When Salzburg Festival director Alexander Pereira stepped onto the stage of the Großes Festspielhaus last night to announce that one of the cast members of La bohème was sick and unable to sing, he faced a chorus of hisses from the audience. Soprano Anna Netrebko, the festival’s biggest non-conductor star, was feeling fine (though as Mimì she would shortly die of consumption). But the excellent tenor Piotr Beczala had decided a mere ten minutes earlier that his vocal cords would not be up to singing Rodolfo that night. We would have to wait forty minutes for a replacement. Further hisses. Fortunately Pereira had an ace up his sleeve: the replacement would be another star, Jonas Kaufmann, who is at the festival singing Bacchus in Ariadne auf Naxos. After the forty minutes had elapsed, Pereira announced the plan: Beczala would act the part while Kaufmann would sing from the side of the stage.
It turned out to be a wonderful performance. While an awkward arrangement, the miming approach preserved Damiano Michieletto’s detailed, sensitive direction. The set presents a series of skewed perspectives: the entire stage raked from left to right, backed with enormous windows that dwarf the characters. In Tableau 2, an enormous map of Paris is covered with tiny buildings. Tableau 3 takes place on a desolate highway that curves vertically upstage like a Tableau from Inception, a tiny rest stop providing shelter. In Tableau 4, the Bohemians have been evicted, and sit by a pile of their belongings in the street.
But the sets, while striking, are never convincingly integrated into the production, nor are they particularly visually beautiful. The production succeeds in its small touches and fresh perspective on the characters and their relationships. Instead of a sugary romance, we get a lovable but flawed group of contemporary young adults going about their lives in Paris. Mimì needs someone to light her cigarette, wine is drunk from red plastic cups, and Tableau 2 presents us with an orgy of holiday consumerism with shopping carts, Santa, elves, reindeer, and ending in video game systems for all the children. In contrast to this wealth, the roadside scene shows trash collectors, prostitutes, and other members of the modern underclass. Mimì is timid and insecure, Rodolfo flatters her but doesn’t respect her. Musetta is given an unusually sympathetic treatment, confident and stylish and enjoying herself, instead of the conventional simpering narcissist. Michieletto has a naturalistic approach of Personenregie, mostly realistic and restrained, occasionally breaking out into a grand gesture—but only when called for by the music.
It is particularly remarkable that the production worked as well as it did in the face of Daniele Gatti’s eccentric conducting. While the Wiener Philharmoniker sounded fantastic and their ensemble was impeccable, Gatti seemingly has only two modes: very slow and very fast. Very fast was reserved for the recitative-like sections, where the singers struggled to articulate or make anything of the text at such a clip. Very slow was for anything remotely lyrical, where the singers struggled to make their breath last long enough, and in a few cases (notably the Tableau 2 quartet) left the musical line indiscernible.