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Chilean Newspaper
ACTIVIDAD CULTURAL
Jueves 20 de Agosto de 2009
A los 72 años falleció en Tokio:
Adiós a Hildegard
Behrens, la gran voz de Wagner y Strauss
[Farewell to Hildegard Behrens,
the great voice of Wagner and Strauss]
La soprano alemana cantó en el Teatro Municipal, por única
vez, en 1996.
Maureen Lennon Zaninovic
"La tarea del individuo es purificarse más y más,
para ser capaz de refinar su materia en forma creciente y ascender".
Son palabras de la legendaria soprano alemana Hildegard Behrens
(1937-2009) en una entrevista exclusiva que ofreció a "El
Mercurio" en 1996, con ocasión de las únicas
presentaciones que dio en el Teatro Municipal.
"Ese año el diario nos encomendó a David Gallagher
y a mí entrevistarla. Lejos de todo 'divismo', ella irradiaba
serenidad y calidez. La música era para ella un ejercicio
de progresiva purificación espiritual de quien la cultiva
y veía la muerte sin temor, como un ir 'hacia energías
más y más altas'", rememora Francisco José
Folch.
Este martes, y a raíz de un aneurisma, esta gran soprano
dramática finalmente comenzó su "camino hacia
energías más altas". Su deceso ocurrió
en Tokio, ya que la habían invitado al festival de la Kusatsu
Academy.

La artista actuó junto a la Orquesta Filarmónica.
Foto:EL MERCURIO
Juan Antonio Muñoz, crítico de "El Mercurio",
recuerda su paso por Santiago: "El público la aplaudió
en el estreno en Chile de 'Sigfrido' de Wagner, pero el 2 de junio
también ofreció un recital memorable, junto a la
Orquesta Filarmónica dirigida por Gabor Ötvös.
Una noche magnífica".
Andrés Rodríguez, director del Teatro Municipal,
puntualiza: "Durante muchos años pasó a ser
la mejor cantante en su cuerda en Richard Wagner y Strauss. Inolvidable
como Brunilda, Isolda, Salomé, Elektra y Katerina".
http://diario.elmercurio.cl/detalle/index.asp?id={5e47367c-4149-40b3-a8d0-3f093496d23f}
CULTURAL ACTIVITY
Thursday August 20, 2009
Dead in Tokyo at age 72:
Farewell to Hildegard Behrens,
the great voice of Wagner and Strauss
The German soprano sang
at the Teatro Municipal only once, in 1996.
Maureen Lennon Zaninovic
"The task of the individual is to continually purify himself,
so that he can refine his nature and advance to a higher state
of being.
These words were spoken by the legendary German soprano Hildegard
Behrens (1937-2009) in an exclusive interview she gave to "El
Mercurio" in 1996 on the occasion of her only performance
ever at the Teatro Municipal.
"That year the newspaper assigned David Gallagher and I to
interview her. So unlike a diva, she radiated serenity and warmth.
For her, music was an exercise in progressive spiritual purification,
preparing one to view death without fear, as an ascent "'to
higher and higher energies,'" recalls Francis Joseph Folch.
On Tuesday, felled by an aneurysm, this great dramatic soprano
finally began her "journey to higher energies". Her
death occurred in Tokyo where she had been invited to participate
in the Kusatsu Music Festival and Academy.
Juan Antonio Muñoz, a critic of "El Mercurio"
recalls of that time in Santiago: "The audience applauded
the premiere in Chile of Wagner' s Siegfried. But it was also
on June 2 that she gave a memorable concert with the Philharmonic
Orchestra directed by Gabor Ötvö. A magnificent evening.
Andrés Rodríguez, director of the Teatro Municipal,
points out: "For many years she was the greatest singer of
works by Wagner and Strauss, unforgettable as Brünnhilde,
Isolde, Salome, Elektra and Katerina.
EDITORIAL
Viernes 28 de Agosto de 2009
Con cuerpo y voz
[With body and voice]
La soprano-abogada que yo quería entrevistar fue
ampliamente superada por la soprano-mujer, la mujer de carne y
hueso que sabe lo que es ser hija y lo que es ser amante.
David Gallagher
"¿Viste esto?", me pregunta, en un correo, Francisco
José Folch. Abro el adjunto, y me encuentro con una noticia
de Reuters. "Murió destacada soprano alemana Hildegard
Behrens". Murió de repente en Tokio, a los 72 años.
Folch sabía que la noticia me iba a conmover. Él
y yo habíamos entrevistado a Behrens para Artes y Letras
en 1996, cuando ella vino a Chile para cantar el papel de Brünnhilde
en el Municipal.
Fuimos a esperarla en el salón del segundo piso del Hotel
Carrera, donde estaba alojada. Alta, atractiva a sus entonces
59 años, apareció en "una suerte de túnica
aterciopelada". Es lo que decimos en la entrevista. La verdad
es que de la túnica no me acuerdo nada, pero sí
tengo grabada en la memoria la simpatía con que se acomodó
en nuestra mesa a conversar, en torno a un café.
