six degrees of insanity
by Douglas Messerli
John Adams (composer), Alice Goodman (libretto), Peter
Sellars (director), Nixon in China /
2011 [Metropolitan Opera HD-live production]
Although most of the critics who I
read (Mark Swed in the Los Angeles Times,
Anthony Tommasini in The New York Times,
and Anne Midgette of The Washington Post)
agreed that the Met's new production of Nixon
in China was excellent and long overdue, there was a sense between the
three that the plot of the work was static and that one character, in
particular, Henry Kissinger (sung by Richard Paul Fink) was a figure of parody
whereas the others were treated more seriously. In a piece by Max Frankel,
published in The New York Times a
couple of days before the live HD airing, the former editor of the Times—who was with Nixon in China and
won a Pulitzer Prize for covering the trip—squarely asked the question which
the other reviewers only intimated:
...Why bother, as in Nixon, to lure us to a fictional
enterprise with
contemporary characters and
scenes from an active memory bank?
Why use actualities, or the
manufactured actualities of our television
screens and newspapers, to
fuel the drama?
The answer, he feels, is
"obvious but also treacherous," that the use of actual characters
helps to "overcome the musty odor that inhabits many opera houses,"
drawing new audiences into the theater. But, Frankel continues, it brings other
dangers with it:
The danger is that despite
the verisimilitudes of text, setting and
costume, a viewer's grasp of
events may not match the fabric
being woven onstage. What
the creators intend to be profundity
may strike the knowing as
parody.
Most of the reviewers agreed that the composer, writer, and director did
give their figures a range of emotions, both serious and comic, and between
acts, Winston Lord (of National Security) assured us that much of the talk
between Nixon and Chairman Mao in the First Act was close to what actually was
said in their meeting; but all also felt that the opera did move to a kind of
parody in the Second Art performance of The
Red Detachment of Women, in which Fink, the singer-actor who played
Kissinger, also plays a lecherous, Simon Legree-like landowner who has stolen
away a young maiden. Fink sings:
She was so hot
I
was hard-put
To
be polite.
When the first cut
—Come on you slut!—
Scored her brown skin
I
started in,
Man upon hen!
Some characterized this scene as
surreal and the last act as psychological, as if they were somehow different in
tone from the more historicized events in the First Act.
If nothing else, there was a sense that Nixon in China, without a narrative arc, was a bit of a rocky ride.
Certainly, at times, while always enjoying the shimmering glory of the music, I
too felt that way while watching it. Yet now that I've pondered it for a while,
I believe I was mistaken, that, in fact, the opera is highly structured and
fairly coherent in its tone and presentation of characters.
First of all, John Adams and Peter Sellars are never going to present
something that works as a Verdi opera might. Although all may work with a
complex weaving of historical events, Verdi's sense of drama is highly embedded
in narrative, while Adams and team, postmodern in their approach, eschew what
we might call "story."
Nixon in China has
"events," but there are presented in a series of tableaux, not unlike
some medieval musical productions. Each character gets the chance to reveal his
or her selves. But what Alice Goodman, Adams and Sellars are interested in is
not so much the outer faces they present to the world, but what these figures
are thinking and imagining within. And I think they would have to admit that
every figure on their stage is, in one way or another, a bit unhinged; these
are, after all—with the exception perhaps of Pat Nixon—people desperate for
power. And all are on the edge of insanity.
Even before we meet any of the major characters, the people of China
speak in a strange manner that we comprehend is not quite rational thought, as
they sing from the text of "The Three Main Rules of Discipline and Eight
Points of Attention":
Prompt delivery
directly to authorities of all items
confiscated
from landlords.
Do not damage
crops.
Do not take a
single needle or piece of thread from the masses.
Pay for everything
you damage.
etc.
As they chant, "The people are
the heroes now," even if these "heroes" are highly manipulated
and controlled.
Out of the sky drops the Nixons' Spirit of 76, and no sooner does the
President descend the airstair, shaking the hand of Premier Chou En-lai, than
he begins inwardly calculating the great results of this journey as the filming
catches him just in time for the evening news broadcasts in the USA, he
hilariously singing out his fascination with his own acts: "News! News!
News!
News
has a kind of mystery;
When
I shook hands with Chou En-lai
On
this bare field outside Peking
Just
now, the whole world was listening
James Maddalena, who has now sung
this role in hundreds of performances, is an amazing actor, who brings off
those jowl-shaking absurdities quite brilliantly.
