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Opera review - Die Frau ohne Schatten (Royal Opera House): This Strauss in the House is as good as it gets

March 20, 2014 14:17
A scene from Die Frau ohne Schatten

By

Stephen Pollard,

Stephen Pollard

1 min read

How’s this for a 20th-century plot? A supernatural Empress is married to a human Emperor who will be turned to stone if the Empress is not able to buy a shadow from a poor woman. And those are just the basic elements.
Strauss’s Die Frau ohne Schatten is sometimes described as his response to The Magic Flute.

Underneath it lies the same idea of a test of worthiness. But where Mozart’s opera can be seen on one level almost as pantomime, this is so heavily allegorical and suffused with psychological ambiguity that it defeats almost all directors.

Claus Guth’s solution is to treat it all as the sexually charged dream of a frustrated young wife. The device works, so that focus is directed away from the more creaking elements of the plot.

But if I urge you to see this new production, it’s not because of the staging, excellent as that is. It’s because you will never hear a finer performance of a Strauss opera than the blazing, incandescent, tender and opulent reading of the glorious score that Semyon Bychkov secures from the Royal Opera House orchestra. On this evidence, we have the Vienna and Berlin philharmonics rolled into one in the Covent Garden pit.

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