logo
Calixto Bieito takes on Wagner's Ring Cycle, a quarter century after first shocking audiences

Calixto Bieito takes on Wagner's Ring Cycle, a quarter century after first shocking audiences

Independent14-02-2025

Calixto Bieito turned introspective as he sat in a cafe across from the Opéra Bastille, where his production of the first night Wagner's Ring Cycle was to premiere the following day.
'I am full of doubts, but I am convinced,' he said, equally brash, humble and apprehensive.
Provoking boos 25 years ago for radical stagings saturated with sex and violence, Bieito has transformed at age 61 from European regietheater enfant terrible to prestigious patriarch.
His production of 'Das Rheingold' that runs through Feb. 19 includes gold represented by cryptocurrency, a thicket of tangled cables and a zombie-like humanoid named Gisela created by Artificial Intelligence.
Donner, the god of thunder, wore a Los Angeles Dodgers cap. Rhinemaidens were attired in blue-and-yellow scuba gear with oxygen tanks. The giant Fafner wore cowboy duds, and Freia, the goddess of love and beauty, smeared herself with oil hoping to be incinerated by Loge, the god of fire. Five television monitors were arranged in the shape of a crucifix in Nibelheim's subterranean chasm; the magic helmet Tarnhelm looked like a Basquiat image, and the ring large enough to fit around the neck like a noose.
After Wotan entered Valhalla as smoke filled the auditorium at the Jan. 29 premiere, the cast and conductor Pablo Heras-Casado were met with applause but the director and his production team skipped the curtain call, leaving the audience response to him unanswered.
Bieito won't take a bow until the full Ring is presented twice in November 2026, knowing he will make changes. A video recording won't take place until then.
'I start very human, not with myths,' Bieito said. 'I really believe we are living in a moment like when Caligula was saying, `I'm God.′ And then I'm going to build a new mythology.'
Rise to fame — or infamy
Bieito's 1999 staging of Bizet's 'Carmen' in Perelada, Spain, gained attention for an acgtor strung up a flagpole. His 2000 production of Verdi's 'Un Ballo in Maschera (A Masked Ball)' at Barcelona's Liceu opened with about a dozen men on toilets reading newspapers; a 2001 version of Mozart's 'Don Giovanni' featuring a coke-snorting Don Juan and was booed at the English National Opera on opening night.
A 2004 staging of Mozart's 'Die Entführung aus dem Serail (The Abduction from the Seraglio)' at Berlin's Komische Oper included Osmin, the pasha's overseer, seeming to slice off a woman's nipple and a prostitute drinking urine.
'When I did ` Carmen,′ people were hating me,' Bieito said. 'I had to leave some restaurants because people were shouting.'
His works have since appeared in most major European houses.
'He comes in with a less-established concept and really develops much more in the room,' Paris Opéra general director Alexander Neef said. 'What he was initially planning on doing can change quite significantly.'
A project that began a decade ago
Bieito had gotten struck in Paris traffic, taking a car across town rather than the Métro because he is claustrophobic. In his usual black shirt, head shaven, shoulders slightly hunched, he explained the production's gestation.
He was commissioned for Wagner's four-opera 'Der Ring des Nibelungen (The Ring of the Nibelung)' in 2015 and was in rehearsals for an April 2020 opening when the the coronavirus pandemic shuttered the house. Bieito changed many of his ideas by the time a new cast gathered last December, influenced by James Bridle's book 'New Dark Age: Technology and the End of the Future.' The AI machines developed in 'Rheingold' will cause war in "Die Walküre," nature will rebel in 'Siegfried' and characters will gather in a Wagneria n-period living room as consciousness disappears into a black hole in 'Götterdämmerung.'
He visited moors near Haworth in Britain, home of the Brontë family, to find his mood for the Ring.
'We are living in a moment where the gods, they don't exist anymore — I'm talking about Western society. The human beings, they believe they are gods,' he said. 'We are creating a machine ourselves. We are creating god.'
Bieito, who was born in Miranda de Ebro, near Spain's Basque region, was influenced by a Jesuit education and lives in Basel, Switzerland, where he was artist in residence at Theater Basel from 2013-15. Stéphane Lissner, Neef's predecessor, hired Bieito for the Ring after seeing him direct Shakespeare's 'King Lear.'
'If I had to describe his work during rehearsals, the three words, they would be freedom, intensity and artistic personal responsibility,' said Bettina Auer, a dramaturg who has worked with Bieito since 2009.
An influential mentor
Lydia Steier, a American director who moved to Germany in 2002 as a Fulbright Scholar, first met Bieito when she was an assistant stage manager in Berlin during the infamous 'Abduction' production. She spoke decent Spanish, they bonded in part of what she termed his 'sort of potty humor' and Steier remained as an assistant when Bieito returned to Berlin for Puccini's 'Madama Butterfly' in 2005. She was promoted to his choreographer for Wagner's 'Die Fliegende Holländer' and Rameau's 'Platée' in Stuttgart.
'The reason that I decided to become a director and stay in Europe in general was `The Abduction from the Seraglio,'' Steier said. 'Without bending or breaking the music, he made it mean something completely different and incandescent and modern and necessary.'
Countertenor Anthony Roth Costanzo said working with Bieito last winter in Thomas Ades' 'The Exterminating Angel' caused an epiphany
'He never comes in with a preordained plan, which I think is is part of his genius,' Costanzo said. 'He can see what works and see what doesn't work very well and he nudges you in one direction or the other.'
Interpretations left open — even for the cast
Even singers are left to ponder meanings.
An image of a baby at the final notes could be Siegmund, Siegfried or Hagen.
Brian Mulligan, the bass-baritone who portrays Alberich, asked Bieito whether the feet shown in the opening projection belong to his character.
'He laughed," Mulligan related, his voice rising in a sing-song, "and said, `Maybe they are.''

