logo
The week in classical: Festen; Das Rheingold review – a dark, jubilant, five-star Turnage triumph

The week in classical: Festen; Das Rheingold review – a dark, jubilant, five-star Turnage triumph

The Guardian15-02-2025
In the feverish build up to Festen, Mark-Anthony Turnage's new opera to a libretto by Lee Hall, one question has dominated. Why make an opera based on Thomas Vinterberg's cult 1998 film, in which a son accuses his father of child abuse? The implication: why not think of something new. Since nearly the entire operatic repertoire, from Monteverdi's L'Orfeo (1607) to Puccini's Tosca onward, is based on extant sources – myth, plays, novels and, now it exists, cinema – the question should hardly detain us, beyond initial acknowledgment. Opera needs stories that can be sung.
Festen, as well as being a dark exploration of human frailty, offers the potential for arias, choruses, crowd scenes, intimate duets, orchestral interludes: the stuff of opera. The result, which finds Turnage (b.1960) at the peak of his powers, is a dazzling and jubilantly entertaining work. It was premiered last Tuesday by the Royal Opera, conducted by Edward Gardner, directed by Richard Jones and designed by Miriam Buether, with a flawless cast, orchestra and chorus.
Turnage's first opera was Greek (1988), a prodigious early work based (via Sophocles, and Steven Berkoff's play) on Oedipus Rex updated to the Thatcher era, as aggressive and affecting now as when new. The Silver Tassie (2000), Anna Nicole (2011) and Coraline (2018) followed. A composer loyal to his collaborators, he is back working with some of the same team. Richard Jones directed Anna Nicole, about the American Playboy model, in a production memorable for pneumatic breasts and much pink. Gerald Finley sang the lead in The Silver Tassie, adapted from Sean O'Casey's anti-war play.
Now Finley is Helge, the father celebrating his 60th birthday with friends and family. The large cast consists of many singers who, directly or not, have accompanied Turnage throughout his working life. Centre stage was John Tomlinson. As the baffled grandfather he sings only a line or two, but with his years of experience became the paternal linchpin of a collective enterprise. Star singers took their bows together, as part of the company: Allan Clayton as Christian, raped by his father in childhood and still blank with trauma; Stéphane Degout as the younger son, Michael, who moves through life with the grace of a demolition ball; Natalya Romaniw as Helena, the daughter attempting to make family peace through a haze of drug addiction. Among the long list of names to mention: Susan Bickley, Philippa Boyle, Clare Presland, Peter Brathwaite.
Set in a 1980s-style hotel that switched between reception, bedroom, kitchen and dining room, helped by Lucy Carter's lighting effects, Buether's sets are stylish and efficient. Action is swift-moving. This makes the impact all the more devastating. Festen, in the hands of Turnage, Hall (credits include the screenplay for Billy Elliot) and Jones, is often funny. Comedy whets the tragedy. Hall's nimble, demotic text bristles with internal rhyme. An opening 'hello' chorus, a hideous, racist rendition of Baa Baa, Black Sheep and, as a centrepiece, a conga support a strong dramatic structure.
Above all, Turnage's score, confidently played by the Royal Opera orchestra under Gardner, has assurance, noisy ebullience and lyrical intensity. An army of percussion instruments – whip, ratchet, castanets, maracas, edgy and scratchy in mood – is softened by marimba, harp, piano and celesta. Rumbles of bass clarinets and contrabassoons lurk beneath sparky top lines. Characters are given definition by instrumental colour: Helmut (Thomas Oliemans), the unlucky master of ceremonies, is accompanied by strident high brass; Helge by a torpid sludge of tuba and trombones. Silence, the white space between sounds, is employed to arrest and shock.
Turnage has always owed much to jazz, but here the echoes of Britten (the choruses of Peter Grimes) and Tippett (the dances from The Midsummer Marriage), as well as the precision and transparency of his teacher, the composer Oliver Knussen, show Turnage embracing, rather than shying away from, a vital lineage. Opera can be more palpably avant garde, no doubt. In the myriad alliances the art form requires, of music, words, staging, every decision is an extreme experiment. Failure is a norm. This one works. Daring and brilliantly achieved, Festen is the composer's best work yet.
The lure of Wagner's Ring, especially in the UK, remains irrevocable if not mysterious. Devotees flocked to Gloucestershire last summer for Longborough Opera's cycle. One couple, dressed as the god Wotan and his Valkyrie daughter Brünnhilde (unless horned helmets are their normal attire), had travelled from the US. Last Sunday, identifiable Wagnerians – you learn to recognise the markings – wandered up and down in freezing rain, waiting for the doors of York Hall in Bethnal Green, east London, to open. Famous as a boxing venue, this is the new home for Regents Opera's in-the-round Ring cycle, built up, with minimal budget, over the past five years.
The conductor Ben Woodward has arranged the score for 22 instruments, including electric organ. Initially it sounded underpowered, with rough edges, but my ears grew accustomed. Caroline Staunton's production, with designs by Isabella Van Braeckel, takes place on a small stage. Costumes are eclectic, from folkloric tunic-tabard (Ralf Lukas as the conflicted Wotan) to rocker tight trousers (James Schouten, a wily, hip-swivelling Loge). The set is a group of different sized plinths, prone to thudding to the ground when the action speeds up.
The graft needed to bring off two complete cycles in this way (the first ends tomorrow; the second starts next Sunday) is incalculable. Das Rheingold, first of the four operas, had some admirable performers: the Rhinemaidens (Jillian Finnamore, Justine Viani and, also singing Erda, Mae Heydorn), Ingeborg Novrup Børch as an incensed Fricka, Charlotte Richardson's gleaming Freia. As her brother Froh, god of spring and the only half-decent character in the whole of the Ring, Calvin Lee perilously cartwheeled on stage and sang his high phrases with exuberant charm. Then he summoned up the rainbow bridge and it was all over. I doubt the cheers when Tyson Fury beat Rich Power at York Hall were much louder than those that erupted once those rotten, gold-greedy gods had crossed to Valhalla.
Star ratings (out of five)
Festen ★★★★★
Das Rheingold ★★★★
Festen is at the Royal Opera House, London, until 27 February and will be broadcast on Radio 3/BBC Sounds on 22 March
Regents Opera's Ring (cycle 1) at York Hall, London, ends with Götterdämmerung, Sunday 16 February, 3pm; cycle 2 dates: Das Rheingold (23 February); Die Walküre, (25 February); Siegfried (27 February); Götterdämmerung (2 March)
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ayrshire singer opens her garden to the public to raise money for Red Cross
Ayrshire singer opens her garden to the public to raise money for Red Cross

