Speranza
The Metropolitan Opera returned its controversial production of Puccini's Tosca to the stage with Patricia Racette in the title role and Roberto Alagna singing her artist lover, Cavaradossi.
Whatever else one may say about Luc Bondy's staging, and opera buffs have said a lot since its premiere four years ago, it is still a shocker.
The Bondy version of Puccini's popular opera opened the Met season in 2009 and became an immediate touchstone of Peter Gelb's stewardship as the company's general manager.
The production was excoriated by critics as a travesty and lauded by supporters as visionary.
There was and still is no middle ground.
Opera fans around the world did get a chance to decide for themselves which side they're on when the Met simulcast a performance on Nov. 9 as part of its Live in HD series to some 1,900 theaters in 64 countries.
It probably did not help endear the Bondy staging to the hearts of Met audiences that it replaced a 1985 production by Franco Zeffirelli that was one of the most beloved in the repertory, one whose sets re-created in rich detail three of Rome's familiar tourist destinations.
The contrasts begin as soon as the curtain rises.
During the overture the audience finds itself in what more resembles a vaulted catacomb than the magnificent 17th-century Baroque church of Sant'Andrea della Valle.
And the painting that Cavaradossi is executing looks more like a model for a modern-day perfume ad, complete with one breast bared.
It is certainly not a depiction of Mary Magdalene that would find a place in any church in Christendom.
The second act provides a further jolt.
Instead of the 16th-century Renaissance splendour of the Farnese Palace, the audience finds itself in what would appear to be the basement of a brothel.
Hookers lounge on sofas waiting to service Scarpia while the police chief struts around like Tony Soprano at the Bada Bing.
At least the business of simulated fellatio in the 2009 performances has been excised.
But a bigger concern in the Bondy production than the unconventional sets are some of the stage directions that change the very nature of Puccini's characters.
To give a couple of Act 1 examples.
Tosca slashes the painting of Mary Magdalene that Cavaradossi is working on, destroying it.
And at the end of the act, Scarpia throws his arms around a statue of the Madonna in a lustful, sacrilegious embrace rather than kneel before it in prayer.
When a director takes such liberties in the theatre or the movies, it usually means he doesn't trust the original material.
One has the feeling watching Bondy's Tosca that he either doesn't particularly like Puccini's opera or doesn't think it can stand on its own without some sexy spicing up.
The Met is offering a dozen performances of Tosca this season with Racette splitting the title role with Sondra Radvanovsky and Elisabete Matos and Alagna sharing the tenor's part with Marcello Giordani and Ricardo Tamura.
George Gagnidze sings Scarpia in all of them.
Racette brings plenty of jealous passion to the part of Tosca.
Her voice is expressive but thin in some passages and occasionally has difficulty carrying over the pit.
Her "Vissi d'arte" was acceptable but not exactly moving and she and Riccardo Frizza, who conducted, were not always together.
Alagna makes a dashing Cavaradossi.
His solid tenor is a pleasure, although the very top of the register is a bit of a stretch.
His third-act aria "E lucevan le stele" was the high point of the evening.
Gagnidze's commanding baritone gave a fearsome malevolence to Scarpia.
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