What that meeting accomplished, an issue clearly of importance in this
opera, is questionable. But surely we can feel, and, in Adams' delicious
scoring, we can hear the growing
friendliness of all figures as they swill down Mai-tai after Mai-tai with toast
upon toast. Again, non-drinker Kissinger misses out on all the glorious
insanity of the evening.
In Act II we get a chance to see Pat Nixon at the edge. She begins the
morning, in fact, downing a couple of needed pills. Like Premier Chou she is in
sufferance, and, although excited by the whole trip, she is also exhausted and,
we feel, not at all comfortable. The most American of this opera's figures, she
flaunts a bright red coat. Flawlessly played by Janis Kelly, Pat comes off as
somewhat frail and slightly terrified being as she is rushed through a glass
factory (where the workers award her a green elephant) and classrooms in which
the students have clearly been told what to say and how to behave, before
stopping by the Gate of Longevity and Goodwill, where she sings her touching
and slightly pathetic paean to the world she loves:
This
is prophetic! I foresee
A
time will come when luxury
Dissolves
into the atmosphere
Like
a perfume, and everywhere
The
simple virtues root and branch
And
leaf and flower. And on that bench
There
we’ll relax and taste the fruit
Of
all our actions. Why regret
Life
which is so much like a dream?
Yet the homespun images she spins
out of her sense of momentary joy—lit-up farm porches, families sitting around
the dinner table, church steeples, etc.—are right out of Norman Rockwell
paintings and is just as absurd of a vision as are her husband's darker
mumblings.
Mark Morris, using some aspects of the original choreography, nicely
stages his orderly squadrons of young military dancers against the chaos of
events. This is perhaps the most difficult part of the opera, and I am still
not sure whether or not it truly succeeds, but it is crucial to our witnessing
the truly mad person behind Chiang Ch'ing (Kathleen Kim)—who in real life may
have been responsible for hundreds of deaths and had, herself, erratic nerves
and severe hypochondriasis—as she proclaims in the noted aria, "I am the
wife of Mao Tse-tung," angrily declaring that all be determined by
"the book." After Mao's death, we should recall, Chiang Ch'ing
committed suicide.
After witnessing these six individuals'—Richard Nixon, Mao Tse-tung,
Chou En-lai, Pat Nixon, Henry Kissinger, and Chiang Ch'ing—mental dramas, we
can only breathlessly watch as they slip into sleep. Kissinger shacks up with
one of Mao's translators before disappearing into the bathroom. The Nixons
share their disappointments, the President for being misinterpreted by the
newspapers, Pat silently suffering, with tearful eyes, from her husband's
inattention and having herself to attend yet again to what may be his ritual
recounting of an attack he endured in World War II. Mao also finds relief in
the hands of one of his translators before threatening his wife for having made
political mistakes, until he falls with her into a lustful embrace upon their bed.
Chou En-lai, clearly already in pain from the bladder cancer which would kill
him 4 years later, awakens early to return to his never-ending work, drawing a
close to all the madness with the most profound question of the opera:
"Was there any point to any of it?" The "it" may refer,
obviously, to the Nixons' visit, but it also suggests another possibility of
meaning: "Was there any point to all their madness, to their desperate
struggles to hold onto any power they might have over others?" All ended
their lives in disgrace and shame, except for Pat; but even she almost
disappeared from the public eye after the death of her husband, suffering a
serious stroke the same year that Chou En-lai died.
In some respects, I now wonder, despite its occasional comic elements
and always lush sonority of sound, if this isn't one of the darkest of operas.
But then, aren't the young and the old—represented by the US and China—usually
at the heart of the tragic, Romeo and Lear?
Los Angeles, February 19, 2011
Reprinted from American Cultural Treasures (March 2011).
*Coincidentally, in my 1990
"opera for spoken voices," The
Walls Come True (Los Angeles: Sun & Moon Press, 1995), I included Dr.
Kissinger in my "Twelve Tyrants Between Acts: Mundane Moments and Insane
Histories," based on the paranoia and ridiculous accusations he expressed
in his Years of Upheaval (Boston:
Little Brown, 1982) when, in 1973, he was in Hanoi attempting to negotiate the
Paris Accords.




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