Antes de empezar a cantar, Behrens estudió derecho en Alemania.
Yo había sugerido entrevistarla no sólo porque era
la mejor Brünnhilde de su época, sino también
porque pensé que ella tendría una visión
fascinante sobre el conflicto que hay, en la tetralogía
de Wagner, entre la desbordante voluntad de un dios y las leyes
restrictivas que él mismo establece. ¿Puede un dios
vulnerar sus propias leyes, o es el esclavo de ellas?
Behrens nos demostró que había pensado mucho en
el significado de la obra, pero como actriz y soprano, obligada
a encarnar, con cuerpo y voz, a una heroína, ella no padecía
de mi vicio de querer conceptualizar todo, de pretender reducir
la obra a elevados conflictos metafísicos. Su visión,
para mí aleccionadora, era menos de abogada o filósofa
que de mujer y actriz. Para ella Brünnhilde es, primero,
una hija con un padre difícil, un padre que ella idealiza
hasta que descubre sus fatales defectos. Wotan, según Behrens,
"incurre en negociaciones turbias. Engaña. Queda enredado
en sus propias redes". Frente a un padre así, la hija
no puede sino desilusionarse, y por mucho que lo siga queriendo,
no puede sino desobedecerlo. Brünnhilde será una diosa
y Wotan un dios, pero la relación entre los dos es la de
incontables padres e hijos. Después, cuando Siegfried la
despierta, Brünnhilde se da cuenta que "ya no es una
diosa, sino una mujer vulnerable" y siente, según
Behrens, "el terror que, probablemente, le ocurre en algún
momento a toda mujer frente a un hombre".
No hace falta decir que la soprano-abogada que yo quería
entrevistar fue ampliamente superada por la soprano-mujer, la
mujer de carne y hueso que sabe lo que es ser hija y lo que es
ser amante.
Behrens nos habló después de su voz. De lo difícil
que es en Wagner sobreponerse a la orquesta. De su preferencia
por contar con una amplia zona de reserva. De joven, a escondidas
de su profesora de canto, ensayaba el difícil Fa agudo
de la Reina de la Noche, en la Flauta Mágica de Mozart:
para "saber que la tenía", por si acaso.
Con mucha pena, nos despedimos Folch y yo de la soprano, y yo
me fui al campo, para disfrutar del fin de semana largo del 21
de mayo. Folch se quedó con la grabación. Un par
de días después, me llamó desesperado. La
grabación no se oía bien. Necesitaba ayuda. Pero
yo, desde Chépica, no podía hacer nada. "No
te preocupes", dijo Folch, resignado. Todavía recuerdo
el alivio, canallesco, que sentí en ese momento.
Releyendo ahora la admirablemente bien editada entrevista, me
quedo pensando. Una gran obra de arte es, me digo, una que nos
induce a conceptualizar, como hacía yo con la tetralogía,
pero que siempre se escapa de las conceptualizaciones que intentamos.
Una que nos tienta con incontables claves que parecen indicar
que es reducible a algún orden, pero que finalmente no
cabe en ninguno.
http://diario.elmercurio.cl/detalle/index.asp?id={4d531d8d-97a1-4e63-a76a-8364f527afe6}
EDITORIAL
Friday August 28, 2009
With body and voice
The lawyer in the soprano
I wished to interview was totally surpassed by the woman she was
- a woman in the flesh who knew what it is to be a daughter and
to be a lover.
David Gallagher
"Have you seen this?"
Francisco José Folch asks in an email. I open the attachment,
and I come across a Reuters report. "Leading German soprano
Hildegard Behrens had died. She died suddenly in Tokyo at age
72.
Folch knew that the news would move me. He and I had interviewed
Behrens for Arts and Letters in 1996 when she came to Chile to
sing the role of Brünnhilde in the Teatro Municipal.
We waited in the lounge on the second floor of the Hotel Carrera
where she was staying. Tall and attractive for her then 59 years,
she appeared in a sort of velvety tunic. That was what we said
in our interview. The truth is of the tunic I don't remember anything,
but what is engraved in my memory is the sympathetic way she made
us feel comfortable as we settled around our table to chat over
coffee.
Before she started singing, Behrens studied law in Germany. I
had suggested the interview not only because she was the best
Brünnhilde of her time, but also because I thought she would
have a fascinating view of the conflict in Wagner's tetralogy,
between the overwhelming will of a god and the restrictive laws
that he himself creates. Can a god violate his own laws, or is
he their slave?
Behrens showed us that she had given much thought to the meaning
of the work, but as an actress and soprano obliged to portray,
with body and voice, a heroine, she was not burdened by my habit
of wanting to conceptualize everything, seeking to reduce the
work to a set of lofty metaphysical conflicts. Her exemplary view
was less that of a lawyer or philosopher than that of a woman
and actress. For her Brünnhilde was, first a daughter with
a difficult father, one she idealizes until he discovers his fatal
flaws. Wotan, according to Behrens, "engages in shady dealings.
