Speranza
Werther {35} Metropolitan Opera House: 10/7/1978.
(Debuts: Ann Sessions,
Julius Rudel
Review)
Metropolitan Opera House
October 7,
1978
WERTHER {35}
Massenet-É. Blau/Milliet/G.
Hartmann
Werther.................Plácido
Domingo
Charlotte...............Elena
Obraztsova
Albert..................Dominic
Cossa
Sophie..................Betsy Norden
Bailiff.................Italo
Tajo
Schmidt.................Charles
Anthony
Johann..................Andrij
Dobriansky
Käthchen................Ann Sessions
[Debut]
Brühlmann...............Cecil
Baker
Conductor...............Julius Rudel
[Debut]
Production..............Paul-Emile Deiber
Stage
Director..........Fabrizio Melano
Designer................Rudolf
Heinrich
Lighting designer.......Gil Wechsler
Werther received ten
performances this season.
Photograph of Elena Obraztsova as Charlotte in
Werther by Winnie Klotz/Metropolitan Opera.
Review of George Jellinek for
the Times News Service (Telegraphed)
New York -- Massenet's "Werther,"
the quintessentially French operatic reworking of Goethe's famous novels
returned to the Metropolitan Opera on Saturday.
It had been absent since the
1971-72 season.
Julius Rudel, long-time general director of the New York City
Opera company, made his Met debut and all the principal singers were heard in
their roles here for the first time.
Aside from emphasizing the good
relationship between New York's two major opera companies, the invitation
extended to Rudel was a wise decision - clearly endorsed by the warm ovation
which greeted his appearance in the pit.
For the past many years he has proved
his affinity for French opera not only on stage, but also in an impressive list
of major recordings.
Taking over Werther on short notice to replace the
indisposed Richard Bonynge, Rudel controlled the stage action with the skill of
the thoroughly experienced craftsman he is.
He paced the music with clarity and
a thorough understanding of the restraint with which Massenet counterbalanced
the over-sentimentality of his literary source, but whipped up plenty of
excitement for the passionate climaxes.
That elusive French aura,
however, was not always evident in the singing.
Elena Oeraztsova and Placido
Domingo made a handsome pair singing, acted well and sang with opulence, but
neither artist is really at home in Massenet's world.
Obraztsova's style
does not adapt easily to Charlotte's self-effacingly subtle music in the first
two acts, where so much depends on verbal emphasis and Gallic smoothness of
phrasing.
Domingo excelled in all the big moments, particularly in the
"desolation" of the second act, but he lacks the "voix mixte" technique which
would enable him to move imperceptibly from chest to head voice.
Not
surprisingly both artists did their best singing in the passionate final
scenes.
In the role of Sophie, Betsy Norden was a delight to hear and to
behold.
And Dominic Cossa coped competently with the thankless role of Albert,
the husband saved from cuckoldry only by the conventions of the age. There is
not much tone in Italo Tajo's singing these days, but he remains a lively stage
figure.
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