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            Mozart & Mussorgsky – Idomeneo & Boris Godunov,
            Soloists, Chorus and Orchestra of the San Francisco Opera. San 
            Francisco Opera House, San Francisco, 21/22.10.2008 (RRR)
            
            
            
            Mozart:
            
            
            Conductor, Donald Runnicles
            
            
            Idomeneo and Boris Godunov in San Francisco
            
            Idamante - Alice Coote (mezzo)
            Ilia - Genia Kuhmeier (soprano)
            Idomeneo - Kurt Streit (tenor)
            Abace - Alek Shrader (tenor)
            Elettra - Iano Tamar (soprano)
            
            
            
            Mussorgsky: 
            Conductor, Vassily Sinaisky
            
            Boris Godunov – Samuel Ramey (bass-baritone)
            Prince Shuisky - John Uhlenhopp as Prince (tenor)
            Grigory -  Vsevolod Grivnov (tenor)
            Varlaam - Vladimir Ognovenko (bass)
            et al.
            
            
            Seeing Mozart’s Idomeneo and Mussorgsky’s Boris Godunov
            back-to-back at the San Francisco Opera on the evenings of 
            October 21 and 22, I did not expect to be struck by the similarity 
            of their themes.  What could this Enlightenment opera, penned in 
            Munich in 1781, have to do with the darkness and gloom of 
            unenlightened czarist Russia of 1869?
            
            More than you might think.  Both operas deal with the perennial 
            issue of the order of the soul and the order of the city.  Both 
            operas ask the central questions: what is the ruler’s relationship 
            to the divine and what difference does that relationship make to his 
            rule; and what is the relationship between the moral character of 
            the ruler and the political order?  Not surprisingly – since the 
            family is the foundation of the polis – both operas also deal with 
            families and the relationships within them.
            
            I was left to dwell upon these themes because the excellence of both 
            productions left me free to plumb the meaning of the operas 
            themselves. There were no distractions from poor production values, 
            bad casting, awkward acting, or flubbed notes. More will be said 
            about the obverse of each of these, but the main point is that both 
            evenings were opera at its finest – as one has come to expect of the 
            San Francisco Opera.
            
            Although I am a Mozart fanatic, Idomeneo remains relatively 
            unknown to me. In fact, it was pretty much unknown to everyone from 
            the time of its last performance in 1781 until some point in the 19th 
            century. San Francisco didn’t see its first production of Idomeneo 
            until 1977; the current production was first offered in here in 
            1989.
            
            For those used to the teeming life in Don Giovanni and The 
            Marriage of Figaro, the reasons for Idomeneo’s neglect 
            are fairly easy to divine.  In the vein of opera seria, Idomeneo 
            is a somewhat heavy classical drama based upon the fictional story 
            of Idomeneo returning from the Greek conquest of Troy.  He almost 
            perishes at sea, but is saved by his vow to Neptune to sacrifice the 
            first person he sees on land.  That person turns out to be his son 
            Idamante (a part written for a castrato that is now sung by a 
            mezzo-soprano).
            
            Thus the dramatic tension in the opera is centered on whether or not 
            Idomeneo will kill his son. If he does not, will the gods destroy 
            Crete?  That sounds exciting but, in fact, most of the major action 
            takes place off stage – the ship wreck, the storm, the monster’s 
            attack on Crete, and Idamante’s slaying of the monster – we are only 
            told about these events. Instead, the characters mostly soliloquize 
            over the dire situations in which they find themselves. In other 
            words, most of the drama is interior. This makes the on-stage action 
            static. The poor director (John Copley) is left having the 
            characters occasionally lurch in one direction or another to express 
            the profundity of their emotions.  It is hard to imagine what else 
            he could do – although it would be a director’s job to figure 
            exactly that out. Nonetheless, this is already mature Mozart, and it 
            is so musically rich and sophisticated that one can only be pleased 
            that it has made its rather late entry into the repertoire.
            
            Back to the story: Idomeneo immediately regrets his terrible vow, 
            but seems to have been placed in this situation because he was 
            willing to sacrifice someone else’s life for his own.  The tension 
            this sets up is only resolved when others prove willing to sacrifice 
            themselves, rather than see Idamante slain.  In a marvelous scene in 
            Act III, Idomeneo realizes his culpability, “I alone sinned,” and 
            offers his own life for his son’s.  Idamante, in turn, is clearly 
            willing to give his life to save the people of Crete as he goes out 
            to slay the monster (whose destructive presence seems the embodiment 
            of the dislocation in the relationship between the gods and man).  
            Then Idamante announces that he is ready for Idomeneo to take his 
            life as the necessary sacrifice.  Ilia, King Priam’s daughter, who 
            is in love with Idamante, intervenes and offers her life in his 
            place.
            
            With this, the spell of Idomeneo’s vow is broken and Neptune 
            relents.  The disembodied Voice proclaims: “Love has triumphed.”  
            However, Idomeneo has forfeited his right to rule.  By offering to 
            sacrifice someone else in his stead, he dislocated his relationship 
            with his own son – thereby suggesting that it was wrong to offer 
            anyone in his place.  He has lost his legitimacy. Idamante replaces 
            him as king. Thus, order is restored. The legitimacy of the new 
            order, sanctioned by the gods in a presage of Christian kingship, is 
            established by the ruler’s willingness to self-sacrifice.  This does 
            not strike me so much as an Enlightenment message as a Christian 
            one.
            
            It would be difficult to praise the orchestra and its conductor, 
            Donald Runnicles, too highly. I would be tempted to call them the 
            stars of the evening were it not for the vocal excellence on 
            display. The playing was echt Mozartian – alert, highly 
            nuanced, especially in the winds and strings, vivacious, lyrical and 
            dramatic as the moment required.
            
