“Die Walküre”
All photos and video courtesy of Metropolitan Opera
“Die Walküre” threatened to becomeEva-Maria Westbroek, making her ill-fated Met debut as SieglindeBut the main cause for concern, throughout the evening, was the painfully obvious pain of the conductor. Let me first acknowledge that the orchestra played magnificently, as it has
never failed to do under Levine’s baton in all the many years that I’ve been
attending. But at numerous times Friday, it appeared that this lustrous
performance may have owed more to careful preparation in rehearsals to
what was emanating from the podium that night. (More on this later.)
Brünnhilde
I found Voigt’s interpretation ofBrünnhilde as a playful, willful and ultimately disobedient and disowned daughter to be so moving and convincing that tears streamed down my face (myself, a daughter who recently lost her father) when Wotan regretfully took his leave of her in the last act, saying that she would never see him again.
monstrous, segmented contraption that kept morphing into different shapes and colors throughout the evening
Instead of greeting Daddy Wotan with a big hug,the impetuous Brünnhilde stage front, Brünnhilde’s plucky grin, and didn’t miss a beat as she unleashed the opera’s signature “Hojotoho!” from the spot where she landed (waiting for stranded bass-baritone Bryn Terfel to join her on terra firma).
As it happened, the Met had already posted on YouTube a video of this very scene (recorded during rehearsals), so I now know what I was supposed to have seen—Voigt at the top of the mountain, Terfel admiring her from below. Look closely in the rather dark lower right corner, and you’ll see the leader of the Valkyries ascending to hug the Norse god. (On Friday night, she never got that far):
For the rest of Act II, my attention to the opera was distracted by my concern for the physical welfare of the singers (particularly Voigt). Later on, Brünnhilde screwed up her courage and approached the treacherous contraption again, treading very carefully. Mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe, hefty of girth and radiant of voice, was having none of it: She was trundled on and off the set in the relatively small but pivotal role of Fricka, Wotan’s wife, securely ensconced in a rather ungainly mechanized throne, with armrests fashioned from enormous rams’ heads.
Stephanie Blythe and Bryn Terfel in the Met’s “Die Walküre”
Aside from its perils, I had mixed feelings about the set: Sometimes it seemed ingeniously (and wittily) versatile, as in the famous “Ride of the Valkyries”:
One by one, the woman warriors (intentionally this time) slid down those galloping planks at the end of their “rides.”
Other times, Lepage’s 90,000-pound gorilla (designed by Carl Fillion, also responsible, with Lepage, for the damnable set of “Damnation of Faust”) seemed ponderous and obtrusive, upstaging the music. It consists of 24 planks, constructed between two towers, running on a
hydraulic system. It was also used in Lepage’s new production of “Das Rheingold” and will be in operation throughout his reimaginings of final two operas in the “Ring” cycle.
The only other major glitch in Friday’s performance was the mid-opera substitution for the role of Sieglinde. The first act’s vocal performances were disappointingly under-powered: Neither the indisposed Westbroek, nor the evening’s young Siegmund, Jonas Kaufmann (perhaps reined in by his partner’s difficulty), soared in the sublimely rapturous moments of their love music. Siegmund’s emphatic solo cries of “Nothung!” (the name of his enchanted sword), normally a high point of the tenor’s role, were oddly subdued.
Before the second act, Peter Gelb, the Met’s general manager, took the stage to announce that Westbroek was ill but would nevertheless continue singing. I was pleasantly surprised, therefore, that the soprano’s voice (and also Kaufmann’s) had unaccountably risen to Wagnerian proportions in the second act. Then, before the third act, another onstage announcer informed us that an understudy, Margaret Jane Wray (who has previously sung the role at the Met), had, in fact, taken over as Sieglinde in the second act.
Each time an announcer took the stage, I braced myself for what I thought might be a substitution of conductor. I assume that most reviewers, sitting in prime orchestra seats, didn’t have the clear view of James Levine in the pit that I did, perched in my usual non-press Dress Circle Box seats.
James Levine, music director, Metropolitan Opera, taking a bow at the Met’s 125th Anniversary Gala, 2009
Photo: Ken Howard, Metropolitan Opera
From my vantage point, Levine, throughout the five-hour evening, looked to be in considerable discomfort, constantly adjusting his seated position and sometimes limiting his exertions, which began and ended energetically enough, but were seriously constrained for much of the evening, when he didn’t seem to be cueing and exhorting the players with his usual verve and flair.
Most alarmingly, Levine’s left arm appeared to be only semi-functional. He would repeatedly use it and lose it: After a broad raised-arm gesture, he would recover by resting his left hand in his lap. For much of the night, he awkwardly extended the left arm behind him, to lean on (or, more likely, push against) the railing separating him from the audience. As an intermittent back-pain sufferer, I have a pretty good idea of what was happening: Jimmy was trying to take the strain off his bad back by bracing himself against the rail.
You can’t conduct in discomfort for such a long stretch and not suffer any consequences. Levine’s energy is causing him injury. For the curtain calls, the conductor did manage to to arrive at the end of the stage with a cane on one side and a helper on the other. To haltingly reach center stage, he needed to be propped up on both sides, with the sturdy Voigt and Terfel doing the honors.
Levine has repeatedly asserted that his “body’s still getting stronger,” as he told Daniel Wakin for a NY Times profile today of Fabio Luisi, the Met’s principal guest conductor. Wakin calls Luisi “clearly the heir apparent” to Levine. On the other hand, veteran music critic and AJ blogger Norman Lebrecht writes in this weekend’s Wall Street Journal that “Luisi, who is taking over Levine’s present cancellations, looks like a stop-gap, not an heir.”
I don’t like talk of Levine’s retiring; the results he achieves are still too brilliant for us to lose him. But I don’t think he can continue indefinitely in this manner.
Speaking of which, Levine still has six more performances of “Die Walküre” to get through. I hope he makes it. After that, rather than subjecting himself to the wear and tear of the company’s planned summer trip to Japan, I hope the Met’s much beloved maestro considers giving his body a fighting chance to heal.