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New Production
Der Fliegende Holländer
Metropolitan Opera House, Mon, December 11, 1989
Debut : Robert Gambill
Der Fliegende Holländer (116)
Richard Wagner | Richard Wagner
- Dutchman
- James Morris
- Senta
- Mechthild Gessendorf
- Erik
- Gary Lakes
- Daland
- Paul Plishka
- Mary
- Judith Christin
- Steersman
- Robert Gambill [Debut]
- Conductor
- James Levine
- Director
- August Everding
- Set Designer
- Hans Schavernoch
- Costume Designer
- Lore Haas
- Lighting Designer
- Gil Wechsler
Der Fliegende Holländer received eleven performances this season.
This production was performed without intermission.
FUNDING:
Production gift of The Lila Acheson and DeWitt Wallace Fund for Lincoln Center and Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. Tedlow
Review 1:
Review of Martin Mayer in Opera Magazine
The Met's arrival in the New Year was bracketed by three productions with the artistic director on the podium, which meant a considerable improvement in the company's attention to detail. All three were a credit to the house, and one-the new Everding production of "Der fliegende Hollander"-was something more.
Everding sets the opera quite late in the 19th century (Daland on arriving at the sail-shop in his living room aggressively flicks a switch to turn on the lights). The Dutchman is master of an enormous steel-hulled ocean liner, its hull towering above Daland's boat. It arrives in the fjord in a spectacular fog, and is revealed with its blood-red anchor dropped. A ladder descends from the flies, and the Dutchman comes halfway down to sing 'Die Frist ist um'. It is in this case James Morris, and the voice bathes us all. We are not dealing here with great intensity-Morris cannot offer that-but the combination of vocal resource and educability gives pleasure and conviction. Everding eases the pressure on him by the conception, for this production centers, not on the awful presence of the condemned wanderer and his enslaved crew, but on the romantic overcommitment of Senta: the Dutchman is more object than actor when you put him in the age of Kaiser Wilhelm II.
If we had not lost Eva Marton, our originally scheduled Senta, the evening might have been considerably more powerful. Marton is nobody's Duse, but the thrill of her duet with Morris might have yielded that suspension of disbelief this piece badly requires. As it was, we had Mechthild Gessendorf, who was a great disappointment both vocally and dramatically. Daland on December 18 was the ever-admirable Paul Plishka, Robert Gambill was a light but effective Steersman, Gary Lakes an earnest and musical, but boring, Erik. James Levine played the work straight through without intermission, as the composer originally intended, and dealt with The Dutchman on a sensuous-surface level, which is fine for those of us who think that's all there is there, less fine for those who have higher views of the opera.
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