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Don Giovanni
Metropolitan Opera House, Sat, March 25, 1961
Don Giovanni (226)
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart | Lorenzo Da Ponte
- Don Giovanni
- George London
- Donna Anna
- Leontyne Price
- Don Ottavio
- Charles Anthony
- Donna Elvira
- Mary Curtis-Verna
- Leporello
- Ezio Flagello
- Zerlina
- Laurel Hurley
- Masetto
- Theodor Uppman
- Commendatore
- Bonaldo Giaiotti
- Conductor
- Karl Böhm
Review 1:
Review in TIME magazine of 4/7/61.
Leontyne's Latest
Donna Anna in Mozart's Don Giovanni is a bit of a bore, and audiences can understand why the Don is trying to get away from her. She sings matchlessly beautiful music, but the range of her emotions is narrow: fury at her seducer, with some tenderness for her fiancé. Singing the part for the first time at the Metropolitan Opera last week Soprano Leontyne Price brought to Anna a vitality that she rarely had before, gave as fine a reading of the role as present-day operagoers are likely to hear and see. As in her previous appearances in this triumphant debut season - Leonora in "Il Trovatore," Aida, Cio-Cio-San in "Butterfly" - Soprano Price was setting new standards by which to judge some of opera's classic rôles.
Last weeks production - four seasons old but still one of the handsomest spectacles the Met has to offer - was bolstered by a generally strong cast. But Soprano Price was the undisputed star. Throughout the long evening she demonstrated again her remarkable ability to compel an audience to belief through sheer beauty of tone; from the rage of Act l's "Or sai chi l'onore" to the tenderness of the second act's "Non mi dir," she moved securely and with absolute conviction. Her two great arias stopped the opera cold in two of the most spontaneous ovations of the season.
Later in the week, completing the cycle of new rôles for the season, Soprano Price gave a touching performance of the less demanding part of Liù in "Turandot." If anybody was unhappy about her success it was the Manhattan ticket brokers: obtaining Price tickets these days, they report, is about like wangling a reserved seat beside the first astronaut.
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