This DVD is part of the Britten-Pears DVD Collection. This collection features four historically and musically significant films from the BBC archives of works and performances by Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears, one of the greatest English tenors and Britten’s long-term partner and artistic inspiration. None of these films have been available before on any home video format.
First-ever audio-visual recording of Peter Grimes, Britten’s first great operatic success. The only film recording of Peter Grimes featuring Peter Pears in the title role, and conducted by the composer.
The production was mounted by the celebrated Decca producer, John Culshaw, following his move to the BBC.
The 1969 studio colour film was staged by the great British soprano, Joan Cross. Cross was closely associated with the operas of Britten and had created the role of Ellen Orford at the premiere of Peter Grimes in 1945.
Fabulous cast of British opera greats from the period, including Heather Harper as Ellen Orford, Elizabeth Bainbridge and Robert Tear.
CAST
Peter Pears (Grimes)
Heather Harper (Ellen Orford)
Bryan Drake (Balstrode)
Elizabeth Bainbridge (Auntie)
Owen Brannigan (Swallow)
Robert Tear (Rev Adams)
London Symphony Orchestra
Benjamin Britten
Format: NTSC DVD 9
Aspect Ratio: 4:3
Region: 1-6 (All)
Sound: LPCM Stereo / DTS 5.1 Surround or Enhanced mono tbc
Colour
Subtitles: English, French, German, Spanish
R E V I E W:
A valuable benchmark and eloquent performance in its own right.
This
DVD is as close as we’ll ever
get to seeing how the originators
visualized Peter Grimes. It has Peter Pears in the
title role he created and Britten
conducting with the staging by
Joan Cross, the original Ellen
Orford. But it was made 24 years
after the original and Owen Brannigan’s
Swallow was the only other survivor
from the first cast. And it’s
a BBC recording for television
presentation rather than an opera
house staging, but in essence
it still captures the way Britten
wanted the opera to appear.
Right
from the Prologue inquest Pears’
Grimes comes across as an independent
spirit with a dignity formed from
hard circumstances and inner anguish
which bursts out at ‘The case
goes on in people’s minds’ (tr.
2 5:30, continuous timing). He
is apart from the hubbub which
is the townsfolk and token justice,
Britten’s wry attitude to which
is confirmed by his playful orchestration.
What is more striking and natural
to television is the intimacy
of the duet between Peter and
Ellen (tr.3), a contrast from
the rigmarole of the Borough (Aldeburgh)
townsfolk taking time to leave
in close-up.
Interlude
1, Dawn (tr. 4), like the other
interludes, is pictured as designer
David Myerscough-Jones states
“a series of distant abstract
images projected onto gauze, invoking
an illusion of cloud and water
without the use of realism”. This
minimalist approach in effect
offers some visual relief, enabling
you to ponder awhile and concentrate
on the sound. Britten’s here offers
a less refined, but more spontaneous,
sharper edged, vibrant nature
than his 1958 audio recording.
Saving
the situation of collecting Grimes’
new apprentice, Heather Harper’s
Ellen literally towers over the
townsfolk with her ‘Let her among
you without fault cast the first
stone’ (tr. 7 22:04) as well as
the musical descent from on high
for this high moral ground. Yet
this is a glimpse of her inner
life, which we see in no other
character except Grimes. As for
his, there’s the poignant empathy
of ‘alone with a childish death’
(tr. 8 30:23) where he recalls
what happened to the first apprentice
in the scene with Captain Balstrode.
Bryan Drake as the Captain has
a noble demeanour but loses authority,
in being visibly younger than
Grimes, 43 at the time of the
recording. But the relatively
old Grimes we have here, Pears
at 58, gives him more of a sinister
aspect. This is used to great
effect when he suddenly appears
out of the garish abstract colour
changes in the Storm Interlude
and fills the screen (tr. 9 36:02),
equally when he enters the pub
in the height of the storm (tr.
11 44:25), his turn to tower above
the rest, monster like, so we
experience a tremor of Mrs Sedley’s
reaction of fainting. This is
using television’s capability
to advantage. The round ‘Old Joe
has gone fishing’ (48:55) goes
with a swing, a rare kind of vocal
interlude of happy community spirit
crushed by the stark ‘Home! Do
you call that home!’ (tr. 13 52:21)
after Ellen motheringly reassures
the apprentice ‘Peter will take
you home’.
Act
2 begins with an exultantly bright
account of the Interlude Sunday
Morning followed by the deceptive
calm of Ellen’s singing to the
apprentice her hopes and fears,
summed up in ‘Storm and all its
terrors are nothing to the heart’s
despair’ (tr. 16 61:14). The turning
point comes rapidly. The bruise
on the boy’s neck is noticed.
Ellen states the reality that
even a successful Peter can’t
buy peace from gossip, ‘Peter,
we’ve failed!’ (67:25). He strikes
her and proclaims an anti catechism
to the church service ‘Amen’ just
heard in the background, ‘So be
it! And God have mercy upon me’
(67:49). This is all starkly,
directly and graphically realized
as is the quartet of the women,
Ellen, publican Auntie and her
two whore nieces, ‘Do we smile
or do we weep’ (tr. 20 79:56).
All bedraggled, they seem to step
outside the immediate context
and become eternal grieving women,
desolate yet with the potential
for radiance in
the stratospheric close
from Ellen’s top C flat and for
the First Niece, an ethereal top
D flat from Jill Gomez. The only
radiance Peter can find is a retreat
to his elated vision, ‘In dreams
I’ve built myself some kindlier
home’ (tr. 22 91:36), an idyll
ideally suited to Pears’ lyricism
and unforgettable in performance.
