Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned. Scorned womanhood has no better archetype than Euripides's Medea. And you're unlikely to see a more powerful or affecting Medea than Nadja Michael's performance in Cherubini's opera Médée, in the first production of the new season at La Monnaie in Brussels (De Munt, if you're a Flemish speaker.)
Like all good Greek tragedy, we all know the story. The sorceress Medea has given everything for Jason, committing fearful crimes to win him the Golden Fleece. Jason repays her by ditching her in favour of the younger and gentler Dirce, whose father Creon sends Medea into exile. Her revenge is fearsome, murdering her own two sons by Jason and causing Dirce to be consumed in flames at her wedding.
Krzystof Warlikowski's three year old production gets its first revival. The portrait of a woman on the edge of despair is brought firmly into this century, with Medea's looks modelled on Amy Winehouse (pale skin, black hair and clothes, abundant tattoos). François-Benoît Hoffman's libretto is retained intact for the lyrics, but the elegant couplets of the original dialogue (Médée is an opéra-comique, with spoken word between the musical numbers) are replaced by modern words that are terse, to the point and brutal. It works brilliantly, speeding up the action and enhancing the tension and the audience's empathy with Medea's awful circumstances. Warlikowski conjures up phenomenal acting performances from all the main roles: Kurt Streit as the self-important but weak-willed Jason, Hendrickje Van Kerckhove as the terrified Dirce, Vincent Le Texier as the tyrannical but ultimately ineffective King Creon.
But it's Nadja Michael's performance that convinces most. Her first entrance is a real coup de théâtre: she slips into Dirce's wedding preparations from a side door, unnoticed by the other players on stage but very much noticed by the audience, frighteningly sexy in black PVC dress, bouffant black Amy Winehouse style hair and arrows of black eye makeup. The different sexual chemistries between her, Streit and Van Kerckhove are gripping.