All five of the Houston Grand Opera’s performances of Die Walküre sold out immediately – more than 13,000 seats – and there are several good reasons why. Primarily, one would think that it was because the cycle marked first American performances of the inspired, enormously effective and widely acclaimed production seen in Valencia, Spain and at the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino by the Catalan theater group La Fura del Baus, which uses wild, Cirque de Soleil imagery and machinery. A closer look, however, spots the deeper reason – HGO and conductor Patrick Summers have assembled, arguably, the finest cast available for this opera in the world.
“Timeless” is the word people like to use for Wagner’s Ring, and Carlus Padrissa’s direction on the production by Fura del Baus, abetted by Chu Aroz’ costumes, Roland Olbeter’s set, and Franc Aleu’s videos, is precisely that. From the pre-historic, Stone Age opening to the futuristic world of the gods, all of time and space seems to unfold in front of us. The opening storm is depicted by a mad race through a dense forest with almost three-dimensional hunting dogs in pursuit, the tree in Hunding’s hut takes up most of the stage and shimmers and throbs, there are animal bones strewn about, and Sieglinde, tattooed and in animal skins, is on a leash and crawls when she is not walking on her haunches. Act II introduces us to the gods against a background projections of bubbling gases, laser lights and the heavens and planets, and Wotan, Brünnhilde and Fricka arrive on cranes (with protective bars to keep them steady while aloft), operated by black-clad figures who raise and lower them. (Padrissa has stated that this is a nod to Greek drama’s Deus ex machina.) There are very few props, but the goddesses have their breastplates and helmets, Wotan has his patch (and a long, white robe), and Siegmund has his spear. The visual pièce de résistence comes at the opening of the last act: a giant hanging ball with the bodies of a couple of dozen slain heroes (some mannequins, some acrobats) swings back and forth as the Valkyries ride against a background of ever-changing sky. Four of the sisters are suspended on cranes, the others are at stage level; at one point the four on cranes are suspended over the orchestra pit. The effect is staggering. And at the finale, Wotan places Brünnhilde in a real ring of fire, against a golden backdrop.
The remarkable thing about all of these “effects” is that Padrissa still manages to make the characters real. Siegmund’s confusion and strength, Sieglinde’s love – and the fact that she begins to walk upright once the bond between her and Siegmund becomes clear – Hunding’s stalking, are all riveting and clear. The confrontation between Wotan and Fricka, which begins as a squabble and ends in a knockdown, is enormously moving – Wotan literally falls to the ground, dropping his spear, once he capitulates. As Wotan tells his daughter of his woes, a huge sun-background eventually goes into eclipse, leaving a ring of flame. Stage and word are invariably wedded.