But then he’s haunted by the former
dead apprentice and obsessed with
gaining wealth. In this production
we see the boy trips up going
down to the cliff (97:47). Who’s
to blame?
Act
3 finds the Borough folk tipsy
but the ‘Goodnight’ ensemble (tr.
25 91:28), with the light comeliness
and relative innocence of Robert
Tear’s Reverend Horace Adams,
is a happy phase of simple pleasures.
Ellen’s embroidery aria (tr. 26
114:04) is her link to dreams
and a happier life, also her epitaph
for Grimes, poignantly rendered.
The Borough folk are now out of
control, Mrs Sedley leading them
and stating the heart of the matter,
‘Him who despises us we’ll destroy’
(tr. 27 122:49), all tooled up
for one man. Their ringing cries
of ‘Peter Grimes’ (124:40) are
perhaps the most abiding memory
of the opera, or is it Peter’s
‘What harbour shelters peace’
(tr. 29 133:13) as he enters in
a kind of elegiac delirium, already
like a drowning man reviewing
his life and thus the opera’s
music. Pears is gripping and harrowing
here. He recalls his love for
Ellen at the same time as she
appears and cradles him in her
arms, but he doesn’t realize she’s
there. He only makes eye contact
with Balstrode who rouses him
to tell him to sink his boat.
Did he love Ellen or rather the
security and respectability she
represents? She is left grieving
because of her love for him.
I
compared the Royal Opera Covent
Garden DVD dated 1981 conducted
by Colin Davis with Jon Vickers
as Grimes (NVC Arts 0630-16913-2).
Vickers is a more credible, formidable
and challenging Grimes than Pears
but less sympathetic. There’s
more sense of mulling over things
and a certain hesitation, conscience
at times in Pears. Vickers is
always in control, if sometimes
by great effort. His performance
is more projected, less intimate.
Britten’s Prologue is faster,
timing at 8:43 against Davis’
9:52. Britten is more colloquial
but his closing love duet is more
lyrical. Heather Harper is Ellen
for Davis too, but matching Vickers
more strident, less warm. Similarly
Vickers’ ‘What harbour shelters
peace’ is more declaimed than
the expressive smoothness of Pears
(tr. 8 32:35). Pears confides
the details of the boy’s death,
Vickers protests them, though
for Davis Norman Bailey is an
authoritative Balstrode. Vickers’
entry from the storm is less dramatic
than Pears but his ‘Now the Great
Bear and Pleiades’, beginning
in sotto voce raptness,
is more magical and with greater
dynamic contrast than Pears (tr.
11 45:09). Vickers’ entry into
‘Old Joe had gone fishing’ is
more contrastedly tormented, where
Pears takes on the general jocularity
but strikingly speaks ‘We found
Davy Jones’ (tr. 12 50:19) and applies parlando to ‘Bring him in with sorrow! Bring
him in with terror!’.
Just
as Britten’s Storm Interlude is
wilder than Davis’s, so his Sunday
Morning Interlude is more ecstatically
hopeful. Harper’s Ellen beginning
Act 2 is more open, expansive
and fresher voiced for Britten,
though her lower register is richer
for Davis with a sepulchral ‘sleep,
like oceans deep’. Davis’s ‘Do
we smile or do we weep’ fills
the expanse of the stage. The
women are closer together for
Britten and the quartet’s blend
of desolation and hope is pointed
more clearly in the swiftly juxtaposed
major and minor keys. With Davis’s
Passacaglia Interlude you’re aware
of the structure, with Britten’s
the emotional flux and varied
mood, finally working up to a
frenzy. Vickers’ ‘In dreams I’ve
built myself some kindlier home’
is soft, sotto
voce, thereby with a more
veiled, insubstantial quality
than Pears’ smoother, more serene
approach.
Britten’s
Moonlight Interlude is more emotive
than Davis’s observed lapping
of the waves, with more warmth
at the opening and anguish at
the climax. Britten’s pub dances
have more lilt, the parody of
the Landler clearer while Mrs
Sedley states her suspicion of
the boy’s murder to Ned Keene.
Harper’s embroidery aria is more
gravely etched for Davis, a more
melting, flowing narrative for
Britten. The mobilization of Britten’s
Borough folk and their massed
cries are more violent. Again
there’s a more intense motion
and climax to Britten’s account
of Interlude 6, timing at 2:10
to Davis’s 2:49. In the final
scene Vickers distraught is paradoxically
at his most lyrical, especially
at ‘Ellen, give me your hand’,
but Pears’ softer, more pleading
treatment of ‘Turn the skies back
and begin again’ (tr. 29 129:22)
is more affecting.
Picture
quality is good in this first
DVD release of the BBC tape which
boasts more, perhaps old-fashioned
provincial, colour in costume
than the Victorian probity of
the Davis DVD. The mono sound
is at a disadvantage in comparison
with Davis, also with Britten’s
1958 stereo audio recording in
terms of breadth and density,
most notably in the big ensemble
and chorus combinations, e.g.
‘Now the flood tide’ in Act 1
(tr. 8 25:23) and ‘O pity those
who try to bring a shadow’d life
into the sun’ in Act 2 (tr. 18
74:47) where at times there’s
an 11 part ensemble over a 4 part
chorus. But the sheer life of
the performance amply compensates
and you have the choice of
LPCM mono or Dolby enhanced
mono. I prefer the former which,
while less rounded, has more immediacy.
In sum, this earliest complete
visual representation of Peter Grimes
isn’t just a valuable benchmark
by which to judge its successors
but an eloquent performance in
its own right whose quality I
appreciated more at a second viewing.
-- Michael
Greenhalgh, MusicWeb International