The first revival of Axel Weidauer’s 2012 production of Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress for Oper Frankfurt brings with it a largely new cast of role debutants drawn from the company’s own ensemble. With American singers in the two lead parts, projection of Auden and Kallman’s English text was in safe hands, though Theo Lebow’s Tom Rakewell wasn’t immune from the occasional stateside vowel sound. His was a forthright, highly physical assumption of the role, though his tenor was arguably at its best in the more lyrical music of the later scenes than in the carefree knockabout of his character’s early appearances.
Elizabeth Reiter’s Anne Trulove brought some of the most accomplished soprano singing I’ve heard in a long while. Her tone is clear and surprisingly mezzoish, her projection of the words is full of meaning and her musical phrasing well judged. Her extended aria at the end of Act 1, “No word from Tom”, was a masterpiece of pacing and characterisation, enhanced by her expressive delivery, and it invigorated a dramatic pace that had taken a while to be pick up speed in the performance as a whole up to that point.
Korean bass Kihwan Sim as Nick Shadow produced a nice rich sound, though his often lamentable English made one wonder if he would get away with the same in German. No such problem with Tanja Ariane Baumgartner’s vividly drawn Baba the Turk, though – every word of hers told, even in the patter of the comic scene where she nags her new husband to distraction, and she steals every scene in which she appears. Alfred Reiter (no relation) was a little stiff as Anne’s father, though I suppose that goes with the role; Peter Marsh made a mark as the auctioneer, Sellem; and Barnaby Rea’s brief scene as Keeper of the Madhouse was luxury casting. Only Barbara Zechmeister’s Mother Goose, the brothel keeper, failed to make much of an impression.