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Monsalvat: the Parsifal home page |
Parsifal at Covent Garden
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arsifal was first performed in England on 2 February 1914. This review appeared in
The Times on the following day. The author was H.C. Colles (1879-1943), the
newspaper's music critic from 1911.
| Amfortas | Herr Paul Bender |
| Titurel | Mr Murray Davey |
| Gurnemanz | Herr Paul Knüpfer |
| Parsifal | Herr Heinrich Hensel |
| Klingsor | Herr August Kiess |
| Kundry | Frau Eva von der Osten |
| A Voice | Frau Bender-Schafer |
| Conductor | Herr Artur Bodansky |
ueen
Alexandra occupied the Royal box at the first performance in England of Wagner's
Parsifal, which took place at Covent Garden last night before a very distinguished
audience.
he huge
audience which filled every seat in the Opera House from the stalls to the gallery was drawn
there no doubt by every conceivable motive and interest, from a devotion bordering upon a
religious enthusiasm to mere curiosity and the desire to share in an historic event. Yet for
practical purposes it could be divided into two definite classes, those who knew or thought
they knew what Parsifal is and those who had come to make the discovery.
oth classes
no doubt had one question uppermost in their mind: the question how far what they were to see
and hear would be the Parsifal which until this year has remained secluded at
Bayreuth. The question, though inevitable, is destructive to the spirit which Wagner fought so
hard to gain from his audience. He wanted what every artist wants and rarely gets, an attitude
of concentrated sympathy freed from all exterior distractions. He wanted an audience without
poses either of piety or cleverness to whom he could speak direct. The conditions of modern
artistic production make the ideal unattainable, and while those who know Parsifal
have by now answered the question each in his own way, it must be our business to answer it to
some extent for the benefit of the newcomers.
he forest scene, into which Kundry rushes,
wild-eyed and breathless, bringing balsam for Amfortas' wound, and where the boy Parsifal strays and thoughtlessly shoots the swan, gives a far more spacious view of lake and mountain than can be
shown at Bayreuth.
he temple in
which the mystery of the Grail is celebrated is, on the other hand, a
very close representation of the Venetian [sic] architecture of the Bayreuth scene, but the
point at which this production fails is the moving scenery which
Wagner intended should link the two. The idea was one of Wagner's worst blunders in practical
stagecraft. He directed that the whole scene should move gradually towards the right, and even
when it is done perfectly it has some of the absurdity of the old-fashioned panorama show. But
when the scene does not move at all, but is gradually obliterated by a canvas on a roll (which
is what happens at Covent Garden) the absurdity is multiplied a hundredfold. If the management
could have had the courage to prove Wagner wrong by omitting the moving scenery altogether,
letting the journey to Monsalvat be pictured imaginatively in
the magnificent music of the orchestra, as Siegfried's journey to the Rhine is pictured, a
lasting service to Wagner's art would have been done ...
ut
these things are really only the accessories. Every one realizes now that the heart of Wagner's
art lies in the music. The cast had been carefully chosen with this in view. Herr Hensel has
sung the part of Parsifal in two Bayreuth festivals; Mme. Eva
von der Osten is the possessor of one of the most beautiful mezzo-soprano voices of modern
times, and in Herr Paul Bender, Herr Knüpfer, and Herr Kiess were secured three of the
finest singers possible. Individually the work of the principal artists was of the highest
order. But one looks for more than this, and through most of the performance we got more both
in the careful ensemble and in the fine orchestral playing. The opening scenes were
the least satisfactory ...
he ending in
which Parsifal raises the Grail,
illumined as in the first act, produces an anticlimax musically as well as dramatically.
Wagner's attempt to give it additional significance by the descent of the dove produces no more
than a cheap theatrical effect, and he has no new musical point to add in the score. In this as
in much else one is reminded of the fact that Parsifal is the work of his old age. His
strength was ebbing, but the sincerity of his purpose sufficed to produce a work which has
created a deeper reverence for opera than any of his earlier masterpieces could achieve. Even
if we do not feel Parsifal to be Wagner's greatest work, its unique beauty and the
loftiness of its standpoint are incontestable.