Five years after first being seen at La Scala and three years after hitting the Covent Garden stage – where it remains one of the most successful imports of the Holten era – Claus Guth’s Die Frau ohne Schatten has made it to the Staatsoper in Berlin as the new production for this year's Festtage. The cast is new (with one exception); so too is the conductor.
Semyon Bychkov was prevented at the last minute from presiding over the La Scala opening, but achieved wonders with the Royal Opera House Orchestra in London. It was his absence that was perhaps most keenly felt at this performance (particularly by anyone who saw the production in London). Instead it was presided over by Zubin Mehta, a Straussian of some pedigree but whose conducting lacked tenderness, precision and detail. Tempos veered from lugubrious schlepping to uncaring, brusque ploughing-through, and important motivic details failed to register (the voicing of the portentous chords that open the third act offered just the tiniest example of his apparent lack of care). There was a fatal lack, too, of the kind of security that allows for that all-important leap from play-through to true performance, which would have allowed the Staatskapelle to show what they can truly do with one of Strauss’s – indeed, opera’s – most kaleidoscopic and multi-faceted scores.
As it was, the orchestra still produced some moments of exquisite beauty, primarily in the extended solos for violin in Act 3 and cello in Act 2, even though the initial impact of the latter orchestral interlude was severely undermined by an additional cut that left just the torso of the stirring ‘O Tag des Glucks’ ensemble. Happily, at least, the second half of the final act reacted best to Mehta’s approach. It is here also where Guth’s production comes together to astonishingly powerful effect, particularly in his staging of the final quartet and the crunching orchestral climax that follows it.
His main idea, as I understand it at least, is best explained as being akin to a film of something being smashed shown in slow-motion reverse, splintered fragments being reconstituted into a whole as if by magic. That is what seems to happen with the final image of serene humanity with which Guth concludes: its sudden appearance feels as if it comes about as the result of the fractured, disorienting dramatic shards of what has come before it suddenly coming back together into a whole, suddenly making sense, suddenly being as it always should have been. As is the case with Strauss’s music, though, this apparently neat conclusion in no way jettisons what has come before: it manages to carry with it all the pain and sorrow of those psychological trials. It makes for an intensely, viscerally moving moment of theatre.