The world of opera can sometimes be hard for the newcomer to love as there are often fiendishly complicated and frequently unbelievable plots to get to grips with. Jules Massenet’s opera Werther is happily none of these: it is a straightforward story of unrequited love.
Written in 1887, the opera is based on the famous novel The Sorrows of Young Werther by Goethe, which tells of the hero’s infatuation with Charlotte, who is already betrothed to Albert, the man she promised her dying mother she would marry. She eventually does, to the artist Werther’s increasing despair, even as Charlotte’s regret builds. It is a miserable story – so sad that the Opéra-Comique in Paris initially rejected it for performance as it was simply considered too serious. After its successful première in Vienna, however, the Opéra-Comique relented and it was performed in Paris in 1893.
If the opera had just focused on the eternal triangle of characters, the story of the lovesick hero might have become a little dreary, but other characters from a wholesome large family house in Wetzlar populate and embellish the tale, set over six months, starting in July and ending on Christmas Eve. In Scottish Opera’s smart new production from Pia Furtado, the action is brought forward from 1780 to early 1900, and is told in a series of flashbacks from the snowy end of the opera, seen during the overture: Werther is onstage throughout, either as part of the action, or as observer. It is summer, and Charlotte’s father Le Bailli, solidly sung by Jonathan Best, teaches his six small children a Christmas carol while Charlotte gets ready to go to a ball. As her fiancé Albert is away, Werther takes the chance of accompanying her, and the seeds of forbidden love are sown.
An atmospheric fixed wooden set from Helen Goddard was partly artist studio with a high lattice window, but also became the exterior of the house and church, with a fly-in Edwardian drawing room for the third act. We could see snow falling through high framework of windows across the back of the set, which we kept revisiting throughout. Lighting by Oliver Fenwick delineated the scene changes well, with use of harsh glaring white for the pivotal letter scene. There were some wonderfully unexpected and quirky touches: the children haunted the production, from choir to messengers, sometimes just hanging out and witnessing the story. The opera has a couple of interludes, and intriguingly the children and supporting characters donned strange face masks and danced. Charlotte, in her drawing room, had a blizzard of letters posted through the crevices of the doors and walls as Werther became ever more desperate to steal her affection.