Review: The Flying Dutchman intelligently explores power and its relationship to perceived civility (2024)

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  • Title: The Flying Dutchman
  • Original Director: Christopher Alden
  • Revival Director: Marilyn Gronsdal
  • Conductor: Johannes Debus
  • Actors: Johan Reuter, Marjorie Owens, Franz-Josef Selig, Miles Mykkanen, Christopher Ventris, Rosie Aldridge.
  • Company: Canadian Opera Company
  • Venue: Four Seasons Centre
  • City: Toronto
  • Year: Runs until Oct. 23
  • COVID-19 measures: Masks recommended, not mandatory.

Lizzo, baseball, Wagner: Torontonians had many choices for entertainment on Friday night. In a season-opening speech, Canadian Opera Company general manager Perryn Leech used the Blue Jays as a metaphor for the COC’s return to in-person presentation – subtly acknowledging the challenging climate for the arts and urging the near-capacity crowd to come back for additional offerings. If productions (including revivals, of which there are many) are as intelligent as the current The Flying Dutchman, audiences are in for a treat.

Running through Oct. 23 at The Four Seasons Centre For The Performing Arts, Richard Wagner’s 1843 opera Die fliegende Holländer tells the story of the Dutchman, doomed to sail the seas forever unless he can find a faithful woman – which he does in Senta, who has been waiting for his arrival.

Based on tales of a ghostly ship originating in European folklore and 17th-century maritime trade, the opera was also inspired by German writer Henrich Heine’s 1833 novel, Aus den Memoiren des Herrn von Schnabelewopski (The Memoirs of Mister von Schnabelewopski), which features a central character who can only be redeemed by the love of a faithful woman. Christopher Alden’s 2010 production (here led by revival director Marilyn Gronsdal) references the mythology while drawing inspiration from the aesthetics of German Expressionist cinema to create a moving work that offers chewy drama and close social commentary.

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The production hints at the menace that sits within the mundane, rendering its title figure an outsider who cannot exist in a world of repression and violence. Its set, a tilted box (by Set and Costume Designer Allen Moyer) with a huge ship’s wheel and a narrow winding staircase, emphasizes the claustrophobic atmosphere through which love and connection are rendered impossible.

A woodcut-style illustration of a man, his hands resting on his face (resembling Munch’s 1893 painting, The Scream), is used throughout the production, and, like the huge shadow of the ship’s wheel looming against the mottled back wall of the set, becomes a dramatic visual reflecting the leitmotifs sewn within Wagner’s dense score. Lighting designer Anne Militello effectively channels Expressionist influences in her revealing contrasts: bright and shadowy; still and fluid.

During the famous Spinning Chorus song, women of the COC Chorus are starkly lit and positioned in rows reminiscent of scenes from Fritz Lang’s Metropolis, their movements monotonous and sinister. Their calls of “mein gutes Rädchen, braus und saus!” (“my good wheel hum and sing!”) are coloured by an aggressive conformity that will subsequently morph into a more grandiose if disturbing expression of that positioning.

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Later During Sailors Chorus (Steuermann, lass die Wacht!), the ensemble slams down beer mugs, bangs on walls and stomps feet, turning a jaunty musical line hostile, with the men wearing thick armbands over their uniformly matching suits, and the women in complementing stoles which emit an eerie glow. The aggression, the bullying body language, the hardened stares, the brash delivery – all prove uncomfortably familiar and far more unsettling than the Dutchman himself.

And what of the fabled figure? At first sight, the Dutchman (Johan Reuter) is cloaked in a sweeping, Nosferatu-like coat, plus goggles and headgear. Simple acts of removal (by him, or others) reveal not a monster but a man; het is less scary than scarily human. The coat, taken off by Senta (Marjorie Owen), reveals striped pyjamas, an outfit which precisely matches those worn by the Dutchman’s crew, who are revealed within the lattice-like framework beneath the set, and quietly stare out at the audience. It is a haunting piece of staging, particularly given contextual histories, including the composer’s anti-Semitism.

Such moments effectively underline the production’s exploration of power and its relationship to perceived civility. The Dutchman is a ghost, one this particular society chooses to mythologize, vilify and ultimately isolate. Senta’s final “sacrifice” (which closes the opera) is staged with simple if highly effective elements that drive the point home: conform or die.

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The stellar singing in The Flying Dutchman underlines the drama both inherent to the score and to Alden’s vision, with Danish baritone Johan Reuter’s entrance aria (Die Frist ist um, which translates to, The time is up) an intelligent blend of colour and texture infused with real feeling. As Erik, the lover whom Senta rejects, tenor Christopher Ventris delivers a stylish reading with beautifully clear diction, despite his vocal tiring toward the end of opening night. Marjorie Owens’s Senta is laser-focused and nicely modulates her clarion soprano tone and is particularly affecting in the scene where Senta and the Dutchman first meet.

The COC Orchestra takes its cues from the production’s cinematic design, with music director Johannes Debus giving a bold reading of the opera that first welcomed him to the company back in 2010. How much more does this Dutchman have to say in 2022? Quite a lot, as it happens.

