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"A quality national opera not only demonstrates our
level of cultural sophistication. It proves to the world that we are in the heart of
Europe."
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Opera Diplomacy
For a recent article about the Latvian
opera, also see Opera
Nation.
Latvia still can't afford to buy all its soldiers guns and some
of its roads are still riddled with potholes. But that hasn't stopped it from throwing
millions of dollars at its national opera, which officials here argue fervently is one key
to Latvia's resurrection.
Since independence in 1991, Latvia has spent tens of
millions of dollars on opera, much of it going towards renovating the landmark national
opera house in central Riga. Valdis Birkavs, recently foreign minister and now minister of
justice (photo), said one reason for the opera expenditures is t hat the government sees opera as a way for Latvia to
get the respect it deserves and so badly needs as it lobbies to fully integrate into
Europe.
After the Soviet break, Latvians implemented tough market
reforms, which in turn sparked strong growth. Latvians now insist they are as ready as
anyone to enter the elite European clubslike the European
Union and NATO. But they complain their little-known nation is too often lumped in with
less successful reformerslike Belarus or Bulgariaand that this has sometimes retarded their integration efforts.
Showing off the national opera, insists Birkavs, helps set
the record straight.
"A quality national opera not only demonstrates our
level of cultural sophistication," he said in a recent interview. "It proves to
the world that we are in the heart of Europe. For us, this is very important."
At the minister's behest, opera has become an unlikely
feature of Latvian diplomacy, with visiting VIPs being marched off to performances at
Riga's white-pillared opera house as a matter of course. At a summit of 11 government
heads from around the Baltic Sea in 1998, the Latvian hosts made a night at the opera the
climax of the two day affair. As the European prime ministersincluding
then-German Chancellor Helmut Kohlfiled
into the opera house, they looked skeptical, glum, even bored, recalled Birkavs. But as
the performance of Giuseppe Verdi's Aida progressed, their jaws dropped in
amazement.
"The prime ministers were shocked that the Latvian
opera was that good," said the Latvian minister. "They didn't expect it."
Latvia's opera diplomacy has gone on the road, with the
company apparently impressing audiences across Europe. After a performance in London,
The Times declared Latvia's opera one of the best on the continent.
"The Latvian National Opera boasts as good a company
as any in this country," the newspaper said.
Latvia established itself as an opera hub in the 1800s and
during its first period of independence, from 1920-40. In the Soviet Union, Latvia's opera
was considered the third bestafter the Bolshoi and Kirov.
Latvia's opera tradition also includes Richard Wagner, who
lived in Riga from 1837-38 and composed his first opera, Rienzi, while working in
the city as a conductor. Wagner's The Flying Dutchman was inspired by a stormy
ship journey from Riga as he fled creditors here.
But around the time of the Soviet collapse, with a general
shortage of funds, managerial disarray and the opera building literally falling apart,
Latvia's century-old opera tradition was under serious threat. Current opera director
Andrejs Zagars likened the state of the opera house after independencewith
its flooded basement and golden-leafed paint peeling in the main hallto
the plight of Latvia itself: lots of potential, but ailing and empty.
"Things were extremely bad," agreed Raimonds
Pauls, Latvia's cultural minister at the time. "It was a desperate situation."
Pauls said he was convinced the opera had to be the jewel
in the crown, not only for the local art scene, but for the nation as a
whole. But the prime minister at the time was looking for ways to salvage the nation's
budget, and far from pumping money into the opera, he was thinking about cutting its
already limited funds.
"But I went to him and said, 'Look, every normal,
self-respecting country needs its opera,' " recalled Pauls. " 'We have no choice
but to find the money and bring the national opera back to life.' He agreed."
The first and by far the most costly task was renovating
the opera house. Many of the Soviet-trained staff, too, had become liabilities, explained
opera director Zagars. Prima donnas who had passed their prime refused to step aside for
younger talent. Feeling the heat from the new management, some staff even resorted to
petty sabotage: including sticking needles into the costumes of up-and-coming performers.
Restrained by labor laws and Soviet-era contracts, Zagars
said he had a difficult time edging out Soviet-minded singers and pre-independence
management staff.
"This was very difficult and caused lots of
tensions," Zagars, a former Latvian stage and film actor, said in a recent interview.
"Some people just don't know when to leave."
Years later, Latvia's opera is brimming with young talent.
Structurally, the opera house has also dispensed with the old ways: only a few years ago
for example, sets and curtains were still raised by teams of men tugging on ropes and
pulleys. Today, everything on the stage is operated almost completely by computer.
Inside the 1000-seat main hall, Astra Irmeja said the
company was on track not only to be the best opera in the Baltics, but to be the best in
all of northern and eastern Europe. She also described the opera as Latvia's cultural flag
for the outside worldbut insisted opera wasn't merely
something to show off to outsiders. Proof of enthusiasm for the opera at home, she said,
was that the opera house consistently registered over 80 percent attendance.
"Latvians are such a small people, so there are so few
things to inspire us as a nation," she said, waving her hand around the opera hall,
studded with gold-plated cherubs. "We need something like this to inspire us, to give
us the impulse to be the best that we can be."
from CITY PAPER-The Baltic States May/June 1999
Also see Opera
Nation.
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