Vyara Stoyanova
Wagner Festival ended with enthusiastic audience and foreign critics
Sofia's "Lohengrin" is a triumph of music and stagecraft rarely seen even on the world's biggest stages, writes German publication Online Merker about the Sofia Opera and Ballet's production. The spectacle was the pointe at the institution's Wagner Festival, a must-see event for true opera lovers, the critic points out.
"Lohengrin" by director Plamen Kartaloff premiered on 13 June and the performance on 23 June was at the finale of the festival. Three main elements are actively used on stage – the sacred tree, which changes as the stage situations are constructed, two amphitheatrical pitches for the choruses of the warring Brabant and Saxon people, and the arena for the unfolding action.
"Plamen Kartaloff's production is a profound symbiosis between music and visual art," writes Dirk Schauß, Online Merker's envoy to the country. – Every movement and detail on stage seems to stem directly from Wagner's score, making the overall impression extremely emotionally intense and authentic."
The critic also noted the performance of New Zealander Simon O'Neill in the title role, who "transcended the demands of the role" to create a "deeply human Lohengrin". Of Radostina Nikolaeva, who embodied the character of Elsa, the critic said:
"She can already be counted among an outstanding cast on an international level. It is always amazing how high a quality the singers maintain in this opera house".
"This singer deserves the greatest attention – adds the specialist. – Voices of such quality have become rare. Sofia is fortunate to offer an artistic home."
"The days of the Richard Wagner Festival were filled with beauty and exciting musical performances. The great theatre director Plamen Kartaloff has created something truly miraculous here and the wonder of the experience is boundless. Any opera lover who has had enough of the aberrations of the so-called "director's theatre" will find in Sofia an oasis of guaranteed happiness that is hard to find elsewhere. Opera magic with respect for the guidelines of the score is what distinguishes the Sofia Opera and Ballet and gives it a special place in the opera world. The beautiful city also offers a very positive atmosphere and cultural history."
For the spectacle in Sofia have arrived Wagnerians from Portugal, USA, Germany, Austria, Brazil, Belgium, France, Malaysia, Japan, Argentina, Croatia, North Macedonia, Italy, Romania, UK, Czech Republic, Scotland. In addition to Schauß, the audience included other journalists from foreign media, including Iris Steiner, editor-in-chief of the Orpheus magazine. Wagner connoisseur and music critic Klaus Billand, as well as the Vienna Opera's world-renowned bass Kammersänger Falk Struckmann.