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Music school set for hattrick of city summer concerts
Music school set for hattrick of city summer concerts

Scotsman

time3 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Music school set for hattrick of city summer concerts

Pupils from St Mary's Music School will perform at three Edinburgh events Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Pupils from Scotland's leading music school are set to perform in a trio of concerts this summer across Edinburgh. St Mary's Music School will lead three events in the city, showcasing the hard work and talent of dozens of children from the school. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The first event takes place tomorrow (Tuesday) from 7pm at St Mary's Episcopal Cathedral on Palmerston Place. Pupils at St Mary's Music School The Annual Directors' Recital Prize Finalists' Concert is one of the highlights of the school's calendar, and is now in its 25th year. Senior pupils will perform for an expert music panel at the west end venue. On June 18, pupils from the school's vocal programme will present Vocal Scenes. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The event at Stockbridge Parish Church will feature the work of composers including Mozart, Handel and Sondheim. St Mary's Music School, in the west end of Edinburgh And on June 23, the St Mary's Music School Summer Concert will take place at the Queen's Hall. The event is the culmination of the academic year, with students performing a range of powerful and complex arrangements. The concert will also feature a performance by pianist Ben-David Zasman, the winner of this year's prestigious Lord Clyde Concerto Competition. Dr Kenneth Taylor, headteacher of St Mary's Music School, said: 'This trio of events is the perfect opportunity for people in and around Edinburgh to see the very best talent that is being trained and developed on their doorstep. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'For the young musicians at St Mary's Music School, it also provides an opportunity for them to showcase everything they've worked hard for throughout the session. Pupils from St Mary's Music School will perform this summer 'These concerts should underline the quality and commitment of our pupils and teachers. 'They each promise to provide a wonderful evening of music.' Tickets for each event can be purchased here -

Top European theme park that mums say is better than Disneyland shows off new Wes Anderson-style hotel
Top European theme park that mums say is better than Disneyland shows off new Wes Anderson-style hotel

Scottish Sun

time5 hours ago

  • Scottish Sun

Top European theme park that mums say is better than Disneyland shows off new Wes Anderson-style hotel

