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What Has Happened to Wagner's Ring?
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12446 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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7 / 1987 |
2,110 Words |
| Author
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Andrew Clark Andrew Clark is a broadcaster and critic living in Switzerland. |
When the Frankfurt Opera recently staged a new production of Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen, the giants Fasolt and Fafner appeared as huge terra-cotta statues. Standing in front of them were expressionless singers who resembled union representatives in business suits. The noble hero Siegfried looked like a chubby schoolboy, while Brunnhilde rode around on Wotan's back. Gutrune played with a rubber doll, and the Norns wove a theater curtain. At the end, the audience heartily booed the director, sets, and costumes, and enthusiastically cheered the cast and conductor.
When the Bavarian State Opera's new Ring cycle was staged a few weeks later in Munich, Nibelheim was turned into a gloomy mechanical foundry serviced by robots, and Valhalla was a mélange of twentieth-century living room furniture. Wotan put Brunnhilde to sleep in a giant open-ended space capsule. Hagen resembled a Mephistophelian New York mafioso, and the Gibichung men were portrayed as fascist guards. Once again, the final curtain brought heavy booing for the production team and wild cheering for cast and conductor.
What has happened to Wagner's Ring? What has become of all those magical Romantic visions of gods and giants, dragons and dwarfs, caves, cliffs, and palaces? Wagner's Ring is very much alive and well; it just happens to be in a process of dissection, scrutiny, and interpretation in a cultural environment that insists on seeking new meaning and relevance. More than a century after the first complete performance of Der Ring des Nibelungen under the composer's own supervision at Bayreuth, the work - in spirit and music - survives intact, even if its traditional images do not. There is no bottom line on new meaning or nuance in the Ring. It still
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