Metropolitan Opera at Lincoln Center - Balcony F116 ($52.50).
Story. See previous post.
Conductor - Robin Ticciati; Gretel - Aleksandra Kurzak, Hansel - Alice Coote, Gertrude - Michaela Martens, Peter - Dwayne Croft, The Sandman - Jennifer Johnson Cano, The Dew Fairy - Ashley Emerson, The Witch - Robert Brubaker.
We attended this opera with our children and their spouses. Everyone is quite up to it, except for Joe whose love of Broadway musicals doesn't seem to extend to operas. H&G isn't my first choice as an introductory opera (that would be Carmen, La Traviata, or one of Puccini's), but the other available choices are Faust and La Fille du Regiment. Joe and Jess went up to New York earlier that day (they would stay the night there); Anne, Ellie and Kuau drove up at around 4 pm and had dinner in the area; and I took the 5:15 pm train from Metropark and met up with the five of them at the Opera House. I stayed behind to ensure Joe and Jess's dog Ruby was okay; she had just spent the prior night at a Vet Emergency Hospital after ingesting two bars of dark chocolate, which is evidently quite toxic to dogs.
We saw H&G put out by New York City Opera in 2006. Those were my early concert blogging days (it was number 43 or so out of the two hundred plus I have done so far), so I look back at my review with a certain degree of amusement. Unfortunately, this review isn't going to be that much more insightful than the one I wrote five years ago.
First the sets. One would assume the sets put out by the Met will be quite a bit more elaborate than those by NYCO. It is debatable in this case. The Playbill provides an interesting insight into the three kitchens designed for the three acts. Act 1 happens in a D.H. Lawrence-inspired kitchen setting, Act 2 in a German Expressionist one, and Act 3 is in a Theater of the Absurd. Good on paper, and brilliant perhaps to someone into this sort of stuff, but for someone like myself, nothing of the sort.
This is my assessment. Act 1 takes place in a kitchen, of unknown period. Both the simplicity and the grayness can be attributed to the family's being poor and don't need to have anything to do with D.H. Lawrence. (Since I don't know much about the subject, I did a web search of his paintings, and still have no idea how this kitchen relates to him.) Act 2 is basically a long dining table inside a larger room. There are trees that move, I assume they represent ghouls Hansel and Gretel encounter. The 14 angels are represented by overweight cooks who would strike fear in anyone who sees them. And what is the fish doing there? Perhaps these are elements of German Expressionism? The only thing absurd about Act 3 is the food fight that starts with the Witch's head pushed into a pie and his face is all covered with icing afterwards. To me resorting to physical comedy of this sort smacks more of desperation than genius.
The music is generally easy to understand. While Humperdinck adopted many of his mentor Wagner's techniques, it is much easier to trace how his themes are developed as the Opera unfolds. The overture was crisp and pleasant, but there are times the music got a bit muddled, which is a bit surprising given that it doesn't sound that complicated. Joe was marveling at how clear the singing sounded without the aid of a sound system, and in general that is quite true: the singing comes across very well. It is interesting when the singers are in front of a curtain, their voices don't carry too well, probably because the curtain material doesn't resonate well.
We again have a woman singing the role of a young Hansel. I guess it doesn't matter who is singing which part, and since Hansel is a young boy, his voice is probably in the treble range anyway. We heard Alice Coote in Elijah before; she didn't leave a lasting impression then, and she didn't leave one today either. To confuse the audience further, a man played the witch dressed in woman's gear. The advantage is that it allowed the choreographer to put in a few crude comic moments (yes, I used the word "crude.")
I am a bit surprised at how negative I end up being with this performance. Perhaps it is due to my high expectations going in: this is the Met, so it has to be much better than what I remember of the NYCO. Another reason for disappointment is one would think after reading the Playbill that this will be an impressive opera at many different levels. Instead I find it wanting at many different levels.
The New York Times review is very enthusiastic. The performance reviewed had a different singer playing Hansel. I attribute the enthusiasm at least partially to a charitable holiday spirit. Who wants to say "There is no Santa Claus" this time of the year? The reviewer also pointed out that the 28-year old conductor Ticciati is one of the youngest to debut at the Met.
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