Brilliant Artists in Trio. John Bryson
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Brilliant Artists In Trio
John Bryson
Dame Janet Baker, the Wind in Her Hair
St Brigid and the Wizard, Paula Dawson
The Character Onstage: Actor Max Gillies.
Published by John N. Bryson
First published 2013
© John N. Bryson
Brilliant Artists in Trio
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ISBN: 978-1-922219-36-7 (ePub)
Digital Distribution: Ebook Alchemy
Janet Baker, The Wind in Her Hair
Dame Janet recently retired from public performance.
John Bryson recalls her visit to Sydney during the mid-eighties, when he took her sailing.
Here he profiles the great mezzo-soprano.
SHE WAS PLAYING WITH THE SOUND of the waves from the bow, it seemed to me, ‘Never before under sail’, she said. It was very close to song. The pitch was good. She had our precise rhythm. ‘Sometimes to sea, but never before under sail.’ So well did she know the behaviour of her own voice that she spoke softly ahead and we heard her aft, by way of the breeze. She was at the mast, ahold of the rigging, a scarf to guard the hair, a kerchief to shelter the throat. ‘Never before,’ her husband Keith said, ‘quite true.’ Keith was also her manager, and he looked nervous for her. She sang at concert in Sydney yesterday, and must sing again tomorrow. I called her to the cockpit, but she stayed where she was. She peered over her sunglasses. ‘Do you think I am fragile in my old age?’
She was barely fifty. Keith, with Tricia who was her publicist for this tour, and Roger Williamson who worked for her publisher, all seemed to know perilous things were afoot here I mightn’t yet have grasped. ‘No, Trica said, ‘you look fine.’ When she joined us, the scarf and the kerchief were gone to her pocket.
SHE BEGAN IN OPERA twenty-six years before, with the Oxford University Opera Club, Smetana’s The Secret, a chorus part. Within two years she had made it to principal singer, when Morley College called her to play Gluck’s hero, the bereft shepherd Orpheo. She was in mid-twenties. Another dozen roles, and she was onstage at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, the same year as New York first saw her. Since then she performed in forty seven operatic productions, many more if you count the solo concerts.
A few months back, she again played the role in which she was born as a principal singer in ’58, Orpheo ed Euridice. But now she was Dame Janet; now her following was so great that the season would command two theatres, Glyndebourne and the Albert Hall; now the orchestra before her was the London Philharmonic. Producers and music directors were her longtime friends, chorus singers were her acolytes, scene shifters left cheeky notes of praise in the dressing room.
Houses were packed. Again she was the boy Orpheo. In short-cropped wig, cape and leggings, she sang, danced, leapt. She found it difficult to stand through all the curtain calls. The company, in splendid array, gave her a bound letter from Berlioz to Viardot, the chorus gave her Orpheo’s lyre, the standing audiences gave her tumult. She had given to them the operatic performance of a lifetime, and the last of her lifetime. Tears were of admiration and farewell.
SO PRECIOUS AN INSTRUMENT is her voice that Keith was always in managing role, and keen she didn’t talk too much. This was effective for around an hour which, because the breeze was light, took us through a hamper lunch, of which she ate little but nibbled everything tropical, out of respect for things Pacific I supposed, but fealties like this are paid for by later fasts, and she said that if she couldn’t eat then she might as well talk, and she might as well do something. She had in mind taking the helm.
This was Broken Bay, Lion Island to seaward, to our left the inner head, its reef and ledges. She asked me to stand behind her until she had the hang of it. She was short enough that I had clear line of sight over her fluffing hair. As Donizetti’s Mary Stuart she had played to taller Elizabeths, and once ordered a pair of stilted shoes, but she threw them away, and worked on her presence in ways which had nothing to do with altitude.
The Hawkesbury estuary makes directly for the inland here, and we took this heading awhile, the wind over our shoulders. She had the rhythm of the following swell. Her small hands were firm and captainly, they understood the need for an authority in them. We rounded under the northern bluffs. The wind, from ahead now, was nudged about by the skewed cliffs. Roger asked if she wanted him to tell her what she might expect from this. She smiled. ‘I’d rather find out for myself.’ And she’d found something new already. ‘The wind isn’t only from the one direction, is it?’
YORKSHIRE HAS A FIRM PLACE in her understanding of herself, and when she speaks of something close to her heart she uses the accent of the north country. She speaks this way about her childhood and her parents. She seems to use these sounds in the manner of a musical score, to display that her family was of ordinary Yorkshire stock, at the same time as she demonstrates the skill and ambition of such folk, of whom she is a spectacular example. Alongside this is an uneasiness in her, about fame and success, which has to do with the distance between the small town of her birth and the footlights of the international stage. She is truly astonished.
To accommodate the magnitude of her journey she has set in place an intricate system of beliefs. She figures in them merely as the recipient of fortune. The simplest is a recognition of her astrological sign, which is Leo, and maybe accounts for her exorbitant capacity for work. Christianity contributes a good deal more, but is seemed to me that, of the Trinity, she attributes more to the power of God than to anyone, as if patronage like the this could come only from the mightiest source around. The third force, although she might dislike the heresy in putting it this way, the third force is deliciously pagan. She feels it in the theatre, she feels it in the voice, and in the most beautiful of music. When she sings beyond some already established pinnacle, which is always her goal, her heart swells in gratitude, and in awe. She is, as she sees it, a vessel chosen for performances like these, and whoever sequesters her at those times is nothing as puny as a muse. She is possessed then by no less than the life force of artistry itself, as old as the first song, fierce and intolerant of insult, no metaphor for the inexplicable here, but a terrifying and ancient being.
It follows that the gift may not be hers always.
SO SHE IS EVER AT RISK, and I made the mistake, asking if she regretted leaving theatrical opera. Keith sharply caught my eye, Roger and Tricia looked away. ‘I think I’m going fine,’ she said, appraising the course ahead, a generous ambiguity which saved me. She had given a third of her life to staged opera, and would give the next third to concert and recital. I supposed she saw the division between the dramatic stage and the recital platform the way scientists see their