THEATRE PREVIEW
TOBIAS PICKER on "Thérèse
Raquin" at the SD Opera
Published in KPBS On Air
Magazine March 2003
They're cousins in an arranged marriage. They live with his
domineering mother, who treats her daughter-in-law like a servant. The mama's
boy husband is weak and sickly. The suffocated, unsatisfied wife falls in love
with her husband's best friend, a handsome, lusty artist. Ah, yes, it's Paris,
1864. And, one day, during a boat ride on the river, the lovers throw the
husband overboard. After a time, they marry, but their passion has been tainted
by guilt, remorse and mutual blame. The ghost of the dead man terrorizes their
wedding night. They can no longer tolerate each other, and their story ends in
tragic death.
Sounds
like the stuff of opera, doesn't it? That's just what Tobias Picker thought.
The New York-based composer felt compelled to make an opera of "Thérèse Raquin."
"The book exudes opera from every page," he said of Émile
Zola's first novel (1867), the ground-breaking, naturalistic "Thérèse
Raquin." "It has all the elements of tragic opera: high emotional
intensity, theatricality, and a compelling storyline, rife with
symbolism."
All of the actions can be seen as universal and metaphorical,"
says Picker. "Most people who want out of a marriage don't murder their
spouse. This story shows what happens if you act on your impulses. If you read
'murder' as rejection, abandonment or the death of love, the story becomes fascinating
on many deeper levels."
"Thérèse Raquin" is a cautionary tale, a melodrama and a
ghost story.
"We're all haunted by ghosts," Picker admits. "We
all have love stories and melodrama in our lives. These are universal
situations and feelings. People hurt each other all the time. This is not just
about some 19th century French people. It's about life and ordinary
people and poverty of many different kinds. Any good operatic narrative is
something that everyone can identify with."
The opera is a co-production of the Dallas Opera, where it
premiered in 2001, L'Opéra de Montréal (French language premiere) and the San
Diego Opera, hosting the West coast English premiere. The piece has been
revised twice since Dallas.
"In the book, there's a brighter side to the relationship
between Thérèse and her husband Camille," says Picker. "That's gone.
He seemed too nice before; people couldn't understand why Thérèse wouldn't want
to be married to him." Other changes involved characterization, staging,
costumes and text (the libretto is by Gene Scheer), so Picker is calling this
"the new, improved 'Thérèse Raquin.'" Herbert Kellner, a veteran of
Lyric Opera of Chicago, will stage the production originally created by
innovative director Francesca Zambello.
Making her San Diego Opera debut in the title role is American
mezzo-soprano Kirstin Chávez. Thérèse's lover, Laurent, will be sung by
Christopher Maltman, whom the London Guardian called "Britain's hottest
young baritone." American tenor Gordon Gietz reprises the role of Camille
he originated in Dallas, and legendary British soprano Dame Josephine Barstow
is Madame Raquin.
In all operas, the music amplifies the emotions. "From the
very moment it begins," says the composer, "there's an undertone of
something wrong; you know this is a dysfunctional family. In the end, it's an
opera about a group of dysfunctional people."
The music is lyrical in the first act, as Picker draws us into the
illicit affair. Then, as the love turns to hatred, the second act takes on a
more dissonant tone, with angular vocal lines.
Ian Campbell, San Diego Opera's General Director, is passionate
about bringing new operas to town, but he knows that purists are often
reluctant to embrace new work. "Don't say 'It isn't Puccini or
Wagner,'" he advises. "Look at what it is -- which is
wonderful."
The composer certainly has an impressive pedigree. Picker was a
musical prodigy who performed at the Met at age 9. By 11, he attended Juilliard
(preparatory division), where he later pursued graduate study before moving on
to Princeton to work with experimental composer Milton Babbitt. He's won
numerous awards and fellowships and has created more than 70 musical works,
from string quartets to symphonies. Matthew Gurevitsch of the Wall Street
Journal called Picker "our finest composer for the lyric stage."
This is his third opera. The first, "Emmeline," based on
the best-seller by Judith Rossner, was hailed by The New York Times as one of
the ten most significant musical events of 1998. It was telecast on PBS' Great
Performances. Picker's second opera was "Fantastic Mr. Fox," based on
the children's tale by Roald Dahl. He's currently working on an adaptation of
Theodore Dreiser's "An American Tragedy," scheduled to open at the
Metropolitan Opera in 2005.
Meanwhile, everyone at San Diego Opera is buzzing about
"Thérèse Raquin." As Nicolas Reveles, the Director of Education and
Outreach puts it, "It's explosive material, poetic and haunting, a work
filled with lyricism, passion and excitement -- three things we demand of great
opera. It's an opera you'll never forget."
"Thérèse Raquin" plays March 22, 25, 28 30 at the Civic
Theatre; 619-232-7636).
©2003 Patté Productions Inc.