Renate Stendhal

In an introduction to Verdi's Macbeth at the Vienna State Opera, Barrie Kosky—the renowned Australian director based at the Komische Oper Berlin—called the work a three-person-story. Given the large set of characters in Shakespeare's play and the still ample cast of Verdi's opera, this sounded intriguing. It turned out that Kosky simply followed Verdi's own instructions: ".. there are three roles in this opera," Verdi wrote, "and three is all there can be: Lady Macbeth, Macbeth, and the chorus of witches. The witches dominate the drama; everything derives from them. "*
I don't know that anybody has ever taken this as far as Kosky did with his shockingly radical stage reduction to the three-person drama.

Productions of Macbeth usually struggle with the representation of the large chorus of the Witches and the ghostly apparitions they conjure to tell Macbeth his destiny. Swept off the stage are all the apparitions, courtiers and extras. Only the brief appearances of the warriors Banco, Macduff and Malcolm are left. Side characters like the doctor, the lady in waiting or the servant are placed on the fringe or barely visible. The stage is a deep, dark space traversed by four diagonal lines of dim lights running like parallels into infinity. The entire opera takes place in concentrated darkness, and the longer one contemplates this uncertain space the more it comes to represent the unknowable past and future.

Upfront under a vague light from above lies a man like a corpse, covered with dead crows: Macbeth, the man obsessed with his future, doomed from the start. A silent mass of bodies moves up on him out of the darkness—shadowy but recognizable as naked women, men and hermaphrodites—the Witches. The mass moves like a single body, slowly, sneakily, almost lovingly like vultures sensing a carcass.

In this atmosphere the rather jolly chorus of the Witches takes on an eerie tone of cynicism as they foretell the future to Macbeth and his rival Banco: Macbeth will be king but Banco's sons will wear the crown. Macbeth is visibly unsettled (as is the audience) while the naked bodies cling and writhe at his heels.

Kosky profits from a great singer/actor in the lead role—acclaimed baritone Gerald Finley. The Canadian singer has an uncanny capacity to show physically the split psyche of Macbeth: the shudder that accompanies his violent hunger for power and the doubt that gnaws at him. His mellifluous voice easily reaches from childlike, whispered longings to rage, from vengeful fury to dark forebodings and terror.

Next to his mesmerizing portrayal, the Lady Macbeth of Ukrainian mezzo Liudmyla Monastyrska seems secondary. She remains immobile on her chair (two chairs upfront are the only set props), massive, with a few stock gestures of a conjurer. Her voice is strong but shrill in the high notes and evocative mainly in the low-key insinuations that are her power. Verdi wanted an "ugly" Lady Macbeth with an ugly voice projecting evil. But Monastyrska lacked the fascination of evil and the charisma to match Finley.

This imbalance suits Kosky's concept: Macbeth's primary relation is with his own demons, i.e. the Witches who embody his naked greed, the seductive lust for power. Nothing is real, everything the Witches say and do comes across as a manifestation of his unconscious, independent of the malice of his Lady. This focus on the unconscious gives Kosky's production a very modern appeal without the need to "modernize" Verdi. The costumes, barely visible, are simple, dark coats in a late-medieval style. Kosky's stage with its sinister lighting (designed by Klaus Grünberg) places the whole drama in the dark of the soul.

Particularly striking is the banquet scene (after the murders of the king and Banco). There is no banquet, there is nothing but the black space around the royal couple, but now the Witches stand guard along the diagonal lines of light like naked stone statues in the hallways or alleys of a castle. The image is loaded with allusions to other works of art—especially Cocteau's castle in La Belle et la Bête, where the statues follow you with their eyes and human arms hold the candelabras. The couple sits on their chairs trying to celebrate their bloody success when paper streamers suddenly fly at them, apparently shot by the immobile statues standing guard. No movement is detectable. The colored arcs of the streamer come out of nowhere, and little by little the couple is ensnared in the tangles of fake mirth.

Another sinister scene has the young son of Banco toss a ball in the air in the rhythm of his father's aria of foreboding, warning his son to escape, when the murderer appears. As Banco collapses, the dropped ball rolls forward across the stage.

At the end, Lady Macbeth has gone insane on her chair, trying to wipe the blood from her hands while a single crow is watching. The Witches reappear like a brooding thought. Their raised fingers tremble to indicate that the "Birnam Wood is moving" and Macbeth's defeat is near. Macduff finally murders Macbeth in the same way Macbeth murdered his victims: a vague figure approaches from the shadows and stabs him in the back—there one second and gone the next. A black curtain comes down and Macbeth is left alone upfront.

With this ending, the production follows Verdi's original version from 1847 (he was thirty-four years old), whereas the revision from 1865 ends with a victory chorus saluting Malcolm, the next king). During preparations for the premiere, Verdi explained to the first interpreter of his Macbeth:

    In this final scene there's an adagio in D-flat, every detail of which needs coloring, cantabile and passionate. [...] You'll be able to make much of the death scene if, together with your singing, your acting is well thought out. Macbeth mustn't die like Edgardo [in Lucia di Lammermoor], therefore it has to be treated in a new way. It should be affecting, yes; but more than affecting, it should be terrible. All of it sotto voce, except for the last two lines, which, in fact, you'll also accompany with acting, bursting out with full force on the words "Vile... crown... and only for you!..."

As if Verdi had had Gerard Finley in mind, the singer powerfully conveys Mabeth's awareness of the futility, the terror of the useless bloodshed he caused. He sits on his chair, tattered  like a homeless man. In the chair next to him sit the crows—all alive now, flapping their wings and eagerly listening to the last mumblings of a man who is already a ghost.

This staging of Verdi's first "music-drama" was a revival of Kosky's Zurich Opera production, where it premiered in 2016 and was reprised in 2023. The Vienna State Opera orchestra under Axel Kober was exquisitely fine-tuned to the singers. The intensity of Verdi's score was considerably heightened by the lack of visual distractions in Kosky's concentrated scenic space. In the smaller roles, Roberto Tagliavini as Banco, Saimir Pirgu as Macduff, and Carlos Osuna as Malcolm were impeccable.

Kosky's stark, existential vision of Macbeth was naturally controversial and much debated in Europe. For me it was what one is always  hoping for: the "ideal" interpretation, the brilliant concept that won't easily be matched by another.


* From Verdi's correspondence, ed. Philip Gosset, general editor of Verdi's works.

Photos:
Wiener Staatsoper/Michael Pöhn
Wiener Staatsoper / Sofia Varågalová

inFocus

December 2024

 

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Renate Stendhal , Ph.D. (www.renatestendhal.com) is a writer, writing coach and interpersonal counselor based in San Francisco and Pt. Reyes. She has published several books, among them the award-winning photo biography Gertrude Stein in Words and Pictures, and most recently the award-winning Kiss Me Again, Paris: A Memoir. Her articles and essays have appeared intenationally. She is a Senior Writer for Scene4. For her other reviews and articles:, check the Archives.

©2024 Renate Stendhal
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