logo
#

Latest news with #JohnChristie

Glyndebourne's overdue Parsifal is full of unusual decisions
Glyndebourne's overdue Parsifal is full of unusual decisions

Telegraph

time18-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

Glyndebourne's overdue Parsifal is full of unusual decisions

Nothing about Wagner's Parsifal is normal. It certainly isn't a normal opera, though countless directors have tried to make it one. Richard Wagner created his final major work, first performed in 1882, as a 'stage consecration play', casting its narrative of redemption in the form of a long, unfolding ritual. 'Here, time becomes space', as one line in the libretto has it. The usual play of narrative is reworked as Parsifal, an innocent fool, arrives as an outsider in a damaged chivalric community which guards the Holy Grail; this circle is ruled by a king, Amfortas, who has not only lost their Holy Spear to the malevolent sorcerer Klingsor, but been grievously wounded in the process. It has taken Glyndebourne a long time to mount its first Parsifal, which apparently had been the ambition of its founder John Christie back when the festival started in 1934. In its old house, the piece was impossible; even in the fine new theatre, opened in 1994, it's still a tight fit. The ensemble at Wagner's premiere numbered an orchestra of 107, a chorus of 135, and 23 soloists; here, they're reduced to manageable proportions. The grandest effects, such as recorded off-stage bells, are underwhelming, but conductor Robin Ticciati achieves miracles of ever-moving textures from the London Philharmonic in the orchestra pit, never wallowing in the sound but driving it forward and giving it an edge in the act preludes. The sense of momentum and wonder he creates gives the drama its essential underpinning. Director Jetske Mijnssen, highly praised and making her UK debut, mounts a production that's not only suited to the size of the theatre but also offers some startling new takes on the narrative. The innocent Parsifal of Daniel Johansson, light-voiced and not yet fully characterised, arrives in the traditional manner with dead swan in hand, but encounters a defensive crowd of knights who interrupt their Act One finale procession to beat him savagely. They're equally intolerant of Kristina Stanek's 'wild woman' Kundry, whose initial incarnation as a maid bringing in a tea-tray is quite a novelty. But to hear her voice blossom while keeping its incisiveness is one of the great thrills of the evening. The drab marble-pillared hall of Ben Baur's design is essentially a domestic setting. It imposes a dreary uniformity on proceedings, echoed in Gideon Davey's grey costumes, which are Nordic-noir with a visual dash of Munch or Hammershoi, red hair for the maids and the flower maidens. Silent added characters – Parsifal's mother, a younger and older Kundry – stimulate some new perspectives on Wagner's story. It's a nice touch in this male-dominated drama that after Kundry has washed Parsifal's feet, he, Christ-like, washes hers. But Parsifal himself is strangely recessed in the final drama, not helped by a sacred spear no bigger than a penknife. In this reductive setting, amid all the processing, John Tomlinson's veteran ex-king Titurel (still interfering) and John Relyea's implacable elder knight Gurnemanz have to sit round a tiny altar to celebrate the Office as if they were starting a hand of bridge. Relyea doesn't grow older across the acts as he should, but he remains the heroic controlling force and vocal star of the show, a truly remarkable feat. Meanwhile, Audun Iversen's fine wounded and despairing Amfortas seeks, through compassion, a reconciliation with Klingsor, magnificently declaimed by Ryan Speedo Green; and the production ends with an unexpected twist. On this first night, there were cheers for the music, but scattered grumbles at the drama. Either way, Glyndebourne's Parsifal is a gripping evening that will stimulate continuing debate about the real meaning of Wagner's final challenge to the world.

From the sacred to the profane: the Wagners, Bayreuth and Parsifal
From the sacred to the profane: the Wagners, Bayreuth and Parsifal

