logo
Taming the ‘Howling Infinite': ‘Moby Dick' Comes to the Met's Stage

Taming the ‘Howling Infinite': ‘Moby Dick' Comes to the Met's Stage

New York Times02-03-2025

When 'Moby Dick' opens at the Metropolitan Opera this week, audiences will experience a deeply American story of unchecked ambition, fomented grievances and a self-destructive desire for revenge.
Based on Herman Melville's 1851 novel, the opera delivers an economical and resolute retelling of the fateful tale of the Pequod, a ship in pursuit of a vengeful white whale. The libretto, by Gene Scheer, hits the book's main conflicts without losing track of the action. The score, by Jake Heggie, is graceful and propulsive. The opera's ending is certain and clear.
It's probably fair to say that more people know the story of the white whale from parodies or synopses than from reading 'Moby Dick.' But an adaptation is not just a summary of the book's major events. A society obsessed with efficiencies can be overly focused on directness.
Skillful though it is, the opera, which had its premiere in Houston in 2010, has a kind of scrubbed and airless storytelling that leaves the singularity of the novel behind. This is the sort of adaptation that audiences have long responded to — a simplification of the book's billowy structure to emphasize its plot. But can a tidy adaptation truly represent this unruly book, with its dramas born of endless uncertainties? Or is the purpose of adaptation something different?
A composer decides what aspects of the narrative can be told through music, while a librettist shapes the story through words that can be thrown out into the air by way of song. An aria reveals a character's singularity and ambition. Characters sing them to announce what they want and what lengths they must pursue to get it. Each creative turn adds distance from the book.
Certainly, there are advantages to adapting a work as well known as 'Moby Dick.' There's a beginning, middle and end that have met the approval of readers, and that can serve as the ballast for any number of creative reinterpretations. There's less risk for a production, too. While Melville's original publisher, Harper and Brothers, considered the book a commercial failure when it came out, few works compare in influence and longevity.
There are also distinct disadvantages to adapting 'Moby Dick.' Melville's language can be difficult. The book has hundreds of pages of exposition. And much of the story's foreshadowing comes through subtle cues, metaphors and allegories.
The novel, at its heart, is a moral tale about how people deal with what they most fear, how they confront what they despise, and how they make sense of defeat. These are abstract agonies played out through a cast of characters who don't really evolve. Instead, they press on becoming archetypes of unrealized ambitions. Though Ishmael (called Greenhorn in Scheer and Heggie's opera) narrates the book, Captain Ahab (the tenor Brandon Jovanovich at the Met) is the star of the opera, an apt, dramatic choice: He is the novel's most complex and developed character.
In the novel, Ahab is most tender, though inconsistently, in his interactions with Pip, a 14-year-old cabin boy. In the opera, Pip's story serves as the turning point that reveals Ahab's heartlessness. Pip is an innocent, and his naïveté stands in contrast to the sailors' confidence. His survival is in the hands of the crew, and his presence raises the stakes of the voyage. After a mishap, Pip (sung by the soprano Janai Brugger) suffers immensely; his resulting fear is a harbinger of troubles to come. Pip's transformational moment occurs earlier in Scheer's telling than in the book, a dramaturgical choice that speeds the narrative along, while keeping all the novel's essential notes.
Setting Melville's thorough and moody prose to music seems a natural. Its lyrical quality invites music that reaches for harmonies: The text is full of open vowel sounds, made when the tongue doesn't obstruct the flow of air. That can be useful to singers when they harmonize, especially in choral performances.
Melville's diction can also be oratorical, organized with the driving energy of a sermon. In 'The Lee Shore,' a funerary chapter offered as testimony for a sailor who will be lost to the sea, the narrator weighs the disappointment of a life unfulfilled against the finality of death, 'Better is it to perish in that howling infinite, than be ingloriously dashed upon the lee, even if that were safety!'
There's a natural lyricism in Melville's sentences, even as the narration drifts between pessimism and optimism. Often, he attempts to name feelings that reside someplace deep and unseen. He does this by embracing rhythmic patterns used in poetry. Consider the narrator's need to reckon with 'a damp, drizzly November in my soul.' This frequently cited passage in the book's opening paragraph carries a pattern of stress and intonation.
But Melville's sentences are often lengthy as they wind through multiple ideas. This makes them difficult to sing. Scheer's libretto is forthright in its characterizations. Its lines, many lifted right from the book, are deceptively simple, written with great control. Some are as short as one or two words. Through the muscular interpretation of the chorus, these monosyllabic utterances — 'Aye!,' 'Ding!' — become brief, euphonious hollers.
Not all adaptations of 'Moby Dick' are faithful to the disposition of the novel. The British composer Robert Longden and the librettist Hereward Kaye created a bawdy musical about the staging of 'Moby Dick' by the girls of St. Godley's Academy for Young Ladies. (It opened on the West End in 1992, was widely panned, and closed after just a few months.) The performance artist Laurie Anderson created an avant-garde version of 'Moby Dick' in 1999, called 'Songs and Stories From Moby Dick.' The book is really about 'enormous heads,' she says in the show — specifically Melville's, which was 'full of theories and secrets and stories,' and the whale's, which was monstrously large.
Some more conventional adaptations could be interpreted as acts of devotion to Melville's messiness. Dave Malloy's 2019 version, performed at A.R.T. in Cambridge, Mass., reckoned with the eclectic style of each chapter. It also explores the ways gender and race create their own subplots in the narrative. Another recent adaptation, created by the English actor Sebastian Armesto and simple8, a production company that specializes in minimalist productions, told many of the story's crucial moments through sea shanties.
But perhaps it's a bad idea to assume that a retelling of 'Moby Dick' should do anything other than honor the adapting artists' commitment to it. At best, their vision will just as discernible as Melville's is. At worst, one could always pick up the book.
One thing that distinguishes Heggie and Scheer's adaptation is the frequency with which it has been performed (a distinction that is also rare for a contemporary opera). Before coming to the Met, it was performed by opera companies in Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, Dallas, San Francisco and more. You could argue that it has become canonical, despite being only 15 years old.
Are there too many adaptations of Moby Dick? Probably not. Hard times breed bitter men like Captain Ahab, and there is always another one filled to his hat's brim with grievances; always another who feels more than justified in his anger; always another who is ready to drown those around him in his misery.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

