Review

War & Peace: a magnificent production of Prokofiev's flawed opera - WNO, Wales Millennium Centre, review

Lauren Michelle as Natasha and Jonathan McGovern as Andre in WNO's War and Peace
Lauren Michelle as Natasha and Jonathan McGovern as Andre in WNO's War and Peace Credit: Clive Barda

In the melancholy catalogue of heroic failures, Prokofiev’s wildly ambitious attempt to translate Tolstoy’s epic into opera merits a noble place. Overshadowed by the horrors of war and the menace of Stalinist despotism, it’s a project he grappled with throughout the decade before his death in 1953, and as material was continually cut, spliced, revised and added, the score now survives in a bewildering variety of versions. Welsh National Opera’s new production presents its own re-stitched edition, in a fluent English translation.

The narrative divides squarely into 90 minutes of Peace, focused on the story of Natasha and Andrei, followed by 100 minutes of War, embracing the events of 1812 that culminated in Napoleon’s retreat. The central character of Nikolai Rostov is eliminated, and Pierre Bezukhov only becomes prominent in the second half. It’s an efficient but brutal piece of butchery. 

The best music comes at the beginning; a thrillingly barbaric chorus of defiance, followed by a lovely lyrical nocturne for Andrei (beautifully sung here by Jonathan McGovern) and a ball scene that plays to Prokofiev’s strengths as a composer for ballet. Subsequently, it meanders and loses  impetus: in brief, the orchestral writing is far more interesting than the vocal line and there is too much Soviet tub-thumping, often distressingly crude and aggressive. Of Tolstoy’s wisdom and sensitivity there is nothing: this is a cartoon strip of a great novel.

Unconvincing: Simon Bailey as Kutuzov
Unconvincing: Simon Bailey as Kutuzov Credit: Clive Barda

Welsh National Opera makes the best possible case for the work’s virtues, in an energetic and resourceful staging by David Pountney that sticks broadly to the historical period, using projections (which include extracts from Sergei Bondarchuk’s 1966 film) to enhance the spectacle. A cast of what seems like hundreds works very hard throughout, with the splendid chorus taking multiple small roles and notable cameos from Leah-Marian Jones as Marie, Adrian Dwyer as Kuragin, and David Stout as Dolokhov and Napoleon (though Simon Bailey’s interpretation of the celebrated filed marshal Kutuzov as a half-witted dotard doesn’t convince). Lauren Michelle is an intermittently shrill but nonetheless engaging Natasha, Mark Le Brocq a sympathetic Pierre: one wishes they had more chance to shine. 

WNO’s masterful Music Director Tomas Hanus does everything he can to keep this lumbering behemoth of a score on its toes, and the orchestra rewards him with playing of unfailing verve and edge. It’s a magnificent company effort: I just wish that the music delivered more expressive lyricism and less crude propaganda.

Until 29 September. Tickets: 029 2063 6464; wno.org.uk. Touring to Oxford, Llandudno, Birmingham and Southampton, October 13-November 24.  

License this content