Review: The Flying Dutchman intelligently explores power and its relationship to perceived civility (2024)

FAQs

What is the Flying Dutchman theory? ›

The Flying Dutchman is a mythic figure who is condemned to roam the world, never resting, never bringing his ship to port, until Judgement Day. Cursed by past crimes, he is forbidden to land and sails from sea to sea, seeking a peace which forever eludes him. The Dutchman created his own destiny.

What is the purpose of the Flying Dutchman? ›

The Flying Dutchman was an infamous supernatural ghost ship. Originally, the Dutchman held the sacred task of collecting all the poor souls who died at sea and ferrying them to the afterlife. During the Golden Age of Piracy, the Dutchman would become a ship feared by many across the seven seas.

What is the theme of the Flying Dutchman? ›

Der fliegende Holländer (The Flying Dutchman), WWV 63, is a German-language opera, with libretto and music by Richard Wagner. The central theme is redemption through love. Wagner conducted the premiere at the Königliches Hoftheater Dresden in 1843.

What was the Flying Dutchman in real life? ›

In real life the Flying Dutchman was a 17th century Dutch merchantman, captained by Captain Hendrick Van Der Decken, a skilled seaman but one of few scruples, and in 1680 was proceeding from Amsterdam to Batavia in the Dutch East Indies.

What is the summary of the Dutchman? ›

Summary. Dutchman is an emotionally charged and highly symbolic version of the Adam and Eve story, wherein a naive bourgeois Black man is murdered by an insane and calculating white seductress, who is coldly preparing for her next victim as the curtain comes down.

What does the Flying Dutchman symbolize? ›

According to maritime legend, the Flying Dutchman can never be anchored, and anyone who sees the ship is doomed to sail the seven seas for eternity. Although the Flying Dutchman never existed, the story of the cursed ship became a legendary symbol of calamity for sailors.

What is the plot of the Flying Dutchman? ›

The Flying Dutchman was a sea captain who once found himself struggling to round the Cape of Good Hope during a ferocious storm. He swore that he would succeed even if he had to sail until Judgment Day. The Devil heard his oath, and took him up on it; the Dutchman was condemned to stay at sea forever.

What causes the Flying Dutchman? ›

While the sight of a ship floating above the horizon could unsettle any seafarer, meteorologists can explain it as the result of a Fata Morgana – a dramatic 'superior mirage' caused by the air below the line of sight being significantly colder than that above it.

Why is the Flying Dutchman doomed? ›

According to legend, it was a ship captained by a man condemned to wander eternally due to a pact with the devil or a divine curse. The various versions of the legend differ in details, but all agree that the ship and its crew are trapped in a state of perpetual penance on the world's oceans.

What is the main theme of the Dutchman? ›

The main themes in Dutchman are racial oppression and Black identity.

What is Flying Dutchman slang for? ›

Definitions of Flying Dutchman. a phantom ship that is said to appear in storms near the Cape of Good Hope. type of: apparition, fantasm, phantasm, phantasma, phantom, shadow. something existing in perception only.

Why is the Flying Dutchman so famous? ›

The Flying Dutchman (Dutch: De Vliegende Hollander) is a legendary ghost ship, allegedly never able to make port, but doomed to sail the sea forever. The myths and ghost stories are likely to have originated from the 17th-century Golden Age of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and of Dutch maritime power.

What is the theory of the Flying Dutchman? ›

Sailors of the age speculated that the ghostly ship was caused by the crew themselves, guilty of a horrible crime, damned to sail until their penance is met. The most famous sighting of the phantom ship was by Prince George of Wales, the prince who will become King George the V.

Is the Flying Dutchman a human? ›

The Flying Dutchman in SpongeBob SquarePants: Revenge of the Flying Dutchman. The Flying Dutchman is a major antagonist in Nickelodeon's SpongeBob SquarePants franchise. He is a powerful ghost who haunts the ocean, named after the legendary ghost ship of the same name.

What is the myth in Dutchman? ›

By examining the origins and the uses of myth, “the Flying Dutchman” myth itself, and the state of America at the time the play was first shown, it is evident that Amiri Baraka's play positions the myth of “the Flying Dutchman” as a symbol for the curse that is race and racism in America, which has plagued the crew, or ...

What is the Flying Dutchman syndrome? ›

Acrocyanosis is symmetric, painless, discoloration of different shades of blue in the distal parts of the body that is marked by symmetry, relative persistence of the skin color changes with aggravation by cold exposure, and frequent association with local hyperhidrosis of hands and feet.

Where does the myth of the Flying Dutchman come from? ›

The Flying Dutchman (Dutch: De Vliegende Hollander) is a legendary ghost ship, allegedly never able to make port, but doomed to sail the sea forever. The myths and ghost stories are likely to have originated from the 17th-century Golden Age of the Dutch East India Company (VOC) and of Dutch maritime power.

What is the Lost Dutchman story? ›

In the 1870s Jacob Waltz, "the Dutchman" (actually a native of Germany), was said to have located the mine through the aid of a Peralta descendant. Waltz and his partner, Jacob Weiser worked the mine and allegedly hid one or more caches of gold in the Superstitions.

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