MGK Searches for the ‘American Dream' in New Album Trailer Seemingly Narrated by Bob Dylan
MGK Searches for the ‘American Dream' in New Album Trailer Seemingly Narrated by Bob Dylan

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

MGK Searches for the ‘American Dream' in New Album Trailer Seemingly Narrated by Bob Dylan

MGK's next album will be a tribute to Americana, and it seems that he tapped one of the subculture's biggest heroes, Bob Dylan, to narrate the project's trailer. In a clip previewing the August-slated LP posted Tuesday (June 10), a voice sounding very familiar to Dylan's can be heard reading a description of the rapper-turned-rocker's Lost Americana, calling it 'a personal excavation of the American dream.' More from Billboard MGK Talks Working With Lil Wayne on 'Alone In The Studio With My Gun,' Has Two Albums Coming & More | BET Awards 2025 Quincy Jones Remembered by Lucky Daye, Luke James & Miles Caton With Smooth 2025 BET Awards Tribute Jamie Foxx Honored by Stevie Wonder & Reflects on Health Scare at BET Awards: 'You Can't Go Through Something Like That & Not Testify' 'It's a sonic map of forgotten places, a tribute to the spirit of reinvention and a quest to reclaim the essence of American freedom,' the Dylan-esque drawl says over fuzzy shots of MGK smoking, riding motorcycles, hanging out with friends, taking in a mountainous landscape in awe and walking the Las Vegas strip. 'From the glow of neon diners to the rumble of the motorcycles, this is music that celebrates the beauty found in the in-between spaces. Where the past is reimagined, and the future is forged on your own terms.' MGK further teased that Dylan is in fact the featured voice by cheekily writing in the video's caption, 'narrated by …' without revealing any names. Later, the 'My Ex's Best Friend' artist not-so-randomly shared a black-and-white photo of the Rock & Roll Hall of Famer on Instagram Stories Tuesday. Billboard has reached out to Dylan's reps for comment. Arriving Aug. 8, Lost Americana will mark MGK's seventh studio album, following 2022's Billboard 200-topper Mainstream Sellout. Leading up to its release, the artist born Colson Baker has dropped singles 'Your Name Forever' and 'Cliche,' which followed his 2024 collaborations with Jelly Roll, 'Lonely Road' and 'Time of Day.' And while a collaboration with the famously elusive Dylan might seem random, the Lost Americana trailer wouldn't be the first time he and MGK's worlds have collided (assuming that it really is the legend's voice in the narration). In February, Dylan left fans confused when, without explanation, he posted an old video of the 'I Think I'm Okay' artist rapping in a Florida music store in 2016 on Instagram. Whether that was Dylan's way of declaring that he's a fan of MGK or just a random moment, the younger musician was amused by the post. 'you having a phone is so rad,' MGK commented at the time. See MGK's Lost Americana trailer, seemingly featuring the voice of Bob Dylan, below. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart

Artistic head of Hamburg Ballet let go amid work culture complaints
Artistic head of Hamburg Ballet let go amid work culture complaints

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Artistic head of Hamburg Ballet let go amid work culture complaints

Demis Volpi, a German-Argentinian choreographer, is to step down as artistic director of the world-renowned Hamburg Ballet Company following massive criticism from the ensemble over a "toxic work environment." Volpi's contract will be prematurely terminated following mutual agreement and the 39-year-old is set to leave the company at the end of the season, the local cultural authority in the northern German city said on Tuesday. As part of the agreement, Volpi is set to stop working at the ballet immediately, it said. Volpi, who succeeded the company's founder John Neumeier, a 86-year-old American, a year ago, has been the subject of widespread criticism, including from the company's dancers. In a letter to Hamburg's culture minister, 36 dancers - more than half of the company - accused him of creating a "toxic work environment" as well as a lack of competence. Seventeen former and current dancers at the Dusseldorf-based Ballett am Rhein, where Volpi worked previously, also sent complaints to the Hamburg minister. In response, management at the Hamburg State Opera, which includes the ballet company, launched a risk assessment to question all ensemble members anonymously about their work situation. "My vision - both in artistic terms and with regard to a contemporary structure that enables open and responsible collaboration within a ballet company - could no longer be realized under the current conditions at the Hamburg Ballet, despite intensive efforts," Volpi said. "In the interests of all those involved, we have therefore agreed to end my directorship by mutual consent." Following Volpi's departure, efforts are under way to find an interim artistic director to lead the company until the conclusion of the 2025/26 season.

