Absent for a couple of years from Deutsche Oper Berlin's Spielplan, Graham Vick’s 2011 staging of Wagner’s great hymn to impossible love is back. Its return after the unveiling last season of Dmitri Tcherniakov’s staging at the Staatsoper reveals some superficial similarities between the two: both, at least, updated to smart milieus that preclude the sort of poetry and swirling emotions that should, in any decent performance, rise up from the maelstrom of Wagner’s orchestra.
There the similarities end, though, and Tcherniakov’s staging is traditional in one respect: Act 1 takes place very firmly on board a ship. Here, by contrast, in Paul Brown’s expensive-looking set, we are simultaneously inside and outside a smart house throughout. The stage is split in each act by a wall with several doors leading to different rooms: in Acts 1 and 2 it’s at an angle; in Act 3 it runs parallel with the front of the stage. What constitutes the house’s interior and exterior is never entirely clear.
Other details hove in and out of view, much of their original significance having, one suspects, become diluted in the seven years since the production opened: two naked extras, a vast lamp floating around and descending up and down, young doubles, I think, of both Tristan and Isolde. A drug addict bursts out of one of the doors during Isolde’s Act 1 narration, making his jittery way across the stage and out, not without having attempted to snort the sand that had earlier been ceremoniously dropped onto the coffin that appears, variously arranged, in each act.
That, at least, lays the groundwork for a theme of drug abuse that is continued as our lovers inject their potion rather than drink it. But any details there might have been elaborating on that theme seem to have fallen by the wayside. Act 2 consisted largely of standing and delivering from Peter Seiffert’s Tristan and Ricarda Merbeth’s Isolde, while Act 3 sees them all having greatly aged. Tristan, his left hand having developed an involuntary shake, wanders absentmindedly off through the French windows just as Isolde arrives. She in turn, at the end of her Liebestod, goes through the doors to join a slow moving tide of extras. Where they’re going, it’s not clear, but at least it was a moment that provided a rare touch of visual poetry.