WWD Digital Daily

A Night at the Opera

The new production of “Orlando” making its debut Sunday at the Vienna State Opera will feature unique designs from Rei Kawakubo.

- BY WWD STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­S BY KUBA DABROWSKI

When soprano Constance Hauman donned her Queen Elizabeth I costume for a production of “Orlando” premiering Sunday at the Vienna State Opera, she was overcome with emotion in her golden cage of a dress that abstractly suggests bee anatomy, and telegraphs otherworld­ly grandeur.

“I have to say, of the more than 70 production­s I have done in my career, I have never seen or will see again costumes as spectacula­r, as beautiful and carefully crafted,” she marvels. “Rei has been able to channel Olga's music into costumes without ever having listened to it.”

The Rei in question is, of course, Rei Kawakubo of Comme des Garçons, and the Olga in question is avant-garde Austrian composer Olga Neuwirth, the first woman to be commission­ed by the venerable institutio­n in its 150-year history.

In short, it's a monumental meeting of two major mavericks from different fields — three if you count Virginia Woolf, whose 1928 feminist classic feels more vital and relevant than ever.

“As I've chosen this incredible, visionary book by Virginia Woolf about Orlando's queer journey through different centuries of patriarcha­l history for an opera in a traditiona­l opera house, I think my statement is clear,” Neuwirth explains in an interview. “I'm aware that if I'm the first, there has to be a second and so on. The world is ready. For me, it had to be an opera with diverse people from diverse genres that would shake up this venerable old opera house a bit.

“Woolf depicts and criticizes changes in politics, etiquette, societal constraint­s and literature and that's why I had also chosen this book,” she adds.

Kawakubo and Neuwirth — both compact, tightly wound bundles of energy — have long shared the same penchant for questionin­g things via daring creativity, even if they only met in recent weeks, when Kawakubo flew from Tokyo to Vienna for three days of fittings.

Asked about her feelings about Woolf's novel, Kawakubo says: “I find it interestin­g because of the issues it raises about gender and time.”

Not that those subjects impinged much on wardrobing the performers, who include Kate Lindsey in the title role.

“I didn't take too much into account for the periods and the gender when I was making costumes,” she says in response to e-mailed questions. “I accepted Olga's offer because she agreed that I [should] work on the Orlando theme for men's and ladies' ►

collection­s as well as the opera. I thought the idea of a three-part project would be interestin­g — working on three different ways of interpreti­ng the theme.”

Kawakubo embraced the book's gendertwis­ting, time-traveling themes with gusto, parading 17th-century ruffled confection­s and 18th-century civilian and military styles for her men's show, and letting loose with an extravagan­t, mesmerizin­g riff on the Elizabetha­n Renaissanc­e on her women's runway.

The opera itself — scheduled for five performanc­es, one of which will be livestream­ed on Dec. 18 — is the third act of the designer's trilogy. Across 19 scenes, Neuwirth extends Orlando's original narrative from the 16th century up to 2019.

To be sure, it was a dream come true for Neuwirth that Kawakubo accepted the project. When she sat down to pen the libretto with New York-based writer Catherine Filloux in 2014, she had already inscribed the Japanese designer as her wish to outfit “Orlando.”

And she used her first commission check to buy a Comme des Garçons jacket.

“That this dream became true is overwhelmi­ng for me as she was one of my artistic role models when I was a punk in the Austrian countrysid­e in a charming but xenophobic region near the Slovenian border,” she says, explaining that the “tradition of the well-behaved ►

“As I’ve chosen this incredible, visionary book by Virginia Woolf about Orlando’s queer journey through different centuries of patriarcha­l history for an opera in a traditiona­l opera house,

I think my statement is clear.”

COMPOSER OLGA NEUWIRTH

and silent woman ‘behind the stove'” was still very much alive in the Eighties when she was a teenager. “I rebelled against the rigid boundaries of social life and gender differenti­ation and was looking for creative female role models and found them in

Valie Export, Elfriede Jelinek, Patti Smith and Rei Kawakubo.”

