NEW YORK, NY.- In May 2017, star soprano Renée Fleming sang the role of the Marschallin in Richard Strauss Der Rosenkavalier for the last time and with that, said goodbye to one the roles that had defined her career.
Since then, Fleming, 64, has appeared in concerts and on Broadway, and premiered a new opera, The Hours, which was written for her. Now, for the first time in a decade, she is preparing a role debut in the established repertoire: Pat Nixon in John Adams 1987 opera Nixon in China, which opens at the Paris Opera on Saturday in a new production by Valentina Carrasco.
Some sopranos in their 50s and 60s have voices that darken and thicken, making them perfect for character roles, often vengeful older women such as Klytaemnestra in Strauss Elektra or the Kostelnicka in Leo Janáčeks Jenufa. Fleming, who has always had a fastidious technique and a strong instinct to protect her voice, still sings with her characteristic pure, blooming tone.
This makes Pat Nixon, the former first lady whose musings on the simple virtues and the fruit of all our actions are the beating heart of the operas second act, a logical, though initially surprising, choice. Fleming has thrown herself into preparation with her typical studiousness: reading books and articles about the Nixons, studying film reels to capture what Carrasco called Pat Nixons gestures, smoking she was a heavy smoker and slightly constricted and strained smile. Fleming discussed her approach to the role in a video interview from Paris. Here are edited excerpts from the conversation.
Q: Nixon in China is defined in so many peoples heads by the iconic original production by Peter Sellars that came to the Met. How does this staging differ?
A: Its a bit madcap, I would say, in a good way. Theres a lot of creative choices to bring this piece alive that are quite different than anything Ive seen. Ive watched most of whats available, at least on the internet; its just been tremendous fun. People have treated the piece in an insistently serious way. This is the first time where I think enabled by the passage of time a director could say, We all know what happened, were familiar with the piece, and now we can think about it in a different way.
Q: Why Pat Nixon?
A: Ive been a tremendous fan of John Adams forever. There was a period when I was emailing him on a regular basis to see if there was anything of his that he thought I could do. Ive always loved new music and have been performing a lot of it since I was a student. But nothing worked out until this.
Q: How is it to play someone like Pat Nixon who as opposed to a princess or mermaid or other standard opera heroine is in our cultural memory?
A: Its really different. These are people who lived during my lifetime. I dont remember them well. I was in middle school around the time all of this happened; I wasnt paying attention. But theres all this archival material to look at and they come to life once you start reading. There were books about the Nixons and their marriage that were quite interesting, especially Pat and Dick: The Nixons, an Intimate Portrait of a Marriage, by Will Swift, and Pat Nixon: The Untold Story, by Julie Nixon Eisenhower.
In every single video or photograph from the visit, Pat stands out because of her fashion, which was all very carefully chosen. I get to wear the red coat, which is helpful. I had a talk, thanks to a friend, with Frank Gannon, who knew the Nixon family for about five years and was a special assistant in the White House at the time of the trip. He was able to shed light on their marriage on how crazy they were about each other, especially him for her. She was extremely protective of him and of their children.
Q: The piece is not mocking her.
A: On the contrary, I think the creators genuinely respected her. I was surprised, too, because they really arent as kind to some of the other characters, namely Henry Kissinger. Alice Goodmans text is so exquisite. Especially for Chou En-lai, and for Pat Nixon, its beautiful and poetic. The images in Pats main aria, This Is Prophetic, are a vision for what this alliance could look like in a positive sense.
I love singing it, and I love portraying her and in this production, I spend the whole second act with a dragon, which is quite delightful, and which exemplifies her positive vision for this alliance. There are so many beautiful vibrant pictures created in this scene, and all of them heartfelt. It feels to me like a particularly feminine point of view.
Q: What is it like to sing this score, in Adams distinctive style?
A: Its challenging to learn, because it changes meter every bar pretty much, and the aria has a quite high tessitura; it sits consistently too much up at the top of the staff. Its beautiful music, and what makes it possible is that the higher phrases are separated by a few bars so you can relax, get a rest. I also love the unique use of the orchestra. Just to look down into the pit and see five or six saxophones and two pianos creating an extraordinary texture gives me an enormous pleasure. The top of the second act, Pats act, is such a joy. It has a sparkling quality to it that you just cant help but respond to.
Q: Adams insists that singers in his operas are enhanced with microphones given the thickness of the orchestral textures. How does that feel?
A: I find being micd helpful. I think that as orchestras and conductors have less time to work on balance, and the demands being made on singers just to be loud if that continues to increase, I dont think its helpful to the art form to insist that there never be any enhancement on the stage. Theres a huge difference between a subtle enhancement already being used in a lot of theaters because the acoustic is poor and full-blown amplification. I appreciate it, especially because a lot of what Im doing is way upstage. And many set designers dont want to be forced into building boxes all the time to help us with the acoustic.
Q: When Nixon in China premiered, it was sometimes dismissively called a CNN opera because of its engagement with current events and politics. Now, this production premieres amid growing tensions between the U.S. and China and protests in Paris.
A: Travel to China for artists had just opened up but now, surveillance balloons, or the American discovery of surveillance balloons, seems to have messed that up. I hope that communication continues. It serves everyone, and both sides know that. Its a really sensitive time. There are a lot of Chinese artists in the show, some of whom live in China, and even doing this piece is sensitive for them. There were images to be used in a montage at the end of the opera that had to be changed or modified because of those sensitivities. The montage is trying hard to be objective about these conflicts and their relationship to what happened at the time the opera is set. It seems to be more sensitive to discuss whats happening now than what happened in Maos time.
Outside of our dressing rooms last night, there were fires on the street. There were demonstrators running from the Place de la République to the Bastille. Thats what its been like every day. Its ironic, because my [1991] debut here in Figaro had demonstrators outside, who then during the show broke into the theater. It was quite uncomfortable, because someone actually came onstage with a huge machete. So, thus far, its really been not too terrible.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.