22. May 2005
Using a light touch, the director infuses Los Angeles Opera's "Der Rosenkavalier" with fantasy, poetry and unalloyed modernity.
Schell's collaborators are conductor Kent Nagano and artist Gottfried Helnwein, whose décors mingle contemporary elements — there's an office chair on rollers that the oafish Baron Ochs uses to skitter around in — with the Baroque and Rococo earmarks of the era in which the opera is set, the reign of Maria Theresa.
Even before the opening, however, this collaboration has created something of a stir. Helnwein's eye-catching poster features a close-up of two gorgeous bare-shouldered women just barely kissing — which, technically, captures the opening love scene between the Marschallin and the young nobleman she's involved with, Octavian, who in time-honored "trouser" fashion is played by a mezzo-soprano. "I was trying to get to the work's essence," says Helnwein, now an Angeleno relocated from Vienna. "Two beautiful young people in a tender, magical love scene."
But the photo illustration also suggests "lipstick lesbians" — not exactly what Strauss and Hofmannsthal had in mind.
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