            Alice Coote, the British mezzo-soprano, was a standout in the key 
            role of Idamante, which she not only sang well but acted with 
            unflagging concentration and conviction. She was beautifully matched 
            by the Austrian singer Genia Kuhmeier, a completely believable Ilia, 
            who looked and sang just as a Mozartian soprano should.  Kurt Streit 
            has a well-deserved reputation for this role as Idomeneo. His 
            anguish and anger at Neptune were completely convincing. Alek 
            Shrader as Abace stood as a peer with the principals, though he is 
            only 25 years old – about the age of Mozart when the opera was 
            finished. Iano Tamar as Elettra sang expressively of her unrequited 
            love for Idamante.  Hers is not a big voice, however, and she was 
            swamped in the third act quartet.
            
            There is a good deal of great choral music in Idomeneo and 
            the chorus excelled.  Design-wise, the set and costumes emulated the 
            18th century and how the 18th century might have 
            conceived of ancient Greece.  The mix worked well.  The set was 
            suitably archaic looking, with fragments of classical pediments 
            strewn about.  The scene of the ruins from the monster’s 
            depredations had a delicious hint of Italian futurism about it. In 
            short, the production was a success that in many ways transcended 
            the limitations of the stilted opera seria genre.
            
            
            
            Boris Godunov 
            offers another troubled ruler. At the beginning of his reign as 
            tsar, Boris prays, “may I be good and just like Thee.”  This does 
            not appear, however, to be something God can grant or Boris’s 
            conscience allow – because his reign is based upon an act of 
            murder.  Unlike Idomeneo, who was only willing to sacrifice someone 
            for himself, Boris actually did so in having the Tsarevich Dimitri 
            killed so that he, Boris, could rule.  The consequences of this 
            horrible deed are played out in this original 1869 version of 
            Mussorgsky’s opera.
            
            This is one of the truly great portraits of a tortured soul.  It is 
            made all the more moving because Boris actually tries to be a good 
            ruler and a good father to his son Fyodor and his daughter Xenia.  
            All is for naught.  The opera teaches that regime change cannot be 
            based upon regicide.  Boris’s act inevitably gives rise to a 
            pretender, Grigory, a renegade monk who tries to pass himself off as 
            Dimitri, who had been killed 12 years earlier at the age of 7.  The 
            appearance of the pretender intensifies Boris’s anguish to the point 
            that he begins to hallucinate; the murdered child appears to him in 
            one of the great ghost scenes of opera.   “Oh cruel conscience, too 
            savagely you punish me,” cries out Boris. 
            
            Before Boris goes mad, he delivers a prayer for “my innocent 
            children.”  That this scene and its music can bring tears to one’s 
            eyes is a measure of Mussorgsky’s achievement in presenting the full 
            scope of Boris’s tragedy by showing Boris in his full, though flawed 
            humanity.   In counseling his son, he sings, “Keep your conscience 
            clear for it will be your power and strength.”  In other words, no 
            one realizes better than Boris that the good order of the ruler’s 
            soul is the foundation of his political strength.
            
            I have not seen Samuel Ramey since he sang Mefistofele 20 years ago 
            at the SF Opera.  He was still a young man then. Now he is 66 years 
            old.  It seemed to tell a bit in the coronation scene when his voice 
            wobbled a bit.  However, that was the only hint, for he had no 
            trouble rising to the big scenes or in delivering a truly searing 
            and terribly moving portrayal of Boris.  He has a tremendous sense 
            of stage presence, and his nuanced portrait of the increasing toll 
            Boris’s conscience takes on him was haunting.  From the point at 
            which Prince Shuisky tells him of the pretender through to Boris’s 
            death, Ramey was riveting.  He played the prayer scene with 
            heartbreaking authenticity.  The scene in which the holy fool 
            refuses to pray for Boris because he is “Tsar Herod” was joltingly 
            effective.
            
            The rest of the principals were outstanding as well.  John Uhlenhopp 
            as Prince Shuisky was the incarnation of unctuous treachery.  
            Vsevolod Grivnov was superb as Grigory, the pretender, with almost a 
            nasal whine in his voice from envy.  Russian bass Vladimir Ognovenko 
            almost stole the show with his performance as Varlaam, the vagabond 
            monk.  I was not surprised to see in his bio that he has sung 
            Boris.  
            
            The set was stark simplicity itself – a raked stage that wraps up in 
            the rear to the ceiling, and out of which doors opened for various 
            entrances and exits.  The gray setting put everything else in high 
            relief.  It made the appearance of the icons and rich court costumes 
            in the coronation scene all the more impressive.  In a nice touch of 
            irony, Boris was dressed in shocking white. The general darkness and 
            lighting were entirely appropriate to the interior drama that was 
            being played out.  The orchestra and chorus once again covered 
            themselves in glory, this time under Russian conductor Vassily 
            Sinaisky.
            
            It seems there is no escaping the connection between the order of 
            the soul and the order of the city.  As good a reminder for why we 
            go to the opera, as it is a guide for our own lives.
            
            
            
            Robert R. Reilly
            
            Note: Robert R. Reilly features here as a Guest Reviewer at 
            San Francisco Opera. Our regular San Francisco correspondent Harvey 
            Steiman will also report on each of these two performances.
            
            Idomeneo plays again on October 28th and 31st,
            Boris on October 30th, November 2nd, 4th, 
            7th, 12th, and 15th.
            Ed
            
            
	
	
			
	
	
              
              
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