emblems of love
by Douglas Messerli
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (music), Emanuel Schikaneder (libretto) The
Magic Flute / Los Angeles, LAOpera at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion,
December 15, 2013.
In short, Mozart and his librettist seem completely disinterested in
their characters’ motivations, interactions, or even consistency. They are
simply lovers who must undergo predetermined and quite inexplicable trials and
tribulations to prove their worthiness for one another or evil monsters
determined to get in the way. We easily comprehend why Don Giovanni takes to
the streets: he is a womanizer in search of yet more lovers. We can well
perceive why the braggarts Ferrando and Guglielmo want to test their lovers’
faithfulness. But we have little idea why—particularly
given the spider-like manifestation of Pamina’s mother in the LAOpera
production—Tanino has fallen in love or why, without really knowing him, Pamina
responds in kind, going so far as to attempt suicide and, later, follow Tamino
into the throes of death if not death itself. In short, all of the Mozart’s
characters in this opera seem to exist in a kind of gap, are separate and
isolate, never quite able to reach out to one another until the highly
spiritualized ending. And I think this isolation of the opera’s figures also
plays out in Mozart’s music as well. The dialogue passages which separate the
opera’s arias help to further isolate the opera’s set pieces, some of which are
obviously quite beautiful, but for me, at least, seldom coalesce.
Given the isolation of character and gaps of logic and plot of The Magic Flute, directors and designers
generally fill the spaces with extraordinarily elaborate costumes and fabulous
fairy-tale like sets which enchant audiences young and old and keep them from
too carefully questioning and the why and where the characters actions and
travels in their attempt to enter the temples of knowledge and wisdom. And in
that sense, I have to admit, the LAOpera production I saw, based on the
remarkable Komische Oper Berlin production with direction by Suzanne Andrade
and Barrie Kosky and animations and concept by the two-person group 1927,
consisting of Suzanne Andrade and Paul Barrit, is definitely the most
innovative version of the Mozart opera in years.
Their brilliant blend of animation and live-singers, discards the long
dialogical interludes with something similar to silent-film intertitles, often
presented in the flourished letterings of the first two decades of film-making,
with the similarly outdated links of words such as “meanwhile…” or “on the
other hand,” etc. But, fortunately, that is only the beginning of 1927’s
involvement with animation. In this work, film is not projected upon a
backscreen or front scrim as in, say, the recent MET production of The Nose but becomes part of the
on-stage action itself, using the singers to create links between cartoon-like
images borrowed from the entire history of cinema, from Westerns, horror films,
and science-fiction pictures and their images to figures that might remind one
of the paintings of Andy Warhol and Henry Darger. The monstrous Monostatos
(Rodell Rosel) becomes a kind of Nosferatu, to Papageno’s (Rodion Pogossov)
Buster Keaton. Pamina (Janai Brugger) is turned into a Louis Brooks and Perils
of Pauline figure, while Tanino (Lawrence Brownlee) is turned into a sort of
Harold Lloyd-like nerd. Birds fly across the stage, along with pink elephants
(clearly a reference to Disney’s Dumbo), monstrous legions of slightly leashed
dogs and the trotting and faithful bird-loving cat. The three boys who
accompany Tanino and Papageno into the underworld are transformed into
sweet-faced butterflies. When Tanino plays his magic flute, notes flutter
across the entire stage, and with Papageno opens his box of magic bells, a
whole chorus of young nymphets flutter about the proscenium as they were the
performers in a Busby Berkeley number.
If at moments this can move a little too far in the director of Disney’s
Fantasia, the work’s evil figures
call up images that seem to salute the convoluted mechanical constructions of
Monty Python and Gabe Ruberg. The terrifying aria wherein The Queen of the
Night orders her daughter to kill Sarastro (Evan Boyer) becomes a horrifying
series of images in which her spider claws turn suddenly into daggers pinning
Pamina into the prison of her will.
All of this energized image-making, in short, creates an often
exhilarating and nearly always entertaining subtext to the opera’s music. The
only problem is that in its stage-craft requirements that the singers take
their places on the entire screen both vertically and horizontally of the
stage, they are forced to stand upon small pedestals almost as friezes or, in
the case of the three boys and three ladies in framed tableaus. Since they
seldom can move through space, the actors seem even more separated and isolate
from one another, only reiterating the problem of Mozart’s work. The brilliant
interchanges between the “real” and the “imaginary,” moreover, merely remind us
that Mozart’s figures are emblems of beings—lovers and evil forces—as opposed to
psychological figures determined to explain and enact those emotions.
As a lover of artifice, of course, this does not truly trouble me.
Mozart’s work, in this case, was never intended to be a psychological
exploration of why people fall in love or try to defeat its forces. Leave that
to somewhat like Bergman, whose The Magic
Flute-influenced film I have previously described. Here love,
the lovers’ willingness to suffer its torments, and the knowledge that
suffering rewards is as inexplicable as why Adam and Eve became determined to
eat the forbidden “apple” which expelled them from their own magical lives.
Los Angeles, December 16, 2013
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and Performance (December 2013).
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