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By
Norman Lebrecht, Norman Lebrecht

Opinion

Provocative but profound

October 7, 2011 09:22
3 min read

It is always a good sign when a new opera divides opinion straight down the middle. Opera is an inflammatory art, an assault on all the senses. If some critics emerge from it crying "masterpiece" and others are sulphurous with outrage, you can be pretty sure that the staging is brilliant and the work is here to stay.

Few operas in recent years have proved so divisive as Myczieslaw Weinberg's The
Passenger, written in 1968 from a book by an Auschwitz survivor, suppressed by the Soviets and premiered only last year at the Bregenz Festival by the British director, David Pountney, before transferring this month to the English National Opera.

It is, strikingly, the first opera to be set in the Auschwitz death camp. That, for many people, is reason enough to reject it unseen – the more so when the Holocaust is so reduced to cliché that one Guardian columnistm at the premiere, Deborah Orr, brazenly asked why The Passenger was not staged through a prism of Israel-Palestine.

Others, like the editors of this paper and Gramophone magazine were deterred by music that they found either abrasive or unfit for purpose, too trivial for its terrible subject. Analogies were drawn with other Holocaust exploitations – with Sophie's Choice and with Bernhard Schlink's deeply ambivalent fiction of a camp guard's guilt, The Reader, in the film of which Kate Winslet was too lovely to dislike. All are valid criticisms, every one. Yet what I saw at ENO was a near-masterpiece and I'll try to explain why.