Plus, a huge new Premier Inn will open near major airport and will be the largest of its kind in the north of UK SUITE DREAMS Top European theme park that mums say is better than Disneyland shows off new Wes Anderson-style hotel Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A TOP European theme park is welcoming a new premium hotel that looks like it's out of Wes Anderson's world. Dutch theme park Efteling will be opening a new hotel this summer called the Efteling Grand Hotel. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 6 Dutch theme park Efteling will be opening a new hotel this summer Credit: 6 It will follow the fairytale-theme of the park Credit: 6 In total, it will have 140 rooms and suites complete with themed decor Credit: The theme park is already well known for its fairytale theme, with one TikToker - The Travel Mum - dubbing it "better and cheaper than Disneyland". The new addition to the attraction will be the first hotel located within the theme park itself and will open on August 1. The hotel will be themed around a traditional grand dame hotel with stories woven into the design throughout, appearing like a Wes Anderson story. There will be digital check-in, valet parking and luggage handling, upon arrival. A bellhop and Efteling's two princesses will guests in the lobby, where the air will also be infused with the hotel's signature fragrance. The hotel will be spread across seven floors offering 140 rooms and suites, with a total of 644 beds. The biggest room will be able to host six people. The hotel rooms will also overlook the park with different views of the Aquanura water show the House of the Dive Senses entrance, the Fairytale Forest or the Pardoes Promenade Lane. All of the rooms include breakfast at Brasserie 7 and half an hour of early access to the park before it opens to the public. Other features of the rooms include each one having an Efteling Grand Hotel fairytale book. Inside Universal Epic Universe with incredible thrill rides and amazing food The lower ground floor of the hotel will have a swimming pool - availabel only to hotel guests - with spa facilities including a steam room, sauna and massage room. There will also be a multifunctional serenity room where guests can unwind, pray or meditate. The hotel will have two restaurants with Brasserie 7 located on the ground floor and Restaurant-Bar Mystique on the first floor. While Brasserie 7 will serve up a range of classic dishes - which include seven 'magical' ingredients such as princess tears and snow from Mother Holle - Restaurant-Bar Mystique will offer a more premium dining experience. 6 There will also be two restaurants at the site and one cafe Credit: 6 There will also be a swimming pool at the hotel, and spa facilities Credit: Each table will be decorated with edible decorations and the restaurant will be open to the public, as well as park and hotel guests. Café Biscuit will also be a part of the hotel, where baristas will serve coffee and the signature Grand Hotel biscuit. Plans have also been revealed for incredible new 240-room hotel with huge swimming lake, golf and spa near to iconic racetrack. Plus, a huge new Premier Inn will open near major airport and will be the largest of its kind in the north of UK.

If I weren't a chef - I might have ended up as an extra on EastEnders
If I weren't a chef - I might have ended up as an extra on EastEnders

The Herald Scotland

time5 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

If I weren't a chef - I might have ended up as an extra on EastEnders

Located in one of the city's oldest neighbourhoods, the building was once among the first public houses in the capital. Montrose is led by the Radford family, the team behind Timberyard and is their second project, opened in 2023 as a relaxed neighbourhood counterpart. It serves generous, modern dishes and low-intervention European wines in an ethereal space with gothic accents. Sustainability lies at the core of Montrose's philosophy. The kitchen focuses on waste reduction, using a 'nose to tail' and 'root to shoot' approach to ensure minimal waste and maximum flavour. Montrose works closely with a select group of local farms to source ingredients that are dictated by the seasons, and the restaurant's design and operational choices are made with sustainability in mind. Read more: This week, Montrose head chef Moray Lamb answers takes on our Q&A: What was your first kitchen job? Oloroso in Edinburgh, a shocking 14 years ago. Where is your favourite place to eat out? In Edinburgh, L'Escargot Bleu Restaurant is a timeless classic. Traditional French food with brilliant Scottish ingredients. What is your guilty pleasure meal? Anything Sichuan with all the offal-y bits. Can you share a memory of your worst kitchen disaster? Undercooking beef Wellingtons for a wedding party. What is your signature dish? I don't have one, I don't really think I'll ever have a signature dish. I like changing the menu too often. Who would you say is your biggest inspiration? The staff. Talking daily about dishes, wine, and what we want to achieve within the restaurant is a big inspiration and drive for me. What is one of your pet peeves as a chef? Chefs who don't get excited about food and drink. If you weren't a chef, what do you think you would be doing with your life? I once was an aspiring actor. I probably would have ended up as an extra on EastEnders. Pictured: Montrose head chef Moray Lamb (Image: Supplied) What's your favourite trick for making cooking at home easier? Deliveroo. What has been one highlight that stands out in your career so far? Being part of an opening team for a restaurant is something I see as a highlight. I've been part of several openings now, and it's always so rewarding seeing people and an idea come together

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store