In The Met's New Production of The Magic Flute, the Queen of the Night Uses a Wheelchair | 半岛体育

半岛体育

Classic Arts Features In The Met's New Production of The Magic Flute, the Queen of the Night Uses a Wheelchair

Inside Simon McBurney and Nathalie Stutzmann new, off-kilter version of Mozart's Die 窜补耻产别谤蹿濒枚迟别.

Seth Morris and Lawrence Brownlee in Die 窜补耻产别谤蹿濒枚迟别 Karen Almond / Met Opera

Led by soprano Erin Morley and tenor Lawrence Brownlee, the wildly creative new production is a journey of wisdom, love, and light that leaves audiences in today鈥檚 troubled world with a glimpse of a more hopeful future.

Premiered in 1791, Die 窜补耻产别谤蹿濒枚迟别 飞补蝉苍鈥檛&苍产蝉辫;created for aristocrats or presented at a fancy court theatre. Instead, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and librettist Emanuel Schikaneder introduced it at Vienna鈥檚 Theater auf der Wieden, a venue for the common people who cried for the heroine and sang along with the comedian. No doubt the first-night audience came away utterly exhilarated and convinced that all was right with the world. Audiences everywhere have felt that way ever since.

With brilliant imagination, director Simon McBurney鈥檚 production鈥攅qual parts mystery, drama, comedy, and romance鈥�carries on the Met鈥檚 long tradition of memorable Flutes, among them those designed by legendary artists Marc Chagall and David Hockney. More recently, theater artist extraordinaire Julie Taymor鈥檚 staging has been seen in 14 Met seasons since its 2004 premiere. (For the holidays, the Met will still present the Taymor production in its abridged English-language version).

McBurney has directed on Broadway (The Chairs, All My Sons, The Encounter),and in London, he鈥檚 co-founder and artistic director of Complicit茅, one of Britain鈥檚 most adventurous theater companies. An actor in major films鈥攆rom The Theory of Everything to Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1鈥攈e鈥檚 also been featured in television鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Rev (BBC) and The Borgias (Showtime). When it premiered at London鈥檚 English National Opera in 2013, his 窜补耻产别谤蹿濒枚迟别 production triumphed, hailed by The Wall Street Journal as 鈥渢he best production I鈥檝e ever witnessed of Mozart鈥檚 last opera.鈥�

Die 窜补耻产别谤蹿濒枚迟别鈥檚 often harrowing but ultimately triumphant journey to enlightenment inspires McBurney. 鈥淪ociety should evolve,鈥� he says. 鈥淲hat kind of society are we moving towards? How do we transform the consciousness of the audience?鈥� At the heart of Flute, says the director, is that 鈥淢ozart himself is meditating on the idea that music itself changes consciousness. A few of those thoughts have infiltrated what we鈥檙e trying to do.鈥�

The production mixes projections, physical comedy, aerial and sound effects, and choreography to riveting effect. A central element of the set is what The Guardian has described as a 鈥渨obbling, tilting, swinging, hovering platform,鈥� creating 鈥渁 visual metaphor for humanity in crisis.鈥� It鈥檚 also important to McBurney to let the audience in on the theatrical magic. For example, there鈥檚 a Foley sound artist on stage, working to create effects in a structure that critics reviewing the production have likened to a kitchenette. The orchestra gets involved, too. The pit is raised high enough to bring certain players into the action, as when Papageno interacts with the celesta player during his endearing second aria.

Inevitably, every Flute audience looks forward to seeing how the opera鈥檚 extravagantly self-dramatizing Queen of the Night will be presented. In McBurney鈥檚 production, she wields a cane and, in her venge ancearia, propels herself furiously in a wheelchair, both props emphasizing her increasing powerlessness. (McBurney adds to the opera鈥檚 essential humanity by having Sarastro actually reconcile with the Queen, which has rarely occurred in any previous Flute staging.)

Kathryn Lewek and Erin Morley in Die 窜补耻产别谤蹿濒枚迟别 Karen Almond / Met Opera

Among McBurney鈥檚 exceptional collaborators for this production is Michael Levinewho designed the sets of much-acclaimed Met productions directed by Robert Carsen (Boito鈥檚 Mefistofele, Tchaikovsky鈥檚 Eugene Onegin), Anthony Minghella (Puccini鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Madama Butterfly), and Fran莽ois Girard (奥补驳苍别谤鈥檚 Parsifal). Others in the creative team are similarly distinguished, including Nicky Gillibrand (making her Met debut designing the costumes), Jean Kalman (lighting), and Finn Ross (projections). McBurney, a 1998 Olivier Award winner for choreographing The Caucasian Chalk Circle at London鈥檚 Royal National Theatre, has choreographed Flute himself.

Steering the production musically will be one of the most electrifying figures on today鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;classical-music scene: conductor Nathalie Stutzmann, who will have debuted at the Met only two weeks previously, leading the new production of Mozart鈥檚 Don GiovanniAfter more than three decades as one of the most celebrated contraltos of our time, Stutzmann is achieving equal renown on the podium. Newly appointed music director of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, she鈥檚 also guest conductor of the Philadelphia Orchestra and chief conductor of Norway鈥檚 Kristians and Symphony Orchestra.

The Met has always boasted magnificent Flute casts, and this season is no exception. Silver-voiced soprano Erin Morley, who reprises her Pamina (heard here in the 2018鈥�19 season), has dazzled the house in both lyric and coloratura parts, from Gildato Olympia, Sophie, and the title role of Matthew Aucoin鈥檚 Eurydice in last year鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;Met premiere. Opposite her as Tamino鈥攈is first Met appearance in Mozart鈥攊s tenor Lawrence Brownlee, who starred with the company most recently in Rossini鈥檚 La Donnadel Lago and is revered worldwide as one of today鈥檚 greatest exponents of bel canto repertoire.

The opera鈥檚 two antagonists have been cast with today鈥檚 definitive interpreters: coloratura soprano Kathryn Lewek, the most frequent Queen of the Night in Met history (44 performances to date), and world-renowned Danish bass Stephen Milling, whose majestic Sarastro was first heard at the Met in 2006. And in his company debut as Papageno, Dutch baritone Thomas Oliemans brings irresistible singing and comic flair.

With all these elements in place, the Met stage is set for the arrival of an enchanting, exhilarating and鈥攜es鈥攖ruly magical production. 鈥淲e have to assume that Mozart put something very deeply of himself in this,鈥� McBurney continues. 鈥淭he opera came out just after the French Revolution. All of Europe was changing. Everything was in a political ferment. Mozart was dying, but he was at the height of his powers. The Magic Flute is both fantastic and political, both a social comment and a great flight of the imagination. With this production, I wanted to be sure to listen to its own beating heart.鈥�

See Production Photos of Die 窜补耻产别谤蹿濒枚迟别 at the Metropolitan Opera

 
Today鈥檚 Most Popular News:
 X

Blocking belongs
on the stage,
not on websites.

Our website is made possible by
displaying online advertisements to our visitors.

Please consider supporting us by
whitelisting playbill.com with your ad blocker.
Thank you!