Streamed, recorded at Leeds Playhouse
The expressive force of singer Wallis Giunta and dancer Shelley Eva Haden evoked today’s US in a spirited production of Brecht and Weill’s sung ballet
It’s not simply the cardinal sins of Roman Catholic theology that are invoked in Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht’s sung ballet, their last collaboration. This pungent 35-minute work is rarely given its full title – Die sieben Todsünden der Kleinbürger, The Seven Deadly Sins of the Petty Bourgeoisie, but it’s the one that underlines Brecht’s Marxist approach. Sloth, Pride, Anger, Gluttony, Lust, Greed and Envy are ordered to create a narrative trajectory set in 1930s America, essentially an attack on capitalism and the hypocrisy of bourgeois values.
The twin-sister protagonists – Anna I portrayed by a singer and Anna II by a dancer, representing two sides of the same person – are sent away by their family to earn money to build them all a home. Over seven years, the sisters move through seven cities, one sin for each. In this spirited new Opera North production, social-distancing – so neatly managed as to be quickly forgotten – reinforces the loneliness of the Annas’ trials. And, thanks in part to Michael Feingold’s 1992 translation delineating both the exploited and the exploitative, the pairing of the lows of the Depression with the lavish highs of Hollywood meant an often uncanny resonance with contemporary American ills.