Ricordi wanted him. Toscanini approved. So, reportedly, did Puccini himself. His son Tonio, however, vetoed Riccardo Zandonai and the composer never tackled the unfinished Turandot, a decision leaving a tantalizing “what if?” in its wake. Zandonai had already proven himself a master of orchestration and at depicting the lurid, the exotic and the strange. Like Puccini and more than his contemporaries, he had incorporated the influences of Wagner, Debussy and Strauss into his own compositional style. No one was better equipped and none of his operas point to what might have been more than 1914’s Francesca da Rimini, with its complex and contradictory female lead, violent passions, sadism and grotesquerie mirroring some of the same aspects in Turandot. Deutsche Oper Berlin’s production brings this home and invites us to look at Zandonai’s opera anew, unencumbered by traditional trappings.
By stripping the opera of period sets and costumes, the production showcases the voluptuous allure and power of Zandonai’s music. Denying the eyes, it enlists the ears to lend the color in the orchestra and voices to the black and white palette for sets and costumes Christof Loy and his production team have adopted. The sole splashes of color – Francesca’s salmon-hued satin slip and the handmaids’ Act 3 floral print dresses – become all the more striking and sensual against this backdrop. The only drawback is strictly stream-related: the unit set renders the white subtitles illegible whenever they pop up against a white background.
Limiting the visual also serves to heighten the drama. The focus remains on the characters, what they are doing and what they are feeling, not on what they’re wearing. Loy further concentrates attention by dividing the opera into two parts with one intermission. Act 1 flows directly into Act 2 with a mimed scene of the deception which leads to the signing of the marriage contract. Traditional cuts, mostly in Act 2, remain. The battle scene is strikingly staged with the enclosed verandah up a few stairs and through a wide arch becoming the battlements, the Claude Lorraine landscape in the background obscured by the fog of war. Waves of men crash into the wings and rebound back to fall bloodied and spent.
The brief appearance of a balaclava doesn’t immediately yield its relevance, yet Loy’s directorial touches amplify rather than distract. His most thought-provoking departure recasts the minstrel as a silent Everyman after his first and only scene, appearing in a doorway or hovering in the background throughout the two parts. He frames the opera, the first to appear, standing still with his back to the audience, then assuming the same pose but outside the tall windows of the verandah at the end. His grunge outfit undergoes subtle changes of color until the final scene finds him in doublet and breeches, but still rocking his beanie.