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LA Opera's "Das Rheingold": 2 hours, 45 minutes, no intermission

Ring

Culture Monster is ever so excited that the Los Angeles Opera production of  Richard Wagner's "Das Rheingold" -- the first opera in Wagner's epic 15-hour, four-opera cycle "The Ring of the Nibelungs" -- is opening Saturday night at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion. The production kicks off a two-year "Ring"-o-rama for the opera company: All four operas, directed by Achim Freyer, will be presented singly in 2009 and 2010, and performances of the four operas in sequence will be given between May 29 and June 26, 2010.

But even the Monster could not help but be alarmed upon receiving e-mail notice from the L.A. Opera that the running time of "Das Rheingold"  is 2 hours, 45 minutes -- and that it will be performed without intermission.

And much of the action takes place in and around the Rhine River -- well, that's a lot of water imagery, given the circumstances. Do we need to spell it out? Applause isn't the only thing you'll have to hold until the end.

Wagner_2 Don't blame it on the L.A. Opera, or director Freyer; blame it on Wagner (that's the culprit at left): L.A Opera spokesman Gary Murphy tells us that  "Das Rheingold" is always performed in four scenes with no intermission because that's the way Wagner wrote it. E-mails are sent to ticket buyers warning them of the fact.

But not to worry, Murphy adds: Allowances will be made to let patrons back into the house if they need to flee for the restroom, and seats will be held at the rear for those returning individuals.

And since the Oscars are coming up, it should be noted that "Das Rheingold" is actually two minutes shorter than "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," albeit without Brad Pitt.

Because there will be a lot of Wagner in L.A. in 2009 and 2010, Murphy points out that locals may want to take advantage of a companion book called "Wagner Without Fear," by William Berger, which provides a guide through the "Ring's" world of giants, gods, water spirits and dwarfs (the Nibelungs). No word as to whether the guide addresses the challenges of potential "Ring" audiences with Nibelung-size bladders.   

-- Diane Haithman

Photos: Rehearsal of L.A. Opera's "Das Rheingold," Credit Lawrence K. Ho/Los Angeles Times. Richard Wagner, 1877. File photo/Los Angeles Times 

 

   

 
Comments () | Archives (3)

Concert goers beware! I remember hearing Daniel Barenboim tell me a very funny tragic story about conducting Rheingold @ Beyreuth. He got into the pit, made it to the podium, gave a downbeat, and immediately realized he had forgotten to go to the bathroom. The first music you hear is....... water music!!

He claimed it was his fastest performance.

Mein Gott, how tiresome and cliche it is to make bladder jokes about Rheingold. Expect more from you, Monster.

Wagner without fear? The book every attendee needs is "Freyer without Fear". Let's face it, the story told through the cycle isn't all that hard to understand, it's a fairytale (and as with most fairytales, you can read as much into it or as deeply as you want). Freyer's interpretation on the other hand... good luck in comprehending the incomprehensible.



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