Giacomo Puccini

May 10, 2008

The 1893 Turin Manon Lescaut Will Grab Your Attention (And Your Butt. Teddy Tahu Rhodes, Especially)

Grabbybutt

Riccardo Chailly is bangin' the 1893 complete version of the Turin premiere of Manon Lescaut, at Leipziger Opernhaus. That version, unheard for the last 115 years, comes back to life thanks to Chailly and director Giancarlo del Monaco.

In the cast, many OC regulars, from the hawt Francesca Patané and the meaty Teddy Tahu Rhodes to the unwilling participant in the Roberto Alagna-manufactured drama at la Scala, Antonello Palombi.

Here's the whole playbill:

Conductor: Riccardo Chailly
Production: Giancarlo del Monaco
Stage design: Johannes Leiacker
Costumes: Birgit Wentsch
Choir director: Sören Eckhoff
Oper Leipzig Choir
Gewandhaus Orchestra

The Cast

Manon Lescaut: Sondra Radvanowski/Francesca Patané
Sergeant Lescaut: Teddy T. Rhodes
Chevalier Des Grieux: Aleksandrs Antonenko/Antonello Palombi
Geronte de Ravoir: James Moellenhoff

Dance_butt

Makes one want to grab some tickets and get one's butts over to Leipzig.

Grabby

April 03, 2008

Le Fanciulle Daniela & Janice: Dessì And Baird Ride The Unfortunately Named Dick Johnson

Fanciulla_1

Bless Teatro Opera di Roma, one of the few remaining opera houses (In Italy, and not just there) that still insist on casting singers who can actually sing -- and big propsicles to GM Francesco Ernani who still takes the time to cast singers who can sing.

Fanciulla_2

One week from now -- and OC is sorry she'll still be in New York -- Rome will be taken by storm by La Fanciulla del West with Daniela "SuperDany" Dessì (and Janice Baird, Our Queen Janice recently discovered by Met audiences in that emergency-laden Tristan and now back in Rome after her very successful Wozzeck there) as Minnie, Fabio Armiliato as the (eponymous) Dick Johnson, directed by Giancarlo Del Monaco and conducted by Gianluigi Gelmetti. 

Fanciulla_3

Love Armiliato's now-thicker beard and Gelmetti's Hitchockian silhouette.

Fanciulla_4

March 30, 2008

La Bohème At Metropolitan Opera: Came for Luisotti, Stayed for Frengo, Gheorghiu Was, Um, There, Too

One of the more detached Bohèmes that OC has been to, with every eye in the house bone dry and tissues unused by the time Ramón Vargas uttered, "Che vuol dire quell'andare e venire...", though not all fault of the tenor. The chemistry between the Ceauşescu-ian ice princess and our Mexican lyric-of-many-scarves was not terribly convincing, and Gheorghiu was detached, while Vargas remained aloof when scenes called for them to converge. Both singers acted independently well enough, but a sense of platonic buddies pervaded their scenes together. Gheorgs couldn't wait for her death scene to be over, squirming uncomfortably and stroking her jaw, while Teh Fargster kept hovering over her and kept like 3-inches away at all times.

The best performance was by Italian Maestro Nicola Luisotti, who guided the tipsy, capsizable ship of Puccini's La Bohème to the safe shores. Angela Gheorghiu was at the helm of S.S. Unprepared, struggling to match obvious and egregious orchestral cues, at one point transposing notes at the end of a passage that was waiting for her measures ahead, and giving Maestro Luisotti the best workout he's had in years. Things got so precarious at one moment that Luisotti abandoned his orchestra and began furiously guiding the short-of-sight Gheorghiu through one of her simpler, later act songs with gigantic and florid flutters of his hand, matching her swells with the ebbs of the orchestra. Gheorghiu hasn't been doing her homework, and bombed the oral quiz. Vargas was more or less on point and the house clearly loves him. His Che gelida manina! wasn't anywhere close to perfection, but he received a wall of spontaneous bravi from the crowds, despite the fact that his voice at the higher notes was pinched, and he strangled a passage.

