Valentin Schwarz's Bayreuth Festival retelling of Wagner’s Ring as an epic tragedy of an extended family continues to intrigue, and so far is holding its own in terms of its internal logic and its perceptive character development. One of its more engaging aspects is its playing with our expectations, and our knowledge of the original plot, so that we are left constantly wondering how this or that particular element of the libretto can possibly be staged in this context. Although the festival website helpfully provides podcasts of members of the cast narrating this revised storyline, much only falls into place by careful observation of the detail – or as far as one can from 25 rows back.
In Act 1 of Siegfried, Mime has taken over Hunding's abandoned ‘hut’ and has at least repaired it and sorted out the electrics. He seems to be a rather dodgy children's entertainer and is preparing for Siegfried's birthday party. Our ‘hero-to-be’ rolls home drunk, though, and swiftly destroys the toy weapon that Mime has wrapped as his present. But Mime, feigning infirmity with a crutch and stairlift, has the boy well trained to his day-to-day needs. After Siegfried has gone out again, Wotan turns up like the neglectful father to drop off a birthday gift of his own (carried by his two heavies, presumably representative of his ravens) – Siegfried's blond locks matching those of Wotan seem to settle the paternity question posed last time (which, one supposes, now makes Brünnhilde his half-sister rather than aunt). The gift box contains a new crutch, inside which is secreted a blade (Nothung at last), which Siegfried then sharpens to his satisfaction, and his forging song accompanies his trashing of his environment, the hammer blows the clashes of weapon against anything to hand.
Fafner appears to be the family's true patriarch, lying on his deathbed in a room of the family mansion, and cared for by the young Hagen, none other than the now grown-up abducted boy from Rheingold, and a nurse who turns out to be the Woodbird. An unseen music lesson (the business with the reed pipe) accompanies Siegfried's futile first attempt at making a pass, and his ‘horn call” finds an analogue in his showing off with swordplay. Rather than deliberately use his weapon on Fafner, he is merely riled up enough by his intervention to knock him to the ground and so the death by heart attack appears accidental. But more alcohol fuels his understanding of both the Woodbird and Mime (which explains why the latter had no need to cook up his poison in Act 1) and he has no compunction about finishing his adopted father off with his blade. The Woodbird knows exactly where to find the family heirloom, in Fafner's coat pocket, and at last we have a ring, or at least a bejewelled knuckleduster – which Siegfried, not seeing its value, promptly gives to Hagen… The boy's yellow baseball cap from Rheingold, presumably representative of the Tarnhelm and which has meanwhile been in Mime's hands, is tantalisingly left on the floor, as Schwarz continues to tease us.