Opinion - What happened to Terry Moran: Echos of Edward R. Murrow
Opinion - What happened to Terry Moran: Echos of Edward R. Murrow

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Opinion - What happened to Terry Moran: Echos of Edward R. Murrow

You seldom see anything really new on television. But this weekend proved an exception. For the first time ever, we saw the live performance of a Broadway play: CNN's broadcast of the hit Broadway show 'Good Night, and Good Luck,' starring George Clooney. It was an entertainment triumph. The acting was superb. The story was compelling. The staging was excellent. There were no commercial breaks. And the play's powerful message could not have been more timely. Indeed, the story of how legendary CBS journalist Edward R. Murrow took on the phony anti-communist campaign of Sen. Joseph McCarthy (R-Wis.) is an ominous foretelling of what we are witnessing today. Murrow exposed the lack of evidence behind McCarthy's attacks on alleged communists in the State Department. McCarthy fought back, accusing Murrow himself of being a communist sympathizer. And CBS folded, demoting Murrow from prime-time Tuesday night to low-rated Sunday afternoon. Sound familiar? In fact, the very next day, Murrow's experience from the 1950s played out again in real time. In a personal tweet, ABC News senior national correspondent Terry Moran called President Trump and White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller 'world-class haters.' The White House protested. And ABC folded, suspending Moran indefinitely. Now, one could argue that Moran has earned his reputation as one of America's best journalists. In April, President Trump even chose Moran for his first second-term Oval Office interview. One could also argue that their anti-immigrant rhetoric in the first and second Trump terms qualify Trump and Miller as 'world-class haters.' But that's an argument for another day. The important point for today is: This latest media blow-up over Terry Moran should worry anybody who believes in how important a free media is to our democracy. Because it proves once again how incredibly thin-skinned are members of the Trump administration, starting with the president himself — and how shamefully spineless are the CEOs of the nation's media companies. This, of course, is not the first time ABC folded. In December 2024, it paid Trump $15 million rather than fight a defamation lawsuit many legal scholars said ABC could easily have won. Other media chiefs have been equally spineless. Jeff Bezos of the Washington Post and Patrick Soon-Shiong of the Los Angeles Times killed editorials endorsing Kamala Harris. Meta's Mark Zuckerberg paid Trump $25 million to settle a 2021 lawsuit and tossed in another $1 million for Trump's inauguration fund. Paramount Global, CBS's parent company, is reportedly considering settling a baseless Trump lawsuit challenging how '60 Minutes' edited its interview with Kamala Harris in October 2024. The collective, corporate caving-in to Donald Trump is disgusting. Especially in light of the fact that Trump has only intensified his own attacks on the media, to which he still applies the Stalinesque label 'enemy of the American people.' During his first term, Trump lobbed personal attacks against many White House reporters. He called then-CNN reporter Jim Acosta 'a rude, terrible person' and temporarily suspended him from the press corps. He viciously attacked NBC's Peter Alexander, calling him a 'terrible reporter' for asking a 'nasty question.' He singled out three African-American female reporters for contempt, accusing CNN's Abby Phillip of asking 'a stupid question,' describing then-Urban Radio Network's April Ryan as 'a loser,' and calling NPR's Yamiche Alcindor a 'racist.' He dismissed NBC's Katy Tur as a 'third-rate reporter,' and ridiculed the New York Times's Maggie Haberman as a 'Crooked H flunkie.' Trump Two has brought more of the same. The White House has exiled Associated Press for refusing to adopt the 'Gulf of America.' Some outlets have been banned from the press pool. The president routinely asks reporters whom they work for before answering, or belittling, their questions. He has targeted for personal abuse the Washington Post's Eugene Robinson, ABC's Rachel Scott, and even Fox News's Jacqui Heinrich, whom he called 'absolutely terrible.' But what happened to Terry Moran proves that media criticism is a one-way street. The president and his aides can level the most vicious personal attacks against reporters, but if any reporter dares fire back, he or she could well be fired for telling the truth. Edward R. Murrow summed up the difficulties he faced at CBS in attempting to reporting the facts about McCarthy in this chilling phrase: 'The terror is in this room.' The same could be said of many newsrooms today. Under such unrelenting attacks, it makes you wonder whether a free and independent media can even survive. Good night, and good luck. Bill Press is host of 'The Bill Press Pod.' He is the author of 'From the Left: A Life in the Crossfire.' Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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