first performed it in 1885).
Siegmund, the perfect example of a hero beginning to have his doubts,
even refuses the journey to the Norses’ heaven if he cannot take the woman (his
own sister, with whom he has entered into an incestuous relationship) who
represents earthly bliss, with him, and claims that he might rather go to
Hell—quite literally. Perhaps he has, given the fact that Brünnhilde returns on
her sky-traveling steed with his wife rather than him.
It
his Wotan’s recognition of the errors of his past that forces him to agree with
Fricka that he must look less toward the future and change, and more to the
rules that he himself, in his original godhead had enforced.
So
too has his beloved daughter, Brünnhilde, fallen in
love, in her many journeys there, with earth and its beings, including
Siegmund, who, defying her father’s insistence that she not intrude in his
battle with Hunding (Günther Grossböck), attempts to help save him from a
certain death, must be doomed herself to become one of the mortals—and in this
production, high atop the now-famed Lepage “Machine” she is crucified to later
become a kind of female Christ to the world with she has fallen in love. The
theme, of course, is repeated in the opera Siegfried.
It has always been fascinating to me that in Wagner’s world, the Christ is not
the dead hero, but the woman who has sacrificed her own immortality for man.
But it is also Ulysses defying Zeus and the other Greek gods; it is
Augustine speaking out against the Roman deities; it is Ibsen’s Brand denying
his own faith. Earth and all of its failings can be such a lovely place that
even the gods, who realize they must severely punish its sinful denizens, long
to be there. How the Christian God must have envied his Adam and Eve!
If
only the mortals stopped attempting to be gods!
Los Angeles, April 1, 2019
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and Performance (April 2019).
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