Date:   

1984


"1984" at Covent Garden, Saturday 14th. May 2005

 

Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, 14th. May 2005

Lorin Maazel, 1984

Libretto by J.D. McClatchy and Thomas Meehan, after George Orwell's

"Nineteen Eighty-Four"

 

DIRECTOR:              Robert LePage

 

CAST:

 

WINSTON SMITH          Simon Keenlyside

JULIA                          Nancy Gustafson

O'BRIEN                     Richard Margison

GYM INSTRUCTRESS/

DRUNKEN WOMAN          Diana Damrau

SYME                           Lawrence Brownlee

PARSONS                    Jeremy White

CHARRINGTON                     Graeme Danby

PROLE WOMAN            Mary Lloyd-Davies

CAFE SINGER            Johnnie Fiori

PUB QUARTET            THE DEMON BARBERS -

                                    Stephen Douse, Rupert Jennings,

                                    Anthony Scales, Jeremy Birchall

TELESCREEN VOICE       Jeremy Irons

 

Chorus and Orchestra of the Royal Opera House, conducted by Lorin Maazel

(the composer)

 

*******************************************************

 

Maazel's re-working of Orwell's novel has been almost universally condemned by the critics, but I did TRY to keep an open mind; there were many things I liked about it! Not least the fact that it started with the sound of Big Ben striking thirteen - you'll probably recall that the novel starts with the clocks striking thirteen. The opera starts with the "Two Minutes' Hate", and unfortunately, well-written as the music is (including the "National Anrthem of Oceania", which seems to parody every cliché of every national anthem that has ever been written - surely deliberately!) Maazel seems to think that the "Two Minutes' Hate" is directed at the current enemy, Eurasia (though it will become - and WILL ALWAYS HAVE BEEN - Eastasia in the course of the narrative), whereas in the novel it is directed at the figure of Goldstein, enemy of the party, enemy of Big Brother, corruptor of youth, etc. etc.

Hate


 

This indicates right at the outset one of the main problems with Maazel's version of 1984 - that the more general political thrust of the novel is weakened in favour of the love-story of Winston and Julia.

1984


Before pursuing this theme, I will draw attention to the episodes that I thought were very well done...

 

One of Smith's colleagues, Syme, sings a lyric in praise of NEWSPEAK, "the only language whose vocabulary gets smaller every year!" The text of the lyric is quoted in the programme, and the first line is "The beauty of Newspeak". The irony is, of course, that once Newspeak has been fully launched, there will not BE a concept of beauty. This is sung by Laurence Brownlee in an audaciously high tenor verging on the falsetto, to, of all things, a jaunty dance tune! Much of the score relies on parody and pastiche, and as these were the parts that stood out and grabbed the attention, I imagine that this is deliberate on Maazel's part. There are also some beautiful passages for solo violin - Maazel is a violinist. Sometimes the music is a bit - well, "obvious" I suppose - when Winston and Julia are caught, you just KNOW there are going to be crashing chords in the orchestra, and sure enough....and there is no shortage of ominous drumbeats at crucial moments.

 

The other scene that I thought was very well done was the scene after the arrest, when Winston is separated from Julia and waiting for his fate. Some "ordinary" - that is, non-political - prisoners are brought in, including a drunken prostitute. She makes crude advances to Winston, and then while two of Winston's colleagues are brought in (including Syme, who hasn't quite managed to make Newspeak stick after all) the high woman's voice (uttering crude banalities) accompanies the men's voices like a sort of threnody.

 

I had been wondering how Maazel was going to deal with the central political theme of the novel...you will recall that when O'Brien has Winston completely at his mercy, he reveals the reason why the Party is in power and why it will stay in power - "The Party seeks power entirely for its own sake. We are not interested in the good of others; we are interested solely in power...We know that no-one ever seizes power with the intention of relinquishing it. Power is not a means, it is an end....There will be no art, no literature, no science....If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face ? for ever".

1984


 

Now THAT is the central thesis of Orwell's novel. I thought perhaps it could be done as a sort of Handelian aria,or possibly like Iago's "Credo" in OTELLO, but in the event Maazel deals with it by - leaving it out!! And that was really the greatest disappointment for me.

 

I've mentioned Lawrence Brownlee's striking performance as Syme - Keenlyside is appropriately tormented (psychologically, I mean) as Winston Smith, convincingly conveying the yearning for (or possibly memory of ) a better world than the one he lives in, and he is well-matched by Nancy Gustafson's Julia. And I was impressed by Richard Margison's O'Brien.

 

All in all then - it was interesting, but in the final analysis it has to be said that Maazel has rather missed the point.

Dr. Jane Susanna ENNIS

http://members.fortunecity.co/uk/leonora/opera.html

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1984
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Well done comrade! You're one of the big boys! When you're not holding speeches about how everyone is equal in the communist society, you're busy living the high-life while millions starve, freeze or get worked to death! You zany person you!

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