Daily Record

time3 days ago

  • Daily Record

Ayrshire singer opens her garden to the public to raise money for Red Cross

Renowned international mezzo-soprano Linda Finnie has opened up the garden at Whitewin House in Girvan to raise funds for the Red Cross An Ayrshire opera singer is opening up her garden in a bid to raise funds for the Red Cross. ‌ Renowned international mezzo-soprano Linda Finnie is welcoming the public to the garden at Whitewin House in Girvan. ‌ For just £5, visitors can take in all the garden has to offer including the views across the Firth of Clyde to Ailsa Craig, Arran and Kintyre. ‌ The Victorian garden is one of several gardens across the UK which are taking part in the Red Cross's open gardens campaign. From March to October each year, members of the public are given the chance to explore a variety of beautiful gardens while supporting the Red Cross. Whitewin House occupies a prime position on Golf Course Road as the first house to be built there and the garden featured in the Garden of the Year TV programme on Channel Four in 2022. ‌ Linda Finnie, 73, is one of the most prominent Scottish opera singers following a career that included major roles at the Royal Opera and ENO as well as international appearances at the Bayreuth Festival among others. Whitewin House will be open to the public most weekends in August but a planned opening this weekend, August 9 and 10, has been cancelled following damage from Storm Floris. ‌ However, Linda is looking forward to welcoming visitors back from Saturday, August 16. Refreshments including homemade teas and coffees are available for visitors. Whitewin House is located at 16 Golf Course Road, Girvan KA26 9HW and visiting can be arranged by contacting lafinnie@

