Mozart’s Le nozze di Figaro remains one of opera’s quintessential masterpieces, an opera beloved of both novices and aficionados alike. The Deutsche Oper Berlin’s classic production stars the young members of its ensemble in a lovely evening befitting Mozart’s treasure.
Götz Friedrich’s vintage production is smart and stylish. Now in its 37th year at the Deutsche Oper, it is traditional but not trite, and allows Mozart and Da Ponte’s story to tell itself without interjecting any commentary. Accordingly, we see the servants’ quarters, the Countess’ room, the ballroom and the garden, all of it elegant, befitting of a noble household. The production showcases the close relationships between master and servant, and the tensions between the classes that were beginning to erupt at this point in time. Susanna and the Countess are very close; Friedrich has the Countess provide Susanna with the money to bail Figaro out of his debts (literally flinging it at her in panic at the end of the Act II finale) and the women leap into each other's arms on more than one occasion. Figaro's shock and outrage at his master's duplicity resolves itself at the end when he and the Count shake hands: all is forgiven, for now.
Friedrich shows the audience that it is the opera's women who are in control. As much as the Count, Figaro and Bartolo feel that their authority lends them power, it is the Susanna and the Countess, Marcellina and even Barbarina, operating beneath the masculine system, who really manipulate the opera's action to their own benefit. All that is clear, despite the production's age. Unfortunately, while the production itself is beautiful, the sets seem a little tired. Certainly the wall of paper flowers that bedecks the stage has seen better days, and the brown and orange that the chorus members wear is a nod to the production's 1970's origin. A lick of paint, some new draperies, and a new color scheme for the chorus would work wonders for Friedrich's classic. If the sets and actions seem a little tired, it cannot be blamed upon the singers.