Houston Chronicle

HGO constructs an ‘Elektra’ of epic proportion­s.

- By Eric Skelly Eric Skelly is a writer in Houston.

“Elektra,” Richard Strauss’ monumental setting of the classical Greek tragedy, is an opera only the largest companies can mount, as the production comes with a stage setting that’s almost as epic as this tale about extreme family drama.

A facade of crumbling stone columns and stairs that descend into a pit fills the stage with a texture and dimension that gives weight to the setting, while leaving room for a climactic display of blood flowing down the stairs.

Houston Grand Opera is among the companies that can accommodat­e the demands, as it opened an enthrallin­g production of “Elektra” in the Resilience Theater at the George R. Brown Convention Center last Friday night, one that emphasizes the makeshift theater’s compromise­s and yet seems oddly apt for this challengin­g season.

From the enormous orchestra — during the curtain calls, the lights came up to expose a veritable army of musicians packed behind the staging area — to the title character’s volcanic emotions, “Elektra” threatens to overflow its bounds at every turn, which carries a bit of irony, given Buffalo Bayou’s flooding crippled the Houston Grand Opera’s home theater, The Wortham Center.

From the first unveiling of John McFarlane’s set in this David McVicar production revived by Nick Sandys, the monochroma­tic gray of the set and costume design is pierced by a red glow from within the depths of the palace, like a bloody volcano threatenin­g to erupt. Those crumbling columns and adjacent rubble flank the palace entrance, their monochroma­tic gray reflected in the drab gray of the servants’ costumes and that of Elektra herself. The sparkling black farthingal­e gowns of Queen Klytaemnes­tra and her female courtiers support the production’s monochrome look, their pale, bald countenanc­es evoking gothic vampires.

And while the set design is key, any production of “Elektra” hinges on the availabili­ty of a soprano with the heavy voice and rock-solid technique capable of surmountin­g this Everest of the soprano repertoire. Christine Goerke has scaled the peak of “Elektra” and confidentl­y planted her flag at the summit. Elektra’s spiky vocal lines sounded effortless and lyrical in Goerke’s powerful, yet musically sensitive performanc­e, her hysterical outbursts balanced by soft, sensitive moments wherever she could find them in this densest of Strauss’ scores. Her innate lyricism made it all the more dramatical­ly potent when Goerke, as Elektra, declaims in frustratio­n, “Are there no gods in heaven?!” with the word “himmel” (heaven) bursting forth as a panicked scream.

Mezzo-soprano Michaela Martens, as Elektra’s elegantly debauched mother Klytaemnes­tra, employed an impressive vocal palette, ranging from imperious declamatio­n and the occasional growl in her exchanges with Elektra, to half-whispered, occasional­ly hissed vocal shadings as the desiccated queen describes the nightmares that plague her.

Soprano Tamara Wilson sounded as though she were driving her sound a little too hard early on as Chrysothem­is, but soared impressive­ly over the massive orchestra and chorus at the end; baritone Greer Grimsley’s sepulchral low notes contribute­d to an ominous

portrait of Elektra’s brother Orest; and in tenor Chad Shelton, it seemed luxurious to hear a tenor in his prime as Elektra’s degenerate stepfather Aegisth.

HGO music director Patrick Summers led the Houston Grand Opera Orchestra in a vigorous account that never failed to deliver in the score’s many “goose bump” moments.

How frustratin­g must it be, then, for this distinguis­hed cast and orchestra to perform in a temporary space that gives them no acoustical help whatsoever? Torrents of sound emanate from the stage and are completely absorbed by the house. But on the positive side of the ledger, this vivid drama is played out close to the audience in a way that’s not often possible in the Wortham. Every play of emotion — intense grief, relief, disbelief — on Elektra’s face, as she recognizes her longlost brother and avenger Orest, is clearly visible.

In the end, Orest carries out Elektra’s revenge upon their mother and stepfather, his palace killing spree bringing about the production’s final indelible image: the family’s crimson-streaked past and bloody present surging beyond the confines of the palace, blood streaming down the stairs toward Elektra’s spent, lifeless body, creating a perilously slick barrier for Chrysothem­is. One final overflow in a production and opera that defies containmen­t.

 ?? Lynn Lane ?? Christine Goerke stars as Elektra, front, and Tamara Wilson as Chrysothem­is in the Houston Grand Opera’s production of “Elektra.”
Lynn Lane Christine Goerke stars as Elektra, front, and Tamara Wilson as Chrysothem­is in the Houston Grand Opera’s production of “Elektra.”

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