Prince Andrew's seedy date with playboy model as he fed her chocolate strawberries
Prince Andrew's seedy date with playboy model as he fed her chocolate strawberries

Daily Mirror

time4 days ago

  • Daily Mirror

Prince Andrew's seedy date with playboy model as he fed her chocolate strawberries

An explosive new book has claimed that Prince Andrew has slept with more than 1,000 women, and one of his Playboy model girlfriends opened up about her first meeting with the Duke Over the course of his life, Prince Andrew has slept with over 1000 women, an explosive new book has claimed. ‌ Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York, by Andrew Lownie takes a deep dive into Prince Andrew's life - and that of his ex-wife Sarah Ferguson - making it the first joint biography of the former couple, who are still close friends, and live together at Royal Lodge. ‌ From his luxurious lifestyle, mysterious financial arrangements, all the way to his connection with convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein - the book takes a no holds barred look at the alleged private life of the disgraced Duke of York. ‌ The book is also filled to the brim with salacious claims about both Fergie and Andrew's romantic lives - and one Playboy model girlfriend of Andrew is even quoted describing the early days of their relationship. Denise Martell, a former Playboy model and actress, crossed paths with Andrew at a swanky LA dinner thrown for the Duke back in 2000, she claimed. She shared with Andrew that she has something of a "sweet tooth" and so he promptly ordered that the dessert cart be brought to them and "fed her a chocolate-covered strawberry." ‌ "I took the entire strawberry in my mouth in one gulp," the book quotes her as saying, "It was very suggestive. He loved it. By this time he was holding hands with me under the table." Denise then went back to Andrew's hotel, where "they chatted in the bar until 2.15 a.m, before he walked her to her car and they kissed. He gave her his number on a piece of paper emblazoned with the motto 'His Gloriousness' and they agreed to meet the next night at his £580-a-night suite at the Bel-Air Hotel," the book claims. "I absolutely wanted to make love to him,' she remembered. 'We stayed on the couch heavy petting. I was lying back in his arms." ‌ The pair spent a third night together during that LA trip, after Andrew had given Steven Spielberg an award at a BAFTA event. She arrived with melon-scented candles in tow, she claims, having found the lighting a bit glaring on the previous occasions, and again Andrew fell asleep, leaving the model to let herself out. The pair are alleged to be close to this day, the book claims, "She went on to have a five-year relationship with the prince until 2005, and made him godfather of her son born in 2008. Martell claimed she didn't mind about Andrew's other women. She and the duke remain in touch to this day." Martell was not the only former Playboy model that Andrew was ever linked to, the book claims, with the Duke also dating another high-profile actress and nude model who had been on his "wish list" to meet. ‌ From Page Three girls to BBC researchers, the list of girlfriends allegedly uncovered in the book is extensive.

Why has the Royal Ballet and Opera cancelled its Tel Aviv show?
Why has the Royal Ballet and Opera cancelled its Tel Aviv show?

Spectator

time5 days ago

  • Spectator

Why has the Royal Ballet and Opera cancelled its Tel Aviv show?

