thu 07/11/2024

Paul Bunyan, Welsh National Youth Opera, Cardiff | reviews, news & interviews

Paul Bunyan, Welsh National Youth Opera, Cardiff

Paul Bunyan, Welsh National Youth Opera, Cardiff

Britten and Auden's only operatic collaboration comes up fresh in Welsh youth production

Lukasz Karauda as Hel Helson in WNYO's Paul BunyanCatherine Ashmore

Reading through WH Auden’s libretto for Britten’s first stage work – the so-called operetta Paul Bunyan – it’s sometimes hard to decide whether the intention was to participate in the great American dream or to make fun of it. In 1941 both artists were living in the United States and writing for Americans, who famously didn’t take to the work’s blend of folksy condescension and sententious eloquence. The combination is still faintly queasy.

Towards the end, a Disneyesque dog and two cats pray for deliverance “from a homespun humour manufactured in the city”, and the mind inevitably strays back over the previous two hours’ entertainment.

Entertaining the piece nevertheless is, if patchily, with longueurs, and music that veers between the brilliantly witty and individual, with echoes and pre-echoes of more familiar Britten, and a kind of routine pastiche, part baroque, part ballad, part hillbilly. We are in forest America at the start of time, and Paul Bunyan, the giant embodiment of the pioneering spirit, is gathering together his team of primal lumberjacks, including a quartet of blond, straw-haired Swedes, a pair of lousy fat cooks, and a chorus of assorted frontiersmen and women. Camp life is punctuated by comic vignettes, a fight or two, an argument over the bad food, a bereavement, and a love affair between the good cook Slim and Bunyan’s daughter Tiny, all done as set pieces in vaudeville style, and bound together by Auden’s dazzling brand of sophisticated, tongue-in-cheek doggerel (“Here lies Hel Helson from Scandinavia/Rather regretting his rash behaviour”).

Is this telling us the piece is dated, or merely of its time?

Gradually the America we know and love emerges, the America of John Wayne and the man who shot Liberty Valance, of Abraham Lincoln and Ronald Reagan: not quite “a man’s gotta do what a man’s gotta do”, but very nearly that, in Bunyan’s closing “America is what you do… what you choose to make it.” In this WNO Youth Opera staging by Martin Constantine and designer Cai Dyfan, there’s something vaguely off-putting about the incessant back-projection of Stephen Fry’s teeth in close-up as he delivers Bunyan’s spoken lines, pre-recorded, beautifully, but in a style not far off that of a Cinerama-Holiday voiceover. Whether or not Dyfan’s other back-projections – of jagged Rocky Mountains – are making some point about the archetypal landscape of Bunyan’s vast dentures is not wholly clear; but if so, it’s an idea that matches the homespun humour of the rest of the work.

Too much Fry then (in his actual absence), but otherwise a sparkling production, brilliantly stage-managed, and delivered with obvious enjoyment and immense vitality by these young singers in the wide open spaces of the Wales Millennium Centre. Constantine resists imposing any heavy concept – whether lofty or parodistic – on the simple tale. Not too intrusive is the boy American, vintage 1941, who watches the show in bed on a proscenium-wide TV set with unsteady vertical hold while being occasionally petted by the cast. Is this telling us the piece is dated, or merely of its time, when the USA was still almost the one safe, civilised place on the planet? At the very end, “where the dream becomes the fact”, as Bunyan puts it, a few men with guns roam the stage – an ironic image that needs no emphasis, and isn’t emphasised.

It seems invidious to single out individuals from a big and almost uniformly excellent cast, but two or three stand out, if only because they get the best music. Vanessa Bowers (pictured right with Ross Scanlon) delivers Tiny’s touching lament for her dead mother exquisitely, Elgan Llyr Thomas is highly convincing as Jonny Inkslinger, the camp intellectual, and Joseph Gorvett is irresistible in the bike-on role of the Western Union Boy with his life-changing telegrams, delivered in a kind of fractured Al Bowlly style. The chorus singing is exemplary throughout, and Alice Farnham conducts, stylishly, with fine playing from an unnamed orchestra.

There’s something vaguely off-putting about the incessant back-projection of Stephen Fry’s teeth in close-up

rating

Editor Rating: 
4
Average: 4 (1 vote)

Share this article

Comments

I saw the Saturday afternoon matinee performance of Paul Bunyon and I thought it thoroughly enjoyable. All credit to WNO Youth Opera - a good production with high production values, excellent singing from the principals, and an excellent chorus provided by Only Boys Aloud - the ensemble pieces were clearly well rehearsed and well sung. Moreover, the participation of OBA ensured that many in the audience attended who would not otherwise come to see an opera at the Millennium Centre. In many respects, the production was a community effort. Well done, WNO for extending your outreach programme even further, not only to engage with young people through OBA but also local colleges to work on elements of the production. I'd love to see more opera companies (regional and national) take similar community engagement initiatives. But why was the orchestra unnamed? They did a good job too!

Add comment

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com

Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.

To take a subscription now simply click here.

And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?

newsletter

Get a weekly digest of our critical highlights in your inbox each Thursday!

Simply enter your email address in the box below

View previous newsletters