This Ring will be remembered as a huge project that the Paris Opéra decided to confide to Günter Krämer.
The stage at Opéra Bastille is huge and setting up the show that can be viewed by everyone in such a vast auditorium is tough, especially if we keep in mind the standard requirements applying to every contemporary production of the Ring: the show must be subtle, ideas should be clear and different from recent productions (at least in some aspects), and the show must be spectacular. Even though Krämer was not audacious in his approach, his take on this saga was coherent, interesting for the most part, and the parallel with the 20th century history of Europe and Germany was very engaging.
I felt that the last of 4 operas was less captivating, most probably because the production team got tired. Perhaps they should have spread the producing process over three operatic season, instead of two.**
This was also the first official Ring conducted by Philippe Jordan. He's taken great care of everyone involved in building the musical structure around this Ring and even though the orchestra started off a little apprehensively in the Rheingold, they ended the Ring in a great style.
The cast was uniformly brilliant with several stand-out/memorable performances: a stunning Brünnhilde by Katarina Dalayman in the Walküre; extraordinary Thomas Johannes Mayer whose stamina to sing 10 Wotan in a row at Opéra Bastille was mind-boggling; authority by which Stephen Milling and Hans Peter König sang their parts; Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke and his dramatically phenomenal Mime; Kim Begley's fantastic rendition of Loge... and many-many others. A huge THANKS to all the singers.
In the end, I should say that I did like the Paris Ring mainly for its grandeur, its ambition to be huge (and huge it was), although a lack of director's audacity was often unsettling.
Below you can find the production photos with links to my blog-entries related to each of the four operas.
On the less complimentary side I must note: (1) A disappointing behavior of the Parisian crowd that boorishly disapproved everything that even slightly strayed off the good-ole traditionalism: they consistently booed Krämer after every show, often just to vent out their frustration [that they wouldn't admit!] for having missed the points in Krämer's references; (2) Scandalously pretentious critics of the leading French newspapers that collectively decided to thrash each of the four productions, even when it was painfully obvious that they totally misunderstood the Krämer's intentions to relate his shows with important historical references. They even copied from one another the "arguments" against Rheingold that were completely off the target.
To use your platform and officially kill a production by your review is valid if and only if your arguments are clear, you demonstrate that you've understood the director's intentions but you found them misplaced, misfit, untenable... [or at least admit you didn't understand them!] Otherwise your review is both humanly and intellectually irresponsible (to put it nicely).
Prepare and read something about the background story related to a given production before writing about it -- especially when submitting your review to the main-stream media!
** Even though the stage at the Bayerische Staatsoper in Munich is much smaller than the one at Opéra Bastille, I can only imagine troubles that Andreas Kriegenburg will meet while mounting all four Ring operas in a single season 2011-2012.
Rheingold -- March 2010
See here and herePhilippe Jordan ...... conductor
Günter Krämer ..... director
Falk Struckmann ..... Wotan
Samuel Youn ..... Donner
Marcel Reijans ..... Froh
Kim Begley ..... Loge
Peter Sidhom ..... Alberich
Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke ..... Mime
Iain Paterson ..... Fasolt
Günther Groissböck ..... Fafner
Sophie Koch ..... Fricka
Ann Petersen ..... Freia
Qiu Lin Zhang ..... Erda
Caroline Stein ..... Woglinde
Daniela Sindram ..... Wellgunde
Nicole Piccolomini ..... Flosshilde
[photos by Elisa Haber and Charles Duprat ©ONP]
Walküre -- June 2010
See here and herePhilippe Jordan ..... Conductor
Günter Krämer ..... Director
Robert Dean Smith ..... Siegmund
Günther Groissböck ..... Hunding
Thomas Johannes Mayer ..... Wotan
Ricarda Merbeth ..... Sieglinde
Katarina Dalayman ..... Brünnhilde
Yvonne Naef ..... Fricka
Marjorie Owens ..... Gerhilde
Gertrud Wittinger ..... Ortlinde
Silvia Hablowetz ..... Waltraute
Wiebke Lehmkuhl ..... Schwertleite
Barbara Morihien ..... Helmwige
Helene Ranada ..... Siegrune
Nicole Piccolomini ..... Grimgerde
Atala Schöck ..... Rossweisse
Gertrud Wittinger ..... Ortlinde
[photos by Elisa Haber and Charles Duprat ©ONP]
Siegfried -- March 2011
See hereGünter Krämer ..... Director
Philippe Jordan ..... Conductor
Torsten Kerl, Christian Voigt ..... Siegfried
Wolfgang Ablinger-Sperrhacke ..... Mime
Juha Uusitalo, Egil Silins ..... Der Wanderer
Peter Sidhom ..... Alberich
Stephen Milling ..... Fafner
Qiu Lin Zhang ..... Erda
Elena Tsallagova ..... Waldvogel
Brigitte Pinter, Katarina Dalayman ..... Brünnhilde
Götterdämmerung -- June 2011
See here Director ..... Günter Krämer
Conductor ..... Philippe Jordan
Torsten Kerl ..... Siegfried
Iain Paterson ..... Gunther
Peter Sidhom ..... Alberich
Hans-Peter König ..... Hagen
Katarina Dalayman ..... Brünnhilde
Christiane Libor ..... Gutrune, 3rd Norn
Sophie Koch ..... Waltraute
Nicole Piccolomini ..... 1st Norn, Flosshilde
Caroline Stein ..... Woglinde
Daniela Sindram ..... Wellgunde
Hi
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to find an opera fan who liked Bastille's Ring. It was my first Ring, and although I did not catch all Kramer's references, I liked the whole "package".
As for the musical side, I agree: Jordan did a great job, and there were some terrific singers (Konig's Hagen was breathtaking!).
thanks!!!
DL
I have enjoyed reading your posts on this Ring. I was in Paris when they were advertising Rheingold, and so was more aware than I'd have been otherwise that they were doing the Ring. Interesting what they advertise in the metro stations in Paris. What a variety! I wish I could have seen this production. Is there any chance there will be dvds of this?
ReplyDeleteI have just returned from the first cycle of the San Francisco Ring, and really liked that production very much. It is interesting to see new/different interpretations that make sense.
Hi there! Of course every new congruent interpretation of The Ring makes you appreciate the piece even more. Repeating the same ole stuff ad nauseam would be boring at best.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you liked the Paris Ring. The SF Ring should be released on DVD, if my sources are correct. Looking forward to that ;)