L.A. Opera scooped by 1930 âRingâ at the Shrine
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Los Angelesâ first âRingâ was a triumph. So was its second. As it turns out, for all its trumpeting about the need for every major city to see Wagnerâs influential tetraology, Los Angeles Opera wasnât the first to show it to L.A. after all. John Suppe, a professor of geosciences at Princeton and National Taiwan University, has e-mailed to say that his parents attended a âRingâ cycle at Shrine Auditorium in 1930. And sure enough, clips from The Times back him up.
In March 1930, the German Opera Company brought a full production of the âRingâ to L.A., and on the nights in between âDas Rheingold,â âDie WalkĂźre,â âSiegfriedâ and âGĂśtterdämmerung,â the touring Germans presented Wagnerâs âThe Flying Dutchmanâ and âTristan und Isolde,â as well as what The Times described as a great rarity -- Mozartâs âDon Juan,â which we now know as âDon Giovanni.â
According to The Times clips, a local impresario, L. E. Behymer had attempted as early as 1912 to bring Bayreuthâs âRingâ production to L.A., but World War I made that impossible, and it wasnât until 1930 that he finally succeeded in getting a âRingâ here. The touring company arrived in a 14-car train, with the dragon in âSiegfriedâ ârequiring the better portion of a single car.â Among the companyâs âingenious contrivancesâ was a smoke-and-cloud machine.
Ticket sales for some performances suffered because of rain, but âGĂśtterdämmerungâ sold out the huge Shrine (which had a capacity of 6,700 back then). And although at the end of her career, Johanna Gadski -- a noted German soprano who had emigrated to the U.S. and was a regular at the Metropolitan Opera before the War -- seemed to have made a big impression as BrĂźnnhilde.
L.A. Opera still gets bragging rights for first home-grown production of the âRingâ and probably for the first complete âRing.â The first act of the Shrineâs âGĂśtterdämmerungâ was said to have lasted âa full hour and a half.â In fact, the act lasts at least two hours, so the opera may well have been cut by as much as 25%.
-- Mark Swed
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Shrine Auditorium.