The set for this Faust is a series of blank screens, which slide about quickly and frequently, tall canvases for constantly changing images provided by Berlin-based video artist Lillevan. This, along with large white cubes which become boxes for Marguerite’s jewels and for the extracted hearts collected by Méphistophélès, make it seem as if the whole thing is part of an elaborate installation, spellbinding in itself. It would not be out of place in Tate Modern. According to a comment in the programme by Rob Kearley, co-director with Ran Arthur Braun, the kaleidoscopic set (together with some major cuts and rearrangements in the fourth and fifth acts) is part of a bold plan to make the old favourite “contemporary” – a word with a myriad connotations, well-used in the operatic world – and to place it in “a political environment where everything is heightened, forced, false and manufactured”. The central part of the plan requires the audience to imagine that everything is happening right now in the United States, at a time when political campaigning is at its height.
At first Faust (Peter Auty) is linked to high finance, a man in a suit with a mid-life crisis who teeters on a window-sill above what can be assumed to be a pavement near Wall Street, observed by a crowd down below equipped with smartphones waiting for his jump. Méphistophélès (James Cresswell) whips out his immortal soul, a heart-like object, and masked, green-smocked surgeons loom backstage to make Faust forever young through cosmetic surgery, ready and able to enjoy to the full all the hedonistic pleasures. Cresswell’s rondo “Le veau d’or” is splendidly delivered, busy roulette tables featuring on the screens as money falls like confetti. So far, so promising: this must all relate to Mammon and casino banking, to obsessions with the latest technology and to plain old-fashioned greed. There are few problems here with the suspension of disbelief.
It gets harder later. Marguerite’s campaigning brother Valentin (the superb Marcin Bronikowski) is a kind of Southern Baptist politician, his followers waving aloft holy books coyly decorated with coloured stripes. They are enthusiastic anti-abortionists who wield placards (blank, to enable video messages) outside a clinic after Marguerite (Juanita Lascarro) has got rid of her baby, and this updating grates badly, not only because it implies that a modern termination is equivalent to the infanticide committed by Marguerite in the original version while her mind is wandering, but also because it is difficult to cram the devout Catholicism of Gounod’s France into an “equivalent” 21st-century fundamentalist Christian frame without amending the opera too drastically.