[Met Performance] CID:186030



La Bohème
Metropolitan Opera House, Fri, October 28, 1960

Debut : Lorenzo Testi, Charles Cooke, Ralph Herbert




La Bohème (578)
Giacomo Puccini | Luigi Illica/Giuseppe Giacosa
Mimì
Lucine Amara

Rodolfo
Richard Tucker

Musetta
Laurel Hurley

Marcello
Lorenzo Testi [Debut]

Schaunard
Roald Reitan

Colline
Cesare Siepi

Benoit
Gerhard Pechner

Alcindoro
Norman Kelley

Parpignol
Charles Cooke [Debut]

Sergeant
Carlo Tomanelli

Officer
Edward Ghazal


Conductor
Thomas Schippers


Director
Joseph L. Mankiewicz

Designer
Rolf Gérard

Stage Director
Ralph Herbert [Debut]





La Bohème received twenty-one performances this season.

Review 1:

Review of Raymond Ericson in The New York Times

'La Bohème' Returns

The bustling, slightly raucous figure in the orchestra that sends up the curtain on a freezing poet and painter in "La Bohème" was heard once again at the Metropolitan Opera House last night. Puccini's popular opera, which had stayed in the company's repertory season in and season out since 1901, was dropped last year. It is back, and a welcome return it is. The Metropolitan's production of "Bohème" is one of its prizes, and it wears exceedingly well. Joseph L. Mankiewicz' detailed and perceptive stage direction, now being tended by Ralph Herbert, has not lost any of its sense of intimacy in the roomy, but evocative, sets of Rolf Gerard.

Thomas Schippers again was in the orchestra pit. He has shown a particular affection and understanding of this score since his tenure with the New York City Opera, before he went to the Metropolitan. Now, at the ripe age of 30, he is virtually a master of it. His performance combines finesse and sentiment. He keeps the sound of the orchestra beautifully transparent, while he lets the Puccinian melodies have their sweet way. He both controls and supports the singers. In particular, the second act, with its shift in focus from chorus to individual, is remarkable in its dramatic and musical continuity.

There were other familiar elements in the production, no less pleasurable for their being just that. Lucine Amara, as Mimi, sang with the same tonal purity and accuracy of pitch that she has in the past, but her characterization, vocally and dramatically, has grown more touching, more tender and delicate. Richard Tucker, as Rodolfo sang with the suavity and brilliance that make him one of the outstanding operatic tenors of our time. Cesare Siepi lavished his superb bass voice on the part of Colline. (How he must love this part, after singing so many dignified high priests and kings - his flying leap, onto the bed in the first act was a wonder to behold.) Laurel Hurley's Musetta was flamboyant, a little bit cheap (intentionally so), and warmly human.

Lorenzo Testi, a young Italian baritone, made his debut with the company last night in the role of Marcello. His assurance and ease suggested that he is no stranger to the part, and he managed to enter wholeheartedly into the Bohemians' horseplay, while keeping an eye cocked in the direction of the conductor. His voice, of medium size, sounded fresh and sturdy. It will take a role with more vocal hazards, however, to determine his final value to the company.

New to the role of Schaunard was American baritone Roald Reitan. Usually heard in smaller parts at the Metropolitan, he held his own easily with his colleagues. There were sharply vivid character vignettes from Gerhard Pechner, a familiar Benoit, and from Norman Kelley, an unfamiliar Alcindoro. Other brief roles were in the capable hands of Charles Cooke (Parpignol), Carlo Tomanelli (A Sargeant), and Edward Ghazal (A Customs Officer),



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