[Met Performance] CID:120450



Tannhäuser
Metropolitan Opera House, Mon, January 25, 1937




Tannhäuser (294)
Richard Wagner | Richard Wagner
Tannhäuser
Paul Althouse

Elisabeth
Lotte Lehmann

Wolfram
Richard Bonelli

Venus
Kerstin Thorborg

Hermann
Ludwig Hofmann

Walther
Hans Clemens

Heinrich
Max Altglass

Biterolf
Arnold Gabor

Reinmar
James Wolfe

Shepherd
Stella Andreva

Dance
Rabana Hasburgh

Dance
Kathryn Mullowny

Dance
Daphne Vane

Dance
Elise Reiman

Dance
Charles Laskey


Conductor
Maurice Abravanel


Director
Leopold Sachse

Set Designer
Hans Kautsky

Costume Designer
Mathilde Castel-Bert

Choreographer
George Balanchine





Tannhäuser received two performances this season.

Review 1:

Review of W. J. Henderson in the Sun

Mr. Abravanel had his own ideas about tempi and in that portion of the overture preceding the entrance of the Venusberg music even confused the orchestra so that for a few brief instants things were at sixes and sevens. And several times in later parts of the opera, notably in the finales of the first and second acts, he betrayed a fondness for lingering sweetness long drawn out. On the other hand, Mr. Sachse, the stage manager, had improved the actions of the chorus in the hall of song and had compassion on those who have suffered from the impenetrable gloom in which the stage is sometimes buried.

Mme. Lotte Lehmann was the Elizabeth, noble, patrician in bearing, but radiating gracious and tender womanhood, and singing the music with profound feeling. The music allotted to Elizabeth is so beautiful and so melting in its gentle pathos -- excepting, of course, the ebullient "Dich theure Halle," that even an icily faultless singer, offering us nothing but a perfectly carved statue, gains some credit, but a singer who can make every phrase throb with emotion, as Mme. Lehmann can, gives us a living woman, the woman of Wagner's imagination.

Mme. Lehmann's voice is sometimes taxed by the music and there were spots in which her phrasing was at least questionable, but the significance or her singing was always dramatic and her every utterance was eloquent. She rose to the full measure of the lovely duet with Tannhäuser in the second act and dominated the scene in the closing ensemble. She was vociferously applauded when she took her individual call after the curtain.

Photograph of Kerstin Thorborg as Venus in Tannhäuser.



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