August 20, 2008

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RELATED ARTICLES:

18 Jul 2006 -- Back to the Source: Benjamin Bagby Performs the Original Beowulf at Lincoln Center

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08 Jun 2006 -- Grendel Opens After Delay Forced by Technical Problem

25 May 2006 -- L.A. Opera Postpones Grendel Premiere After Technical Glitch

02 May 2006 -- Photo Journal: Behind the Scenes at L.A Opera's Grendel

Yes, the Wall Stayed Up, But How Was the Opera?
What the East Coast Critics Say About Grendel

By Vivien Schweitzer
16 Jul 2006

Eric Owens as the title character in Elliot Goldenthal's Grendel.
photo by Robert Millard

It seems like no wall this side of Berlin has ever attracted so much attention as George Tsypin's 18-ton, 48-foot-tall, million-dollar behemoth. The rotating edifice is the set for the debut run of Elliot Goldenthal's opera Grendel, conceived with and directed by his wife, Julie Taymor. Following all-too-widely reported technical hitches and consequent delays in presenting the work's world premiere in Los Angeles, the mega-wall made it to New York in one piece for its appearance at the Lincoln Center Festival.

Finally, some column inches could focus on the music and the production. Grendel has a libretto by Taymor and J. D. McClatchy based on John Gardner's 1971 novel of the same title, which retells the 8th-century epic Beowulf from the eponymous monster's perspective.

Critical opinion differed rather widely. The New York Sun described the production as, like its subject, a "misshapen and misbegotten waif," while The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote, "in comparison to so many well-made, well mannered operas that have crossed the stage of late, Grendel is a fearlessly R-rated pageant with so much to say and so many imaginative ways of saying it that you're willing to wait until the two-act piece finds it footing somewhere near the end of Act I."

There were cheers from audience and critics alike for bass-baritone Eric Owens, who, according to all reports, was excellent in the challenging and exhausting title role. The New York Times reported that the "stentorian bass got through it, summoning power when called for and inhabiting the part with abandon, even while wearing a body-encasing monster outfit." The paper added that the role of the Dragon, sung by mezzo-soprano Denyce Grave, "cruelly keeps her singing in a chesty, almost baritonal range, before pushing her to soprano highs."

The Newark Star Ledger said "the work has a compelling middle, but its long setup and anti-climatic finish are muddled and bland in a way that John Gardner's 1971 novel never is." The paper thought that musically, the "opera's tour-de-force, musically and theatrically, is the scene in which the omniscient Dragon grudgingly advises Grenel on the wherefores of the world."

Goldenthal's score won mixed reviews elsewhere. Newsday said the music "has its patches of generic modernist lurching, offset by considerable beauties"; the Inquirer thought that while Act I was unconvincing, "Act II stakes a claim for Goldenthal as a major composer with a powerful gift for dramatic specificity."

The Washington Post thought the wall was worth the effort, writing "visually, the results are magnificent — one stunning scene after another, and nothing out of place."
From Elliot Goldenthal's Grendel: Denyce Graves (top) as the Dragon; Eric Owens, dancers — and that wall.
photo by Robert Millard



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