The Scotsman

Stephen Barlow on staging Marx in London! for Scottish Opera

- Kenwalton @kenwalton4

What’s so funny about Karl Marx? It’s a question I put to Australian-born opera director Stephen Barlow, whose UK premiere of Jonathan Dove’s comic opera, Marx in London!, kicks off Scottish Opera’s 2024 calendar next month.

“Yes, it has slapstick, it’s quite bawdy at times, a kind of juvenile humour,” Barlow acknowledg­es. “But like any comedy – a Mozart opera, a Chekhov play, an episode of Frasier – poignant themes emerge, light and shade, major key and minor key. Comedy is based on tragedy. The classic example is someone slipping on a banana skin. You laugh at their misfortune.”

Such is the promise of a major opera – premiered originally by Scottish Opera’s production partner, Theater Bonn, in 2018 – that charts a madcap day-in-the-life of the celebrated co-inventor of communism.

Dove and his librettist Charles Hart (of Phantom of the Opera fame) plunge us into the chaos of the family home in 1871 during Marx’s final years in London, a complexity of sexual intrigue (Marx lusting after housekeepe­r Helene under wife Jenny’s nose), financial ineptitude, and the great thinker trying to get Das Kapital written with encouragem­ent and monetary support from close friend Friedrich Engels.

“What Jonathan and Charles try to do is dislodge the ‘isms’ and ‘ists’ from Marx’s name and just look at the guy,” Barlow explains. “Depending on where you are in the political spectrum, he’s either the bogey man of history or a kind of God. This opera sets that aside and just looks at someone full of everyday contradict­ions, a man who wanted to reorganise the world financiall­y and economical­ly, politicall­y and philosophi­cally, yet couldn’t even run his own house. He was inept in so many ways, a complete misfit.”

Barlow didn’t see Jürgen Weber’s original German staging. In any case, the ensuing hiatus inflicted by Covid had since prompted Scottish Opera to ask Barlow to create an

entirely fresh production rather than revive the original. “I saw a couple of photos to get an idea of what they’d done so we didn’t replicate, but it was immediatel­y clear I had a very different view of the piece.”

Barlow knows what works with Dove, having staged more of the English composer’s work than any other director. Scottish Opera regulars will recall their joint success staging Flight in 2018, based on the story of an Iranian refugee who lived for 18 years in Charles de Gaulle Airport, which also inspired Steven Spielberg’s film The Terminal.

Last year, Barlow directed Itch, Dove’s operatic adaptation of radio presenter Simon Mayo’s eponymous novels for Holland Park Opera. Scottish Opera’s designer Yannis Thavoris worked with Dove and Barlow on the Jane Austen-based chamber opera Mansfield Park in Manchester, while music director David Parry conducted the Bonn premiere of Marx in London!

“Jonathan writes very intelligen­tly for the art form,” says Barlow. “His work is deceptivel­y complex, very detailed, yet so like Puccini in the way he understand­s the theatre.”

Like so many of Dove’s scores, recognisab­le influences from Philip Glass to Britten and Bernstein compete for space within a framework of cohesive originalit­y. What’s more, Marx in London! is substantia­l, scored for a large orchestra and chorus and a busy cast led by Roland Wood in the title role. “It feels like the biggest thing he’s written, like Verdi proportion­s, really muscular,” Barlow insists. “A real celebratio­n and belief for the art form at a time when it’s under threat. There has to be new work, we have to be ambitious, and we mustn’t be apologetic about it.”

Will audiences learn much about Marx? “It’s like a court case. We’re presented with the facts and left to make up our own minds. Some will leave thinking he’s a great guy, others that he was a bit of a s***. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry.” That’s theatre.

“Marx in London! is a real celebratio­n and belief for the art form at a time when it’s under threat”

Jonathan Dove’s Marx in London! is at the Theatre Royal, Glasgow, 13, 15 & 17 February, and at the Festival Theatre, Edinburgh, 22 & 24 February, see www.scottishop­era. org.uk

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 ?? ?? Roland Wood as Karl Marx in rehearsals for Marx in London!
Roland Wood as Karl Marx in rehearsals for Marx in London!
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