From the first complete production of the
Ring, at the
Bayreuth Festspielhaus in 1876, it was established that the Rhinemaidens should be depicted in conventional human form, rather than as mermaids or with other supernatural features, notwithstanding Alberich's insult to Wellgunde: "Frigid bony fish!" (
Kalter, grätiger Fisch!). The staging of their scenes has always been a test of ingenuity and imagination, since Wagner's stage directions include much swimming and diving and other aquatic gymnastics. Traditionally, therefore, much use has been made of backdrops and lighting to achieve the necessary watery effects. Until the
Second World War, under the influence of
Cosima Wagner and her (and Wagner's) son
Siegfried, a policy of "stifling conservatism" was applied to Bayreuth stagings of the
Ring operas. Although there had been some innovation in productions staged elsewhere, it was not until the postwar revival of the Festival in 1951 that there were any significant changes in Bayreuth's presentation of the
Ring operas. Since 1976, in particular, innovation at the Festival and elsewhere has been substantial and imaginative. One innovation which Cosima did eventually approve was the replacement of the wheeled stands with giant, invisible "fishing rods" on which the Rhinemaidens were dangled. Wires continued to be used in the Bayreuth productions of Siegfried Wagner and, later, those of his widow
Winifred, who ran the Bayreuth Festival until the end of the Second World War. Similar techniques have been used in more modern productions. In the 1996 Lyric Opera of
Chicago Ring cycle, repeated in 2004–05, the Rhinemaidens were suspended on
bungee cords anchored in the
fly space above the stage, enabling them to dive up and down, as intended by Wagner. The Rhinemaidens were played on-stage by gymnasts, mouthing words sung by singers standing in a corner of the stage. The 1951 Festival production, by Siegfried's and Winifred's son
Wieland, broke with tradition and featured an austere staging which replaced scenery and props with skilful lighting effects. The Rhinemaidens, along with all the other characters, were plainly dressed in simple robes, and sang their roles without histrionics. Thus the music and the words became the main focus of attention. The innovative
centenary Bayreuth Ring, directed by
Patrice Chéreau, did away altogether with the underwater concept by setting the Rhinemaiden scenes in the lee of a large hydro-electric dam, as part of a 19th-century
Industrial Revolution setting for the operas. For the scene with Siegfried in
Götterdämmerung, Chéreau altered the perpetual youth aspect of the Rhine Maidens by depicting them as "no longer young girls merrily disporting themselves; they have become tired, grey, careworn, and ungainly". Since this production "the assumption of unrestricted interpretive license has become the norm". (centre) as Woglinde. She was the first of many significant singers to play one of the Rhinemaidens.
Peter Hall directed the Bayreuth
Ring after Chéreau. His version, staged 1983–86, portrayed the natural innocence of the Rhinemaidens in the simplest of ways; they were naked.
Keith Warner adapted this feature in his
Ring production for the
Royal Opera House Covent Garden, first staged 2004–06. A Covent Garden spokesman explained "The maidens are children of innocence, a vision of nature – and as soon as someone appears they hastily throw on some clothes to protect their modesty." While Warner relies on lighting to achieve an underwater effect, Hall used a
Pepper's ghost illusion: mirrors at a 45° angle made the Rhinemaidens appear to swim vertically when the performers were in fact swimming horizontally in a shallow basin. Although the roles of the Rhinemaidens are relatively small, they have been sung by notable singers better known for performing major roles in Wagnerian and other repertoire. The first person to sing the part of Woglinde in full was
Lilli Lehmann at Bayreuth in 1876. In 1951, when the Bayreuth Festival re-opened after the Second World War, the same part was taken by
Elisabeth Schwarzkopf. Other Bayreuth Rhinemaidens include
Helga Dernesch who sang Wellgunde there between 1965 and 1967.
Lotte Lehmann played Wellgunde at the
Hamburg State Opera between 1912 and 1914 and the
Vienna State Opera in 1916. Recorded Rhinemaidens have included
Sena Jurinac for
Furtwängler and
RAI,
Lucia Popp and
Gwyneth Jones for
Georg Solti, and
Helen Donath and
Edda Moser for
Karajan. == See also ==