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Metropolitan Opera Premiere, New Production
Rusalka
Metropolitan Opera House, Thu, November 11, 1993
Debut : Kathryn Krasovec, Sylvia Strahammer
Rusalka (1)
Antonín Dvorák | Jaroslav Kvapil
- Rusalka
- Gabriela Benacková
- Prince
- Neil Rosenshein
- Princess
- Janis Martin
- Jezibaba
- Dolora Zajick
- Gnome
- Sergei Koptchak
- Kitchen Boy
- Wendy White
- Gamekeeper
- James Courtney
- First Sprite
- Korliss Uecker
- Second Sprite
- Kathryn Krasovec [Debut]
- Third Sprite
- Kitt Reuter-Foss
- Hunter
- Christopher Schaldenbrand
- Conductor
- John Fiore
- Production
- Otto Schenk
- Set Designer
- Günther Schneider-Siemssen
- Costume Designer
- Sylvia Strahammer [Debut]
- Lighting Designer
- Gil Wechsler
- Choreographer
- Carmen De Lavallade
Rusalka received nine performances this season.
FUNDING:
Production a gift of Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels Foundation
Review 1:
Review of John W. Freeman in Opera News
The season's next Met first, "Rusalka," also marked the company debut of its composer, Antonín Dvorák, though the work is a staple in his Czech homeland. No one familiar with the symphonies or Slavonic Dances needs to be told that Dvorák had both lyricism and rhythmic energy to spare, but in "Rusalka" he relied much more on the former than the latter. The score tends to lie still in the water unless stirred along by a conductor more determined than John Fiore evidently was to get it moving. The gloriously intoned but rather inert title characterization of Gabriela Benacková may have held him back. Neil Rosenshein, too light and lyric a tenor for the Prince, came into his own only in the lovely final scene. Bass Sergei Koptchak, on the other hand, was a pillar of strength as the Water Gnome, a father no less harsh, but considerably warmer, than Lina's in "Stiffelio."
As a stage production, designed by Gunther Schneider-Siemssen (costumes: Sylvia Strahammer) and staged by Schenk, "Rusalka" emerged a veritable paean to romanticism. It might have helped to reserve for Act II the autumnal look of the forest in Act I, but the lake had an alluring shimmer sorely missed in Act III, where the pond appeared little more than a drainage ditch - given the paramount importance of water in this story, a serious oversight. The down-to-earth rustics (the Gamekeeper and his nephew, the Kitchen Boy) were played to a fare-thee-well by James Courtney and the terminally terrified Wendy White. Their counterpart in the natural/supernatural realm, Dolora Zajick as the witch Jezibaba, had a romp, gloriously in her element. Janis Martin, on the other hand, rated well at the thankless task of personifying the inhuman side of humanity as the Foreign Princess, all coldness, artifice and disdain.
Photograph of Gabriela Benackova as the title role in Rusalka by Winnie Klotz/Metropolitan Opera.
Search by season: 1993-94
Search by title: Rusalka,
Met careers
- John Fiore [Conductor]
- Gabriela Benacková [Rusalka]
- Neil Rosenshein [Prince]
- Janis Martin [Princess]
- Dolora Zajick [Jezibaba]
- Sergei Koptchak [Gnome]
- Wendy White [Kitchen Boy]
- James Courtney [Gamekeeper]
- Korliss Uecker [First Sprite]
- Kathryn Krasovec [Second Sprite]
- Kitt Reuter-Foss [Third Sprite]
- Christopher Schaldenbrand [Hunter]
- Otto Schenk [Production]
- Carmen De Lavallade [Choreographer]
- Günther Schneider-Siemssen [Set Designer]
- Sylvia Strahammer [Costume Designer]
- Gil Wechsler [Lighting Designer]
- Antonín Dvorák [Composer]