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Inspired by Michel
Carres 1850 stageplay Faust et Marguerite, Charles Gounods Faust
was first staged in Paris in 1859, a time and place of political unease and outright war.
A key character in the libretto is Marguerites brother Valentin, a soldier whose
devotion to duty and righteousness sends him off to fight leaving his sister vulnerable to
the affections of the diabolically assisted Faust, who promptly wins her affections, then
impregnates and abandons her.
Valentins reward for his heroism in the name of country is murder
at the hands of Faust and he condemns his weak-spirited sister for giving in to
temptation. Her temptation is a very human one, of course: simply love. Darker, less
benevolent desires haunt the Operas actual protagonist, whose lusts for youth are
multifarious and inspire his deal with Mephistopheles. The basic story is well known, of
course, but Carre, and in his turn Gounod, moved towards contemporary reality by reading
the story more in terms of a core relationship between two people tormented by fear and
desire, one eventually saved, one damned. Faust is such a rich and resonant subject that
it seems difficult to miss with it. Gounod certainly didnt: the opera was a
continual success from its first run.
Musically, Gounod is credited with being among the key figures in the
development of Lyric Opera, a stepping stone between the high-minded classicism of Grand
Opera and the popular explosion of Operetta in the late nineteenth century. In spite of a
move towards less portentous subject matter in Lyric Opera, there was also no small amount
of political resonance in this iteration of the Faust myth (produced as both play and
opera were in the era of Napoleon III). It is made all the more effective by the increased
focus on character drama that came with Lyric Opera, simplifying the musical forms by
putting an emphasis on songs and a lighter musical tone.
This Faust played out human choices in the face of social and
political forces which were evidently meaningful in the face of contemporary reality, and
that applicability held through the history of the Third Republic. It didnt stop
Faust being mythic, of course, and with the endlessly symbolic Mephistopheles always on
hand to help the good doctor towards damnation, Frances moral compass was definitely
spinning to Gounods tunes right up to the German invasion.
This seems to be where Opera Ireland picks up the story in the current
production. Though it is difficult to tell exactly, the setting appears to be France
during World War II. It is a little unclear not least of all because director Dieter
Kaegis vision falls short of being wholly clear, coherent, or even very good. Set in
a single room environment, Kaegi offers a Faust without the inferno, an eternal
purgatorial nowhere space neatly evoked by Stefanie Pasterkamps waiting room/bus
station set, complete with cracked plaster, falling tiles and mundane, anonymous benches.
Thomas Markers lighting enhances the sickly feeling, casting the entire stage in a
green-gray hue which drains life of all color. This truly is a place without purpose, an
empty metaphysical waiting room between life and death, heaven and hell, in which the
eternal drama of temptation takes place. The problem is that though this should work
nicely, especially in the context of 1940s France, it actually fails.
The world is so bereft of real life signification that it ultimately
becomes meaningless to the point of irrelevance. Valentin goes off to war, and some
evidentially fascistic bully-boys raid the set at one point, beating homeless drunks and
seemingly raping the pregnant Marguerite off stage, and yet there is no great sense of the
political here, or, indeed, the social. The one departure from this frozen environment is
a badly staged party scene climaxed by an extremely uncomfortable looking trapeze artist
who singularly fails to break a smile during aerial gymnastic acts which are meant to be
on one hand celebratory and on the other damnably decadent. Otherwise we are locked into
this realist space of the bus station (or whatever it is), and it ultimately
seems too forced a metaphor. The libretto continues to refer to locations which dont
exist, events which arent depicted (including the crucial fifth act scenes in the
Hartz mountains where Faust has a vision of Marguerites sufferings that brings him
back), and notions of duty and responsibility which seem extraneous to a world so
disconnected from reality.
To be fair, Kaegi is probably trying to throw the focus on the basic
human drama as Carre and Gounod did, but here he comes up against the old enemy of Opera
Ireland in the Gaiety Theatre, a lovely Victorian music hall venue essentially unsuited to
the staging of Opera. Opera Ireland have struggled gamely with the limitations of this
venue for many years, and produced some startling and original productions (especially the
brilliant Orfeo ed Euridice). However, this
time ambition has exceeded execution, and the shaky high concept approach crashes on the
rocks of compromise.
Though Irish tenor Anthony Kearns and French soprano Chantal Mathias
have nice voices, they struggle to bring any sense of subtlety or characterization to
their singing or acting, and spend most of their time fighting for volume against the
orchestra. Irish bass Gerard O'Connor fares little better as Mephistopheles. His
performance lacks any sense of menace or charm, and though he fulfills the function of a
bully, this devils grip on Fausts moral conscience seems flimsy at best,
especially when Kearns is concentrating so hard on singing. This Faust seems to barely
notice Mephistopheles is there, a problem compounded by their being two Fausts on stage
most of the time (the other being his elderly incarnation played by American tenor Joe
Turpin).
The most effective acting on the stage comes from two of the minor
players, Irish mezzo-soprano Edel OBrien (a relative, I must confess) in the role of
Martha, who brings comic animation and lusty gusto to her role of the lady-in-waiting
seduced by Mephistopheles, and, particularly, Croatian mezzo-soprano Renata Pokupic,
whose sparkling characterization of the love-struck pageboy Siebel provides the
production with one or two of its most worthwhile moments.
Dublin, April 23, 2006 - Harvey O'Brien