Popular opinion has always been able to make or break a production but until the 21st century that was generally a verdict delivered through the box office. Nowadays, people power can kill off a production before it has even made it to rehearsal, let alone sold a ticket. This modern phenomenon appeared to have claimed another victim with the recent news that the Royal Ballet and Opera has cancelled performances of its new production of Tosca, planned for the Israel Opera in Tel Aviv, next year. Intriguingly, the people exercising power in this instance are not the public but staff within the Royal Opera and Ballet itself. The genesis of the staff pressure seems to have arisen after Daniel Perry, a backstage extra incongruously dressed in what seemed like spotted pyjamas and a Viking helmet, unfurled a Palestinian flag during an onstage curtain call, following the last-night performance of Verdi's Il Trovatore, on 19 July. Video of this incident shows an Opera House official, subsequently identified as the opera director, Oliver Mears, trying unsuccessfully to grab the flag and pull it off stage. The Opera House released a statement after the event saying that Perry's isolated protest was 'a spontaneous and unauthorised action' that was 'completely inappropriate for a curtain call,' and undermined its position of political impartiality. Opera lover Stephen Ratcliffe wrote on X, '…bet he won't be working there again,' and Perry – a freelancer – has indeed subsequently alleged they will not have further work at the Opera House (their pronouns identify as they/them). Whether viewed as selfless or selfish, such an act by a non-descript extra detracted attention from the people that really mattered in that moment: the performers in front of them. It now appears that this solitary protest has escalated to include almost 200 of the Royal Ballet and Opera House staff, who have signed an open letter to the House's supremo, Sir Alex Beard, calling for the cancellation of Tosca in Tel Aviv. This staff cohort demanded that the Royal Ballet and Opera 'withholds our productions from institutions that legitimise and economically support a state engaged in the mass killing of civilians.' Initially Beard is reported as having said 'I am appalled by the crisis in Gaza and recognise the deep emotional impact this has had across our community and wider society. On this issue, we acknowledge and respect the full range of views held by our staff, artists and audiences'. The decision not to take Tosca to Tel Aviv is already having consequences. Mandy Kent – a supporter of the Royal Ballet for more than 20 years – told me, 'The Royal Opera is demonising Israel. I've just cancelled my Friends membership, and I've told them why.' Judging by the plethora of similar comments on social media, it seems she is not alone in this counter-protest. There is nothing in Puccini's Tosca (or in this new production) that could be associated with Israel or the Gazan situation, although perhaps the idea of the Kingdom of Naples controlling the city of Rome might have some indirect parallels. So, it is not the production but where it is to be performed that is at issue. The UK is still actively trading with Israel and although the amount of trade has substantially decreased since the atrocities of 7 October 2023 and the subsequent brutal reprisals by Israel, it still amounts to around £6 billion annually (with a balance of trade of nearly £1 billion in favour of the UK). Despite government advice against all but essential travel to Israel, according to the plethora of advertisements on the internet it still seems to be a popular destination for British holidaymakers. So, why cancel the export of an Italian opera, made it Britain? If I take dance as an example, Israel has a rich culture, which is regularly enjoyed here in the UK. The Israeli choreographer and performer, Stav Struz Boutrous won this year's Bloom Prize at Sadler's Wells. Jerusalem-born choreographers, Sharon Eyal and Hofesh Shechter are both former members of Israel's pre-eminent contemporary dance company, Batsheva, and are now Associate Artists of Sadler's Wells. We should enjoy their work for what it is and certainly not seek to associate it negatively with the country of their birth. Asked for a statement to explain the decision to cancel the production of Tosca in Tel Aviv, the House distanced itself from the idea that it had yielded to pro-Palestine pressure from within, saying 'In light of the deteriorating humanitarian crisis in the region and the associated risks to the safety of our company members, we have made the decision not to proceed with the Royal Opera's new production of Tosca at the Israeli Opera. This decision was reached prior to the recent staff open letter.' Other companies are facing similar dilemmas. The National Theatre of Brno in the Czech Republic was also scheduling performances in Israel but its International Manager, Radim Dolansky told me, 'The safety of our team is our top priority. A final decision regarding the planned guest performance in Israel will be made in early September, based on the current security situation and in agreement with the participants.' So, the official line is that the cancelled performances in Tel Aviv were for the safety of the company and not caving in to pressure from staff. On the surface, this seems a reasonable precaution. I doubt that the Royal Opera and Ballet would sanction performances in Kyiv in current circumstances for similar reasons, and this is in a country with which we have every sympathy for its present plight.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store