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Composer John Adams and director Peter Sellars collaborated with
notable success on two earlier major "history operas": Nixon
in China and The
Death of Klinghoffer. Both operas were set to librettos by Alice Goodman,
librettos which successfully fleshed out the major roles into rich characterizations,
creating sympathetic people with whom an audience could emotionally identify.
Doctor Atomic, the much anticipated new work commissioned by
San Francisco Opera, was also to have had a libretto by Goodman, but she withdrew, and
Sellars took over as writer, abandoning any attempt at original text and instead
assembling a pastiche of historical and literary quotations to dramatize the creation of
the first atomic bomb. Therein lies the rub.
Placed in wartime Los Alamos in 1945, where a huge team of scientists,
technicians and support personnel have worked under intense pressure from Washington to
develop the bomb, the dramatic arc of the opera, such as it is, is in the tension in the
days and moments leading up to the test detonation. The program was helmed by J. Robert
Oppenheimer (Gerald Finley in a powerfully delivered performance), who is determinedly
hawkish, while physicists Edward Teller (Richard Paul Fink) and Robert Wilson (Thomas
Glenn) have profound reservations about the social and moral implications of using the
bomb. The unknown possible effects of the detonation add to the tension--a chorus sings of
potential destruction "beyond the wildest nightmares of the imagination."
An intimate scene between Oppenheimer and his wife, Kitty (Kristine
Jepson), uses love poems of Baudelaire for Oppenheimer and extended, dense poetic text for
Kitty, the latter drawn from the poetry of Muriel Rukeyser and expressing a key
counter-theme to the impending destructive power: "Love must imagine the world."
But the quoted texts distance the characters rather than humanize them; Kitty sings most
of her aria standing stage-front, facing the audience, not addressing her husband behind
her in bed.
In a supporting role, General Leslie Groves (Eric Owens), Army
commander of the project is as determined as Oppenheimer to see the test through, even to
the point of classical hubris--when inclement weather threatens the delay of the test,
Groves says, "I'll make my own weather predictions." Sellars rather weakly tries
to inject some humanity into Groves with details of his dieting. Pasqualita (Beth
Clayton), the Oppenheimer's Native American maid, adds an element of spiritualism and
draws the connection between the Indian people who originally populated the desert lands
of New Mexico about to be desolated.
It all leads up to the inevitable detonation of the bomb, as the cast
and chorus prostrate themselves on the raked stage, literally to take shelter from the
blast, figuratively paying obeisance to the unknown effects--scientific, political and
moral--that they have cooperated in now unleashing. Indeed, a new era begins.
Adams' score, condcuted with conviction and masterful control by Donald
Runnicles, provides muscular musical power that propels the work, particularly in the
often-Wagnerian grandness of the orchestrations which evoke both the gravity of the themes
and the crescendo of tension leading to the detonation. The choruses, too, pack
substantial impact. The music for the soloists, however, written sympathetically for the
literary content and the patterns of speech, feels more like art song than like opera.
When opera is at its most effective, the major characters have been drawn to a depth with
which the audience can identify; the characters' life crises, expressed in the music, find
a profound emotional connection with the listener. Because the Doctor Atomic characters
are never fully realized, such does not happen in Doctor Atomic, which, while
effective in many ways, remains a cerebral experience, leaving the listener far less moved
than might be expected from the seminal subject matter. Even Oppenheimer's stunning first
act closer, set to a John Donne poem and sung with intense fervency by Finley, remains
more a literary than an emotional experience.
Sellars staging is exemplary. With his long term-team of Adrianne Lobel
(set designer) and James F. Ingalls (lighting), they have devised a movable forest of
vertical and diagonal scaffoldings, horizontal pipe elements. and a simple backdrop which
silhouettes the skyline of the Alamagordo test site. The backdrop rises and falls, with
brilliantly colored lighting emphasizing the action taking place on stage. Over a
substantial part of the proceedings the bomb itself hangs suspended center stage, much of
the time directly over the crib of the Oppenheimer baby. The design sense is impeccable,
with the shifting elements providing needed visual stimulation, elegant in composition, in
what is otherwise a rather static staging. The relatively minor dance elements,
choreographed by Lucinda Childs, also add movement, but only in a few moments match the
fervency of the drama.
San Francisco, October 7, 2005 - Arthur Lazere