[Met Performance] CID:319210



Turandot
Metropolitan Opera House, Fri, January 27, 1995

Debut : Daniel Kucan, Jason Kuschner




Turandot (170)
Giacomo Puccini | Giuseppe Adami/Renato Simoni
Turandot
Gwyneth Jones

Calàf
Lando Bartolini

Liù
Teresa Stratas

Timur
Paul Plishka

Ping
Zheng Zhou

Pang
Tony Stevenson

Pong
Philip Creech

Emperor Altoum
Charles Anthony

Mandarin
Kevin Short

Maid
Mary Meyers

Maid
Annette Spann-Lewis

Prince of Persia
Daniel Kucan [Debut]

Executioner
Jason Kuschner [Debut]

Mask
Marcus Bugler

Mask
Ricardo Costa

Mask
Joseph Fritz

Temptress
Linda Gelinas

Temptress
Suzanne Laurence

Temptress
Deanne Lay

Temptress
Rachel Schuette


Conductor
Nello Santi


Production/Set Designer
Franco Zeffirelli

Costume Designer
Dada Saligeri

Costume Designer
Anna Anni

Lighting Designer
Gil Wechsler

Choreographer
Chiang Ching

Stage Director
David Kneuss





Turandot received ten performances this season.

Review 1:

Review of Tim Page in Newsday

Glorious Excess of 'Turandot'

CONFESSION TIME: I rather like Franco Zeffirelli's big, bloated, Cinerama staging of Puccini's "Turandot." The opera lends itself to such spectacle - indeed, gives itself whole-heartedly - and if you're going to stage an opera where the staging itself will likely be the star, it might as well be "Turandot."

Puccini's final work returned to the Metropolitan Opera repertory on Friday night with many of the same players from its last go-round in 1992. Gwyneth Jones, of the huge voice and magisterial presence, was the icy Princess Turandot. Teresa Stratas, of the mercurial, hummingbird heart intensity and uncanny powers of projection, was again Liu the slave girl. New to the opera (at the Met, in any case) was Lando Bartolini, as Calaf, the impulsive suitor.

Friday's performance offered a certain paradox. Bartolini was certainly the most "perfect" singer in the cast. He inevitably sings in tune, his voice has power and a certain clarion luster. And yet his performance struck this listener as loud, brutish and absolutely uninteresting - a Calaf without a thought in his head.

Both Jones and Stratas have vocal flaws that should be obvious to the most casual observer. It is too simple to say that these don't "matter" - of course they do, and there were some painful moments on Friday. But I'll happily swap empty canary-twitter for the sort of real artistry that these two remarkable (and remarkably different) singing actresses bring to their work. Jones 'was" Turandot - haughty, imperious and, underneath it all, terrified to her soul. Stratas was Liu - devoted, desperate and fluttering, but on wings of steel.

Filling out the cast were Paul Plishka (his usual estimable self as Timur), Charles Anthony (a fine Emperor) and Zheng Zhou, Tony Stevenson and Philip Creech as Ping, Pang and Pong. Nello Santi led the Met orchestra and chorus with stylistic authority and sensitivity to his singers. And, again, if you can still appreciate joyful, excessive, almost Trump-ian vulgarity, Zeffirelli's "Turandot" is quite a show.



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