The Guardian

time15-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

From the sacred to the profane: the Wagners, Bayreuth and Parsifal

When Glyndebourne opened its doors for the first time in 1934, the work on the programme was Mozart's Marriage of Figaro. Mozart was the only music performed throughout Glyndebourne's first four seasons, and he is still the composer with whom Britain's first and best-known 'country house' opera festival is most associated. It was on a very different composer, however, that the gaze of the festival's founder, John Christie, was initially trained. Christie was a Germanophile and obsessed with the work of Richard Wagner. 'He was always hankering to do Parsifal at Glyndebourne as an Easter festival,' recalled his son, Sir George, who ran the Sussex festival after John's death, until his own son, Gus, took over in turn at the start of the millennium. 'He was only shut up by my mother.' Ninety-one years after the festival's founding, John Christie will finally get his wish as Wagner's 'stage consecration play' (as the composer himself designated it) is performed at Glyndebourne for the first time. But if it had been left up to Wagner's widow, Cosima, neither Glyndebourne nor indeed any other theatre would ever have been allowed anywhere near Parsifal, her husband's final masterpiece. Cosima came from a glittering artistic lineage: her father was Franz Liszt, her mother the celebrated writer Marie d'Agoult. When Cosima and Wagner began their scandalous affair, producing three children out of wedlock, she was married to Hans von Bülow, one of Germany's leading conductors. She outlived her second husband by almost half a century (he was 24 years her senior), dying just four years before Christie and his wife Audrey Mildmay first welcomed the public to their new theatre on their Sussex estate. Wagner himself died in Venice in February 1883, barely six months after the triumphant premiere of Parsifal, the only one of his 13 operas conceived with an understanding of how the innovative auditorium and orchestral pit of his festival theatre in Bayreuth would actually function. Cosima's grief initially took the form of paralysis: friends literally had to prise her away from her husband's corpse. But she soon applied herself with extraordinary tenacity to ensuring that the Bayreuth festival, inaugurated seven years earlier with the first performances of Wagner's four-part Ring cycle, would remain under the family's control. She planned to act as regent until the couple's only son – the auspiciously named Siegfried, just 13 when his father died – was old enough to take charge. Securing Bayreuth's future required political dexterity: Cosima deftly cultivated Bavarian rulers and German kaisers, emphasising the festival's importance to kingdom and empire alike. The Ring and Parsifal were the only works that Wagner himself ever saw in Bayreuth. Cosima broadened the repertoire to include Tristan und Isolde and Die Meistersinger. But Parsifal remained by far the festival's most frequently performed work: of the 194 festival performances between Wagner's death and 1900, 91 were of Parsifal. Ironically, given the composer's well-deserved reputation for antisemitism, the only conductor to make a real success of his final work was Hermann Levi, a rabbi's son who weathered abuse from Cosima and her coterie of antisemites to return for festival after festival. Cosima was acutely aware of Bayreuth's unique selling point: Parsifal was the only work that could be seen solely at the festival. This was what Wagner had always intended: 'There alone may Parsifal be presented, now and always,' he wrote to King Ludwig II of Bavaria. He was horrified to think that his Knights of the Grail, their wounded king (Amfortas), the sorcerer who threatens them (Klingsor) and the knight who redeems them (Parsifal) might be represented 'in any other theatre as a mere amusement for its audience'. For his family, Wagner's decree carried an absolute and everlasting moral force. In the eyes of the rest of the world, it had no legal standing. Wagner's music would fall out of copyright in 1913, meaning that opera houses across the world would be able to mount Parsifal – and indeed any of his works – without seeking the family's permission or paying any royalties. If Cosima wanted to prevent Parsifal from entering the public domain, she needed to be decisive. In 1901, when the Reichstag debated extending copyright from 30 to 50 years from an author or composer's death, Cosima lobbied vigorously. She wrote to every parliamentarian, extolling Wagner's legacy to the German nation but the proposal was rejected. Two years later, in 1903, Cosima received a devastating blow when the incoming director of the Metropolitan Opera, Heinrich Conried, launched his tenure in spectacular style by announcing a production of Parsifal. She was outraged – but legally powerless. The US had not signed the Berne copyright convention, meaning that the restrictions on Wagner performances that still applied in most of Europe did not bind the Met, and Siegfried had carelessly sanctioned a miniature score from which copyists made perfectly legal handwritten parts. The production was a sensation, but, for Cosima, it desecrated her husband's most sacred work. As 1913 approached, Cosima's acolytes made one final push to promote a special law – Lex Parsifal, as it was dubbed – to protect the family's rights in perpetuity. Resigned to the rest of Wagner's works entering the public domain, the family sought instead to secure for Parsifal an unprecedented legal status: performances would remain forbidden anywhere other than Bayreuth, in recognition of the unique cultural legacy Wagner had bestowed on Germany and the world with his final work. The instigator of this final and somewhat desperate move was Houston Stewart Chamberlain, English-born author of infamous racist tracts and son-in-law of Cosima, who enlisted supporters including Richard Strauss and Hans Pfitzner. Their plan foundered, but a decade later, on his first visit to Wahnfried, the Wagner home in Bayreuth, Adolf Hitler undertook that 'if I should ever succeed in exerting any influence on Germany's destiny, I will see that Parsifal is given back to Bayreuth'. Despite his notorious intimacy with Siegfried Wagner's widow, Winifred, and sons Wieland and Wolfgang, his promise was not kept. Cosima's efforts were motivated not just by financial considerations, but also by a sincere if misplaced desire to preserve what she perceived as Parsifal's unique character. In a letter to Kaiser Wilhelm II, she likened the work to a sacred relic unveiled to pilgrims only on a few special occasions. The productions she supervised retained every detail of Wagner's increasingly dated staging and movement directions; critics began to describe Bayreuth as a mausoleum. Cosima's work cast a long shadow over subsequent interpretations. The tendency to treat Parsifal more like a religious ceremony than a piece of theatre endured well beyond her death. Even in 2020, Roger Scruton defended the convention of refraining from applause after Act I on the grounds that 'it shows the incorporation into the Eucharist of a real sacrificial victim'. Many recent productions, however, have distanced the audience from the ceremonies depicted. Ruth Berghaus's 1982 centenary production for Frankfurt characterised the Grail community as decaying and misogynistic. Stefan Herheim's 2008 Bayreuth Parsifal linked its story to the festival's history and that of 20th-century Germany, staging the action in Wahnfried. The conjunction of Parsifal and Glyndebourne is a fascinating prospect. A relatively small theatre can present it as an intimate human drama rather than a monumental, ceremonial work. In a view resonating intriguingly with current debates, director Jetske Mijnssen interprets its characters as vulnerable human beings, describing Amfortas as unable to die and Parsifal as someone who can give him 'the gift of dying'. Even without Bayreuth's unique covered pit, meanwhile, Parsifal's sumptuous score – described by that ambivalent Wagnerian Claude Debussy as 'one of the loveliest monuments of sound ever raised to the serene glory of music' – will surely be heard to great advantage in Glyndebourne's famously warm acoustic. Ten days after Glyndebourne's Parsifal opens, Cosima herself will appear on the stage of another of Britain's leading country house opera festivals, along with Hermann Levi, Siegfried Wagner, Houston Stewart Chamberlain and several other friends and family members. Longborough – founded in 1991, and the brainchild of another passionate Wagnerian, Martin Graham, is often described as the English Bayreuth, thanks both to its Wagnerian track record and to resemblances between the buildings. The Cotswolds festival is a singularly appropriate venue for the UK premiere of Avner Dorman's Wahnfried. In Dorman's telling, the name Wahnfried ('free from delusion') proves ironic: not only are the house's inhabitants themselves deluded, they force their delusions on others. In non-linear and sometimes surreal fashion, and with music that is often funny and only occasionally sounds like Wagner (the sound-world is closer to Weill, Shostakovich, Adams and klezmer), Dorman exposes the thread linking Cosima's cult of Wagner to the horrors of the Third Reich. The cast includes a character identifiable as Hitler, whose music Dorman evolved by transcribing one of the Führer's speeches into musical notation, 'so that it would sound like him, and also so I didn't have to write music for him – I just couldn't do that'. But however baleful Dorman shows Wagner's legacy to be, his opera does not demonise the composer – although it does Daemon-ise him. Wagner is represented on stage by a 'Daemon' (following Philip Pullman's spelling and example) who evokes 'perhaps the ghost of Wagner, perhaps what is left of him, when rid of the antisemitic bile'. Dorman, whose opera premiered in 2016, was attempting to reconcile his fascinated admiration for Wagner with his knowledge of the cult's consequences: writing the opera was part of this process, but he admits that 'it hasn't solved the problem'. As a musician raised in Israel, where Wagner is effectively banned, and the grandson of a Holocaust survivor, Dorman has more reason than most to feel equivocal. But the challenge he faces is common to all who seek to interpret Wagner: to separate what is beautiful and humane in his work from the ideology surrounding it. Disentangling Wagner from the cult his widow inspired is both difficult and essential. Parsifal is at Glyndebourne festival from 17 May to 24 June. Wahnfried: the Birth of the Wagner Cult is at Longborough festival from 27 May to 14 June. Michael Downes is director of music at the University of St Andrews. His recent book, Story of the Century: Wagner and the Creation of the Ring, is published by Faber.

