[Met Performance] CID:333207



Der Rosenkavalier
Metropolitan Opera House, Sat, December 2, 2000 Matinee


Debut : April Haines




Der Rosenkavalier (355)
Richard Strauss | Hugo von Hofmannsthal
Octavian
Susanne Mentzer

Princess von Werdenberg (Marschallin)
Cheryl Studer

Baron Ochs
Peter Rose

Sophie
Elizabeth Norberg-Schulz

Faninal
Alan Opie

Annina
Wendy White

Valzacchi
Anthony Laciura

Italian Singer
Marcelo Álvarez

Marianne
Claudia Waite

Mahomet
Remy Rovelli

Princess' Major-domo
Jonathan Green

Orphan
Beverly Withers

Orphan
Sandra Bush

Orphan
Lee Hamilton

Milliner
Sara Wiedt

Animal Vendor
John Hanriot

Hairdresser
Marcus Bugler

Notary
James Courtney

Leopold
Gregory Lorenz

Lackey
David Frye

Lackey
David Asch

Lackey
Kurt Phinney

Lackey
Donald Peck

Faninal's Major-domo
Mark Schowalter

Innkeeper
Jonathan Welch

Police Commissioner
Jeffrey Wells

Widow
April Haines [Debut]


Conductor
Jiri Kout







Review 1:

Martin Bernheimer in the Financial Times (UK)

The big news about the latest "Rosenkavalier" was supposed to involve the debut of Vesselina Kasarova, who reneged on an earlier engagement as Rosina but had promised to make amends with Octavian. She cancelled again. On December 2 the ersatz-protagonist was Susanne Mentzer. For all her intelligence and cocky-Cherubino charm, she seemed miscast, her mezzo-soprano a shade too light and a size too small. Attention thus shifted to the Marschallin of Cheryl Studer, returning to the house after a long absence and much-publicised spate of vocal problems. Although she mustered some telling histrionic details and pretty sounds at mid-range, she encountered pitch problems in ascending passages and seemed self-consciously girlish when one most wanted a sense of dignified repose.

With Elizabeth Norberg-Schulz as a shrill mini-Sophie and Alan Opie as a standard-brand Faninal, the performance was elegantly, even eloquently dominated by the British bass Peter Rose, undertaking his first and only Ochs here (the role was otherwise monopolised by Eric Halfvarson). Rose ignored all the awful buffo traditions and played the country baron as a man of authoritative bluster and affecting bonhomie. He really sang the score, from easy top to resonant bottom, without Sprechstimme distortions, and even mustered a good semblance of Viennese dialect. It was a promising achievement, hardly blemished by a disastrous faux-bald wig in the last act. Marcelo Alvarez brought melting lyricism to the aria of the Italian tenor. Jiri Kout conducted frenetically.

The ultra-conventional production was originally staged 31 years ago by Nathaniel Merrill. Robert O'Hearn's intentionally vulgar design for the nouveau-riche Faninal's foyer still draws gasps of approval and rude applause when the curtain rises on Act Two.



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