Santa Fe Opera is presenting its first Billy Budd this season. The company, which was founded just five years after Benjamin Britten premiered the first version of the opera in 1951, waited an inexplicable five decades to stage this haunting 20th-century masterpiece. Yet the new production by Paul Curran (seen Friday), which features superb music direction by Edo de Waart and a vibrant cast headed by Teddy Tahu Rhodes in the title role, makes it worth the wait.
The composer's two-act, 1960 revision receives a strikingly theatrical setting in Curran's staging. The director and his design team succeed in evoking both the external horrors of life in 1797 aboard the British man-of-war the Indomitable and the internal dramas of its principal characters: Vere, the ship's captain; Claggart, the sadistic master-at-arms; and Billy, the beautiful young seaman whose innocence proves his undoing.
Indomitable, with a sloping, handsomely rigged deck intermittently raised to reveal the grim, overcrowded conditions for the men below. Hopkins also contributed the costumes, which clearly delineate the class and rank of those onboard, from the captain down to the lowly — and vigorously protesting — conscripted men. Rick Fisher's lighting design adds invaluable atmosphere, especially when augmented by extratheatrical flashes of New Mexico lightning, glimpsed around the perimeter of the 2,200-seat, open-air house.
Adapted from Herman Melville's novella, with a libretto by E.M. Forster and Eric Crozier, Billy Budd exerted a powerful effect on Britten's creative imagination. The themes that occupied the composer throughout his lifetime — the corruption of innocence and the persecution of an outsider by an unfeeling society — are embodied in Billy, a good-natured orphan pressed into service. Despite a crippling stammer, the character adapts to sea life quickly, emerging as both a natural leader and a loyal supporter of Vere, to whom he swears his undying allegiance.
He's the quintessential innocent, and a likable optimist. Why, then, does Claggart despise him? The generally acknowledged (though not by Britten) reason is repressed homosexuality: Claggart is sexually attracted to Billy, and must therefore destroy him. For the most part, Curran skirts the issue; if his stage directions don't contradict this assumption, they don't overtly support it, either. Here, Claggart is merely evil, in the manner of Iago; the generalized inhumanity of 18th-century naval life must suffice for motivation. In the Act 1 flogging, with a bleeding Novice carried onstage after receiving 20 lashes for a minor offense, it seems explanation enough.
Photos by Ken Howard
The excellent set, by Robert Innes Hopkins, gives the audience a long view of the