AIX-EN-PROVENCE.- The bodies kept coming up.
First one. Then another. Then a dozen. Then a hundred. After an hour of Resurrection, the opening night production at the Aix-en-Provence Festival, 160 decomposing corpses lay in neat, sickening rows on a stage covered in dark earth.
The exhumation of a shallow mass grave is a grimly familiar sight: Sudan, Srebrenica, Veracruz, Rwanda, so many others. In March, Bucha, Ukraine, added to that litany a scene so eerily reminiscent of the one being staged here that the festival sent out an email assuring audiences that the director, Romeo Castellucci, had conceived the production a year before the war broke out.
Three years ago at the Aix Festival, Castellucci presented Requiem, a staging of Mozarts final work. In a series of enigmatic episodes, he set to the mournful, churning music an evocation of civilizations full span, from birth with plangent child singers to vibrant, folk-dancing life, and shadowy implosion amid battles and natures destruction.
His new piece, which premiered Monday, is a pendant to Requiem, but Castellucci has done something quite different with Mahlers 90-minute Second Symphony, known as the Resurrection. Rather than short episodes, here there is a single, almost unremitting action: We watch a United Nations team silently excavate a site where a catastrophe has taken place.
This spectacle risks tastelessness. But Resurrection dwells on these anonymous professionals and their experienced, repetitive choreography so endlessly and matter-of-factly in naturalistic, unhurried real time that it transcends a sense of aesthetic or moral pornography. Instead, the experience of watching it evokes that of watching the news or reading the front pages: waves of sympathy and horror that yield to powerlessness and numbness.
Even the Mahler looks on this unbearable pain with a kind of detachment. The stage action is directly spurred by the sprawling symphony only a few times, so the moods dont match neatly; this isnt a soundtrack, thankfully. For all the intensity of the imagery, there is rarely a sense of emotional manipulation.
Resurrection weakens when it does feel manipulative, moving from the reality of vans and body bags toward more sentimental symbolism: a white horse galloping onstage at the start, innocence soon to be tarnished; a U.N. worker who refuses to stop digging; a final, clichéd benediction of rain.
But the Orchestre de Paris performance of the score, under Esa-Pekka Salonen, was properly savage, even raw though also relished, unrushed. This was deliberate, spaciously paced Mahler, lilting but never too sweet in its ländler second movement, its third-movement danse macabre as haunting as ever.
Golda Schultz sang the soprano solos with quiet purity, but she barely registered next to mezzo-soprano Marianne Crebassas consoling but commanding Urlicht, focused but rich. The bodies driven away, the stage finally emptied, the symphonys stirring, stentorian choral finale was a promise of rebirth directed at a field of upturned dirt.
The site of the performance had its own symbolic charge. During its brief initial existence in the 1990s, the Stadium de Vitrolles, a huge, gritty black concrete box on a hilltop in a suburb of Aix, hosted athletic and entertainment events, as well as an attempted far-right rally concert. It has been abandoned for over two decades; the graffiti on the walls and its industrial scale give it the impression of Berlin squatting in sunny Provence. This production is a ruins resurrection, too.
The stadium shares a cavernous mutability with the Park Avenue Armory, where Pierre Audi, the Aix Festivals director, is the artistic leader. You get the sense that in spaces like this, with productions that couldnt happen anywhere else, Audi is most in his element as a programmer. The rest of the festival is taking place at more traditional theaters, and while the musical values are generally superb, it can all hardly help but feel blander, less of a special occasion than Resurrection.
At the Grand Théâtre de Provence, Andrea Breth has done her best to stage Strauss Salome without its traditional luridness. The Dance of the Seven Veils is a cool and collected promenade of body doubles, without a hint of nudity. Even the decapitated head of John the Baptist, climactically kissed by the title character, goes unseen inside a metal bucket.
The action tends sleepily glacial: The dimly lit set suggests an ice floe, which the characters cross as if trapped in a grayscale dream. The most eyebrow-raising casting at Aix this year was soprano Elsa Dreisig as Salome, a role usually taken by those who also sing Wagnerian heroines. Dreisig, just into her 30s, is better known for far lighter roles like Mozarts Pamina and Zerlina.
But, aided by Ingo Metzmachers delicate, languid, sometimes muted conducting of the Orchestre de Paris, she acquitted herself admirably Tuesday, singing with sweetness and, yes, a girlishness that you rarely hear from those who play this teenage princess.
Thus far the festival runs through July 23 and features seven full productions, as well as a crowded concert program Mozarts Idomeneo has been the best played, with Raphaël Pichon conducting his ensemble, Pygmalion, with longing sensitivity Wednesday. At the outdoor Théâtre de lArchevêché, Satoshi Miyagis production has an air of ritual; the main characters stand in place atop plinths that slide gently around the stage. The lighting on occasion suddenly shifts to show the huddled masses working endlessly to keep this royal family in motion.
Soprano Sabine Devieilhe sang with soaring grace as Ilia; mezzo-soprano Anna Bonitatibus was a somber, secure Idamante; and soprano Nicole Chevalier reveled in Elettras wide-eyed despair. But Michael Spyres, his tenor usually trumpeting, sounded uneasy in the title role, his phrasing abrupt and the top of his voice strained.
Kayo Takahashi Deschenes costumes are a blend of ancient Greece and Japanese Kabuki; Neptunes wrath is here a stylized version of the nuclear bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Like in Resurrection, real-life tragedies are ambiguously but potently evoked as they are, too, in Tobias Kratzers production of Rossinis Moïse et Pharaon.
Kratzer, who has swiftly become one of Europes most in-demand opera directors, makes the operas enslaved Hebrews into contemporary refugees, the Egyptians into corporate types in smart suits. Only Moïse occupies a timeless sphere with a hint of camp in Cecil B. DeMillian biblical robes.
Leading the orchestra of the Opéra de Lyon at the Archevêché on Thursday, Michele Mariotti kept the pulse vital even in the scores longest-arching lines and most gradually building ensembles. And Kratzer is gifted at eliciting forceful yet restrained performances, particularly in tense but unexaggerated duets. The productions video elements digital static, projections of social media accounts, the Egyptian armys unconvincing drowning merely distracted from this human element. And the rare opportunity to hear the operas full ballet music was marred by forgettable, seething choreography.
As Moïse, veteran Rossini bass Michele Pertusi was authoritative in declamation, a bit less so in long-phrased prayer. The voice of rising soprano Jeanine de Bique is fascinatingly wiry: sometimes shaded, sometimes pristine, always urgent. Mezzo-soprano Vasilisa Berzhanskaya sang with even strength as the pharaohs wife, Sinaïde.
This Moïse ends with the Hebrews scattered among the audience for the final hymn of thanks for their deliverance. Onstage, bourgeoisie lounge at the beach, blissfully ignorant that they are tanning by the same sea where refugees have cast out in rafts, to live or die.
Here, as throughout the evening, the back wall of the stage has been designed to suggest one of Aixs antique stone facades, its idyllic Baroque fountains. Its we in the audience on that beach, Kratzer is saying.
But, like Castellucci in Resurrection, Kratzer does not seem interested in angry indictments or pat accusations of complicity. His staging is, more subtly and powerfully, a sad, unsettling suggestion of our unmalicious but all-too-willing forgetfulness.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.