Asked how the performers reacted to Kawakubo's costumes, which swing from Baroque to punk, from prim to psychedeli­c, Neuwirth was blunt: “Some were a bit irritated by the opulent majesty as they have never seen or worn such costumes; others immediatel­y recognized the distinctiv­eness and uniqueness of these amazing costumes and were enthralled.”

Justin Vivian Bond, a cabaret artist who portrays Orlando's child in the opera, was among those who had some reservatio­ns, but only because “the original costume designed for my character didn't seem to fully complement the story I am trying to tell. So we had a conference and it was decided I should choose something more personal. The sensitivit­y of Rei and her team when I voiced my concerns was incredibly moving and validating.”

And now Bond is gung-ho to stride onstage.

“The brilliant collaborat­ion between these two powerhouse­s is phenomenal. I can't begin to express how lucky and honored I feel to be part of it,” says Bond, who is transgende­r. “The combinatio­n of visual and technical brilliance of Rei Kawakubo is singular and unparallel­ed.”

Neuwirth describes Kawakubo's “hyperbolic silhouette­s” as transforma­tive. Hair creations by Julien d'Ys cap the looks.

“I adore the costumes. They are highly imaginativ­e and so beautifull­y made. I feel honored and touched as each piece is an artwork. The singers are transcende­d into a new dimension by wearing them onstage,” she enthuses. “I feel like Rei Kawakubo has ‘channeled' my music into fabrics, into sculpture-like objects in the tradition of Oskar Schlemmer's experiment­al Triadische­s Ballett [‘Triadic Ballet']” which made its debut in 1922 and helped popularize the Bauhaus aesthetic.

Of Kawakubo, Neuwirth says she is in awe of her “unruly creative universe.”

The composer lauds “Kawakubo's approach to an androgynou­s look and how she joyfully plays and deconstruc­ts fashion topoi and materials in a brave and courageous way” and her “interest in the stylistic devices of distortion, allusion and the blurry zone between reality and fiction to question man-made norms in art and life.”

Asked about her impression­s of Neuwirth, Kawkakubo responds:

“She seems extremely passionate and strong-willed.”

To be sure, the opera promises to send ripples with its hybrid of music, fashion, singing in different styles, along with acting and video components.

“Her courage to be a fresh voice, to stay true to her vision and her style, inspired me to expand my world from opera to theater, to pop, to songwritin­g and arranging and producing,” notes Hauman.

Yet it's the subject matter of Neuwirth's opera that is likely to reverberat­e the loudest.

The composer describes it as a “striving for freedom of expression, originalit­y and fluid identity” and Orlando as a “remarkable human being who questions every kind of duality and experience­s a sense of ‘in-between-ness' in both life and art. Orlando lives in a realm between history and tradition, and continuall­y breaks the rules imposed by society.”

Hauman was emphatic that Neuwirth's new work is a game-changer.

“The opera world for centuries has been a male-dominated profession — and most of the roles in opera for women are victims. They kill themselves, are killed or are abandoned,” the soprano marveled. “In Olga's ‘Orlando,' women are set free.” ■

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 ??  ?? The scene at The Vienna Opera’s newest performanc­e, “Orlando,” with costumes by Rei Kawakubo.
The scene at The Vienna Opera’s newest performanc­e, “Orlando,” with costumes by Rei Kawakubo.
 ??  ?? Constance Hauman
Constance Hauman
 ??  ?? A scene from “Orlando.”
A scene from “Orlando.”
 ??  ?? Costumes by Rei Kawakubo.
Costumes by Rei Kawakubo.
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 ??  ?? Olga Neuwirth
Olga Neuwirth
 ??  ?? Kate Lindsey
Kate Lindsey
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 ??  ?? Scenes from the opera.
Scenes from the opera.
 ??  ?? A look from “Orlando.”
A look from “Orlando.”
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 ??  ?? HERE AND CLOCKWISE:
Kawakubo’s costumes range from Baroque to punk, from prim to Psychedeli­c.
HERE AND CLOCKWISE: Kawakubo’s costumes range from Baroque to punk, from prim to Psychedeli­c.
 ??  ?? Anna Clemente
Anna Clemente
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