Retired Globe investigative reporter, journalists from Cape Cod and Maine, to be inducted into New England Newspaper and Press Association's Hall of Fame
Retired Globe investigative reporter, journalists from Cape Cod and Maine, to be inducted into New England Newspaper and Press Association's Hall of Fame

Boston Globe

time06-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Boston Globe

Retired Globe investigative reporter, journalists from Cape Cod and Maine, to be inducted into New England Newspaper and Press Association's Hall of Fame

For 25 years, the association has been 'recognizing the most outstanding newspaper professionals' from the six-state region for their 'extraordinary contributions to the industry' with inductions into the Hall of Fame, the statement said. Advertisement Other 2025 honorees are Paul Pronovost, a former executive editor of the Cape Cod Times, and Naomi Schalit and John Christie, founders of the non-profit Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting. They will be inducted at a March 28 dinner during the association's annual convention in Portland, Maine. Over the years, Kurkjian served as chief of the paper's Washington bureau and worked on the Globe's Spotlight team. His contributions while on the Spotlight team garnered three Pulitzer Prizes, for exposing city corruption in Somerville; for political dealings at the MBTA; and for coverage of the clergy abuse scandal. He also covered the art heist at the Gardner museum. In retirement, Kurkjian wrote a book about the Gardner theft and consulted for a Netflix series about it. Pronovost is being honored for his leadership at the Cape Cod Times where he 'set the bar for what journalism, humility, and dedication should look like,' the association said. 'Paul is the gold standard of what it means to be a great leader — and an even greater person.' Paul Provonost New England Newspaper & Press Association Schalit and Christie founded the Maine Center for Public Interest Reporting in 2009 and in doing so, 'strengthened the state's media landscape,' the association's statement said. 'Their vision and leadership helped establish an independent news organization that delivered high-impact, free reporting on critical issues like politics, education, and the environment,' the association said. 'John and Naomi's ongoing dedication to transparent, nonpartisan journalism played a pivotal role in reshaping Maine's news ecosystem.' Advertisement Naomi Schalit and John Christie New England Newspaper & Press Association Tonya Alanez can be reached at

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