Dirty factory workers bathed in red light raise their fists defiantly in the air and unfurl banners bearing the word "Arise." Visions of an economic utopia ring out from their mouths, lifted hopefully towards the heavens by fluttering flutes and triumphant brass. And all the while, Karl Marx, that famous father of modern communism, snoozes away at the centre of it all, a book on carbuncles serving as his pillow as he catnaps on his desk at the British Library, dreaming up the scene surrounding him. It's a brief respite for Marx from an otherwise totally topsy-turvy day. And it's also just one of the many glorious and humorous scenes in Jonathan Dove's new opera Marx in London at the Theater Bonn.
Written to celebrate the 200th anniversary of Marx's birth last year, the opera presents 24 hours in the life of the Marx household in 1871. The family's material belongings are carted off for unpaid debts, a gun-toting stranger with a mysterious link to the family appears on their doorstep, and a bravura Italian anarchist bent on revenge is foiled by one well-timed falling chandelier.
Director Jürgen R. Weber conceived the initial story idea, and he found the perfect creative pair in librettist Charles Hart and composer Dove, whose clever lyrics and diverse music respectively bring the comical madness to life. Weber purposefully wanted to avoid focusing on Marx's political ideologies and instead bring the man himself, with all his ironic characteristics and day-to-day tussles, to life onstage. In this, the opera is a resounding success.
The audience meets a husband who has squandered his wife's wealth, lusts after his housekeeper and desires worldly bourgeoisie comforts, despite his aim to liberate the proletariat from the oppressive shackles of capitalism. "Is it so very wrong," Marx muses, "to want a Chinese dinner-gong? To end the evening with a song around the piano? To sip one's claret from a glass blown in Murano?" Hart's lyrics channel Stephen Sondheim with their complex and witty rhymes. And without overdoing it, Hart drops tagline phrases here and there that become jokes by being seamlessly embedded in the madcap action that leaves Marx hapless and helpless. "Workers of the world? Unworthy of the name!" he scolds the workers carting away his furniture after bribing them with alcohol fails.
Marx is a wonderful vehicle for comedic acting, a real chance to rake in laughs by simply bringing out his contradictory self. The statuesque baritone Mark Morouse, complete with a bushy grey beard, looked every inch the part, but delivered something of a “dialled-in” performance. Though he livened up more in the second act, his one-liners hung heavily in the air, with a tirade of insults hurled at his arch-enemy Melanzane sounding more like a weekly grocery list than a wild counterattack spurred by ideological obsession. The contrasting facets of Marx's personality weren't backed by emotion, which left the character blander than he is written.