love vs. faith
by Douglas Messerli
Eugène Cormon and Michael Carré (libretto), Georges Bizet (composer), Penny Woolcock (stage director), Matthew Diamond (director) Les Pêcheurs de Perles (The Pearl Fishers) / 2016 [The Metropolitan Opera HD-live broadcast]
Changing the location
from the more specific island of Sri Lanka (Ceylon), the Metropolitan
Yes,
the well-known tenor-baritone duet, “Amitié sainte,” a swearing of the two male
lead’s eternal friendship that reads to anyone with an ounce of imagination as
a male-male matrimony, is the most unforgettable aria of this opera and many
another; but almost as memorable is Nadir’s (Matthew Polenzani) solo recounting
of the beauty of Leïla, “Je crois entendre encore.” And the choral pieces of
both acts I and II beautifully bind the personal emotions of the village leader
Zurga (Mariusz Kwiecien), Nadir and Leïla, with the fears, strengths, and
desires of the community as a whole.
In
part, this tale, like so many operas, represents a struggle to express the self
within the confines of communal rules and decorum. Nadir’s and Leïla’s love not
only betrays the love of Nadir and Zurga, but the pledge Leïla has made to the
community and their god.
The
character of Zurga, in particular, is torn between these issues. It is he,
despite the outcry of the community, who must decide whether the discovered
sinners must live or die, and he openly wavers again and again, twice by the end
of Act I.
Even
after he has sentenced them to death, Act II finds him suffering for his
decision; and, upon meeting with Leïla, who argues for him to spare Nadir, even
if he kills her, he once again temporarily rescinds his decision, desperately
wanting to believe that the whole affair was a thing of accident instead of a
preconceived betrayal of Nadir’s and his love.
Once again, it appears, community values will outweigh personal
passions; but having now realized that he has, symbolically speaking, had his
own night with Leïla when, as a child, she offered him haven in her family home,
Zurga shifts position one more time, in this case ardently turning against his
community and religion by setting the fragile wooden homes afire, and sending
the city’s inhabitants back to their burning homes in order to save their
endangered children. While the lovers escape, his fate seems sealed, as he,
himself, in this production, appears to be surrounded by flames. And no matter
what outcome we might imagine for events, his passion for both Nadir and Leïla
has set his own life afire at the expense of communal obligations and faith.
So
excellent is this new production of the early Bizet opera, we can be assured
that at least for several years, The Pearl Fishers will again
be available, at least in New York.
Los Angeles, January 17,
2016
Reprinted from USTheater, Opera, and Performance (January 2016).




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