Key Word Search
Multi-Field Search
Browse
Repertory Report
Performers Report
Contacts
Met Opera Website
Die Walküre
Metropolitan Opera House, Tue, February 23, 1954
Debut : Rosalind Elias
Die Walküre (374)
Richard Wagner | Richard Wagner
- Brünnhilde
- Astrid Varnay
- Siegmund
- Set Svanholm
- Sieglinde
- Margaret Harshaw
- Wotan
- Hans Hotter
- Fricka
- Blanche Thebom
- Hunding
- Luben Vichey
- Gerhilde
- Thelma Votipka
- Grimgerde
- Rosalind Elias [Debut]
- Helmwige
- Lucine Amara
- Ortlinde
- Heidi Krall
- Rossweisse
- Sandra Warfield
- Schwertleite
- Jean Madeira
- Siegrune
- Hertha Glaz
- Waltraute
- Mariquita Moll
- Conductor
- Fritz Stiedry
Review 1:
Review of R. A. E. in Musical America
Three principals from the first two performances of "Die Walküre" shifted roles for this third performance, resulting in one of the most distinguished and moving presentations the Metropolitan has given all season. Margaret Harshaw, originally the Brünnhilde, and Astrid Varnay, originally the Sieglinde, switched parts. Hans Hotter, who had sung Hunding, became the Wotan, and Lubomir Vichegonov stepped into the part of Hunding. Set Svanholm was again the Siegmund; Blanche Thebom the Fricka. Among the Valkyries was Rosalind Elias who, as Grimgerde, was making her Metropolitan debut.
The two long scenes between Brünnhilde and Wotan provided the unforgettable moments of the evening, for Miss Varnay and Mr. Hotter brought to their characterizations a compassion and nobility that profoundly stirred the listener. Miss Varnay seemed all youth and eagerness in a brilliantly sung "Ho-yo-to-ho," and the subsequent deepening emotions found a ready response in her every gesture and vocal inflection. The soprano's stage actions have always been intelligently planned, but this time the movement seemed to be impelled from within, projecting a terribly real emotion. Her voice, too, was at its best, under full control, sensitive to the myriad shadings she demanded of it. Mr. Hotter's Wotan, so commanding in presence, must surely be the finest the Metropolitan has seen since the days of the late Friedrich Schorr. His sonorous voice had a few hollow-sounding passages, but otherwise was at its most powerful and authoritative. His farewell to Brünnhilde was at once human and godlike in its grief.
Miss Harshaw's Sieglinde, her first at the Metropolitan, was firm and opulent in tone, sweeping in musical line, meaningful and dignified in gesture. Already excellent, this characterization, like her others, should grow in vocal expressiveness and dramatic finesse with further performances. Mr. Vichegonov filled his assignment very satisfactorily.
In one of his inspired moods, Fritz Stiedry made the score glow and radiate as he let the music's grandeur unfold to its last superb pages.
Search by season: 1953-54
Search by title: Die Walküre,
Met careers
- Fritz Stiedry [Conductor]
- Astrid Varnay [Brünnhilde]
- Set Svanholm [Siegmund]
- Margaret Harshaw [Sieglinde]
- Hans Hotter [Wotan]
- Blanche Thebom [Fricka]
- Luben Vichey [Hunding]
- Thelma Votipka [Gerhilde]
- Rosalind Elias [Grimgerde]
- Lucine Amara [Helmwige]
- Heidi Krall [Ortlinde]
- Sandra Warfield [Rossweisse]
- Jean Madeira [Schwertleite]
- Hertha Glaz [Siegrune]
- Mariquita Moll [Waltraute]