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Werther
Opéra Bastille - from 20 January to 04 February 2016
Werther
Jules Massenet
Opéra Bastille - from 20 January to 04 February 2016
3h05 with 2 intervals
About
In few words:
"Why tremble before death, before our own demise? The curtain rises... and we pass to the other side. Do we offend heaven by ceasing to suffer?"- Werther, Act II
“Nothing is more moving than this combination of pain and meditation, introspection and delirium portraying the unfortunate man contemplating himself in thought and succumbing to pain; directing his imagination towards himself; strong enough to watch himself suffer and yet incapable of bringing any relief to his tormented soul.” So wrote Madame de Staël in 1800. Fourteen years later, in De l’Allemagne, she restated her admiration for Werther and “all that Goethe’s genius could produce when he was passionate.”
Even though more than a century separates the publication of the novel from the creation of Massenet’s operatic drama, the composer remains faithful to Goethe’s truly personal literary model and captures the palpable signs of nascent romanticism – that Sturm und Drang whose turmoil would liberate all that was intimate.
In a discreet Clair de lune, the orchestra murmurs the silent empathy of two people holding each other by the arm for fear that their hands or their hearts might touch, until finally, in a febrile outburst of fervour, the tears of Charlotte, embodied by ElĪna Garanča, release the impassioned lyricism of inevitably doomed love.
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Werther
Drame lyrique in four acts and five scenes (1892)
After Johann Wolfgang von Goethe In French
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Performances
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Book your tickets today with the Season Pass
Available in audiodescription
Advantages
Full
Gallery
Audio clips
Werther - Jules Massenet
Backstage
© Émilie Brouchon / OnP
Podcast
Podcast Werther
"Dance! Sing! 7 minutes at the Paris Opera" - by France Musique
07’
"Dance! Sing! 7 minutes at the Paris Opera" offers original incursions into the season thanks to broadcasts produced by France Musique and the Paris Opera. For each opera or ballet production, Judith Chaine (opera) and Stéphane Grant (dance), present the works and artists you are going to discover when you attend performances in our theatres.
© Christian Leiber / OnP
Article
The costumes for Werther
A production remembered
05’
Annette Hasslert Risacher is Head of Costume Production at the Opera Bastille.
When a costume designer is invited to the Opera he first of all presents his project, developed in collaboration with the stage director, to the management. Monitoring the fabrication of the costumes then becomes the responsibility of one of the production managers. The creators come with pictures, sketches, partial models; each has his own method. Christian Gasc, always brings models. From these mock-ups, we start work on the sampling, that’s to say the selection of fabrics, then on the colouring.
For this production of Werther, all the costumes were dyed here on the premises, because it was impossible to obtain the necessary variety of colour nuances from outside suppliers. The Decoration Department undertakes all the dying and the creation of effects on the tissues such as the patina; they can also design original prints and patterns. In parallel, we meet with the Head of the Atelier flou (the couture workshop for women) and the Head of the Atelier tailleur (the tailoring workshop for men). Based on his artwork, Christian Gasc gives his guidelines for how the fabric should be cut. Afterwards I oversee the fittings with the performers. I must be attentive to the soloists and collect their sensations as of the first day of rehearsal in order to implement any possible modifications. The piano dress rehearsal is the moment we present the costumes to the rest of the team for the first time. It is my objective that on this occasion everything has been made and is "ready for use", even if there is always something to rectify. We deliver the finished costumes at the Full Dress Rehearsal, and then it is the Dress Department which takes over and becomes responsible for the costumes on stage.
From cutting to fitting, the design of a single dress for such a production requires at least two weeks. My mission consists of supervising the process, creating technical information sheets for each costume and ensuring smooth collaboration between the different workshops. We should not forget that a costume also consists of shoes, headwear, and hair styles... Each creation is a team effort: we all work together for one artistic purpose: the performance itself. This conjugation of skills from different departments has proved particularly successful in this production of Werther, which for me is a model of clarity and elegance.
For this production, we have made costumes which are rooted in the eighteenth century. This requires an expertise specific to the Workshop couturiers who know inside-out the dress vocabulary of many different eras. At the time of its publication, Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young Werther aroused such enthusiasm that the characters’ clothing deeply influenced and defined fashion in the second half of the eighteenth century; the long night-blue jacket and the yellow waistcoat of the eponymous hero were copied by all the young men of the time and became emblematic of the romantic aesthetic, all the more reason to remain faithful to this historical anchor. What is interesting with period costumes is not so much to look at a picture and copy the clothes we see, but to understand the logic and aesthetics of the garment and to adapt it. We must of course respect the era, but we must also take into account the viewpoint of today’s spectator. The historical origins must be recognisable without giving the impression that the soloists are squeezed into clothes that do not fit them. For this we pay attention to the cutting styles of the time, for example the fitted bodices, but we treat them with contemporary sensibility. We must also take into account the stage director’s personal vision of the eighteenth century and that of the costume designer. Even if Goethe and Massenet's Charlotte is adorned with pink ribbons, it is a coquetry that Christian Gasc strips away in order to be consistent with Benoît Jacquot’s staging which employs starkness to highlight the intimate drama of the opera. We must also avoid cluttering up or confusing the spectator’s vision. It is a pitfall that he avoids by his subtle treatment of colours, a hallmark of his work.
What ensures the
elegance of Christian Gasc's costumes is his rigorous work on the colours. He
selects a basic colour for each character and then develops variations around
it. He may progressively introduce elements to convey different tones and moods
whilst at the same time maintaining coherence. Take for example the character
of Charlotte. Her dress is very bright at the beginning, during the joyous
first act that takes place with children in a sunny courtyard. Charlotte’s
whiteness gradually begins to darken, the dress remains almost the same but its
colour intensifies. Ultimately, in the final scene when she joins the mortally
wounded Werther, Christian Gasc decided to add a blood-red shawl, as if
Charlotte is sharing her lover’s wound. The costumes for Werther demonstrate a controlled unity; we don't get lost in too
many rich colours. For me, this production belongs to the realm of those where
everything is crowned with success, where refinement and grace emanate from
this symbiosis between sets, lighting and costumes.
Interviewed by Milena Mc Closkey
Partners
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With the support of AROP
Broadcast at a later date on France Musique.
Media and technical partners
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