A deceiver entangled in his own web." Confronted with that
kind of father, a daughter,can not but be disappointed, and however
much she still wants to please him, can only disobey him. Brünnhilde
is a goddess and Wotan a god, but the relationship between the
two is like that of countless parents and children. Then, when
Siegfried awakens her, Brünnhilde realizes that "she
is no longer a goddess but a vulnerable woman," and feels,
according to Behrens, "the terror that probably happens at
some point with every woman confronted by a man" .
It goes without saying that the lawyer in the soprano that I had
wished to interview was totally surpassed by the woman she was,
a woman in the flesh who knew what it is to be a daughter and
to be a lover.
Later Behrens talked to us about the voice. Of the difficulty
in Wagner of going over the orchestra. Of her preference for keeping
ample vocal reserves. Of how as a young singer, unbeknownst to
her voice teacher, she was rehearsing the difficult F sharp of
the Queen of the Night in Mozart's Magic Flute to "know that
she had it" - just in case.
With much sadness, Folch and I said goodbye to the soprano. I
went to the countryside to enjoy the long weekend of May 21. Folch
kept the recording. A couple of days later he called me, desperate.
The recording was not very audible. He needed help. But as I was
in Chépica, I could not do anything. "Don't worry,"
Folch said, resigned. I still remember being relieved, rotten
though I felt at that moment.
Today, on rereading the well-edited interview, I'm still thinking.
A great work of art is, I tell myself, is one that induces us
to conceptualize--as I did with the tetralogy, but always escapes
from the attempted conceptualizations. One that tempts us with
countless clues suggesting that it is reducible to some order,
but ultimately fits in none.
MEMÓ RIA
HILDEGARD BEHRENS (1937-2009)
A grande soprano alemã Hildegard Behrens, uma das intérpretes
mais intensas dos papéis dramáticos das óperas
de Wagner e Richard Strauss, morreu aos 72 anos, por um aneurisma
de aorta, em Tóquio, Japão, onde participaria do
Festival de Verão de Kusatsu.
Uma artista completa, dotada de uma voz poderosa, quente e penetrante,
associada a um physi que-du-rôle ideal, Hildegard foi uma
intérprete de enorme inteligência e sensibilidade.
Suas performances eram sempre notáveis por sua imensa capacidade
de adaptação e resposta às necessidades da
música e da cena, engendrando momentos de altíssima
voltagem e intensidade dramática.
Nascida em Varel, Alemanha, em 1937, Behrens somente iniciou seus
estudos vocais em Freiburg aos 26 anos, quando graduou-se em direito.
Após sua estreia tardia nos palcos operísticos,
aos 34 anos, como a Condessa das Bodas de Fígaro, de Mozart,
Hildegard teve uma ascensão fulgurante, abraçando
rapidamente os papéis dramáticos de Wagner e Strauss.
Das protagonistas wagnerianas, Behrens fez sua especialidade maior,
destacando-se como a Brünhilde da Tetralogia O anel do Nibelungo,
a Senta de Der fliegende holländer e uma extraordinária
Isolde, que imortalizou em gravação com Leonard
Bernstein. Sua estreia como Brünhilde foi em 1983, no prestigioso
Festival de Bayreuth, na Alemanha, regida por Sir Georg Solti.
De suas gravações como a valquíria wagneriana,
fez história a sua participação na produção
de Otto Schenk para o Metropolitan Opera de Nova York, regida
por James Levine e registrada em CD e DVD.
Em Richard Strauss, a voz ampla, resistente e o talento dramático
de Hildegard se encontraram à perfeição nos
exigentes papéis de Salome e Elektra. Sua performance,
ao mesmo tempo feminina, frágil, determinada e imperiosa
de Salome marcou a sua estreia no Festival de Salzburg, com o
maestro Herbert von Karajan, em 1997, ovacionada por público
e crítica e resultando na gravação hoje histórica.
Outros grandes papéis de Hildegard, desenvolvidos nos principais
teatros líricos mundiais, incluem a Marie, no Wozzeck de
Alban Berg, gravada em áudio e vídeo com Claudio
Abbado, Leonore, em Fidelio, de Beethoven, Elettra em I d omeneo,
de Mozart, e Tosca, na ópera homônima de Puccini.
No Rio, a consagrada artista alemã esteve em maio de 1998,
quando nos ofereceu um memorável concerto com obras de
Wagner e Strauss no Teatro Municipal.
Na próxima semana, comento sobre a premiada discografia
de Hildegard Behrens, ímpar como a sua arte e o seu legado.
Domingo, 23 de Agosto de 2009
http://jbonline.terra.com.br/leiajb/2009/08/23/caderno_b/memoria_hildegard_behrens__1937_2009.asp
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