When Gheorgs wasn't singing to the beat of her own drummer that mysteriously thumped away inside her own head, or searching for the proper facial expression instead of her dependable fallback knotted brows, or beginning her scenes in a timid, inaudible voice that grew in confidence and volume as the act gelled, what did emit from her was a gorgeous, tender, well controlled voice. Act I was a mess for her entrances, while Act III had her struggling once again against the orchesetra. More insulting than her sloppiness was the male leader of the local Gheorghiu fan club, who screamed encouragement from the Family Circle at the end of an early aria "BRAVO". FAIL! U FAIL @ LIFE!

The perfect sound coaxed by Maestro Luisotti from the Metropolitan Orchestra was at moments heavenly. His mastery of Puccini's well-known score was a stellar interpretation, his idiosyncrasies insanely sexay and elegantly succinct, picking-up passages that can easily delve into sentimentality and sappiness. Afterall, it was Italian Maestro Nicola Luisotti's grandpappy that duck hunted with Puccini himself, so we expected a lot from the legacy of Puccini's circle of friends.

One of the highlights of the night was the presentation of two plaques to Mistah Franco Frengo Zeffirelli, who toddled onstage at the end of Act II's immense and unforgettable Cafe Momus scene before the first intermission to speak a few words. Gelb came out and elaborated that they were putting up two commemorative plaques on the stage walls. Frengo then thanked everyone, and personally thanked Mirella Freni, Carlos Kleiber, and Luciano Pavarotti. And Opera Chic. And his legions of silk and cashmere scarves. We <3 u Frengo!

There were a few opening night issues that have to be worked out, such as when Vargas and Gheorghiu remained in shadowed darkness during Act III's "Donde lieta usci". But more on that tomorrow, cuz this OC without sleep thing is about to get ugly.

March 15, 2008

Trittico Gets The Plasma Treatment

Trit14

(above: Barabara Frittoli in Suor Angelica on top of Ronconi's scary dead Madonna from Scala's Il Trittico)

Classica broadcast via satellite a live transmission from the Thursday night performance at La Scala of Puccini's Il Trittico. OC endured it once again so she could bring you legal shots of the performance via her Canon camera and Samsung plasma. Chailly's conducting remained heavenly even through the canning and compression of live sound to media, although Team Ronconi's odd set designs appeared much darker on screen. The key singers, of course, were much more emotive, with Suor Angelica's Barbara Frittoli even admitting in a post-performance interview that the music moved her so much that she was crying just before one of her arias. suffering for art and all. 

The performance was hosted by Classica tv host Gianandrea Gavazzeni's son, he of oddly-composed facial hemispheres, who coolly interviewed both Barbara Frittoli and Leo Nucci (Nucci in full costume and makeup and fake nose, relaxed as a lamby only minutes before getting on stage for his Schicchi) in his II ordine palco between intermissions. There was also a small pre-recorded piece on both Maestro Chailly (who masterfully dissected the evolution of Puccini's style, more on this in a later post) and director Luca Ronconi.

Oddly enough, it was also the first out of the previous three performances where Mariana Lipovšek as Zia Principessa in Suor Angelica wasn't booed loudly at the curtain call. Ronconi didn't show up at curtain call. no boos? a weird coincidence, since the loggione had booed after every previous performance (they didn't like the staging). were they absent?  diplomatically silent? good faith? bad? hmmmmm.

Puccini's Trittico will be rebroadcast on Classica a few times next month: April 19 (9pm), 21 (8am), 23 (1:30pm), 27 (10:15am), and 29 (11am). Dayuuum.

OC made a niiiice leetel photo album of a few dozen screenshots, which you can enjoy here. Below are a few of the highlights.

Trit04

(above: Juan Pons strangles Miroslav Dvorsky in the finale of Il Tabarro.)

Trit11

(above: The nuns of Suor Angelica walk all over the giant plastic Madonna)

Trit19

(above: Barbara Frittoli takes her curtain call with her immortalized son)

Trit24

(above: Leo Nucci in Dante garb as Gianni Schicchi with a prosthetic nose)

Trit31

(above: Vittorio Grigolo takes a curtain call for Gianni Schicchi: well-deserved applause)

March 12, 2008

Il Trittico @ La Scala: Mehhhhhh

Tabaraca01

‘*^*OC*^*` is barely conscious after the four hour marathon of Puccini’s masterpiece Il Trittico earlier this evening at Teatro alla Scala, and will try to share more impressions of the 3-in-1 opera tomorrow. For now, the angry rabbits on the bottom of her Marni heels are screaming to be put back in their white shoe baggies, so this’ll be quick:

Riccardo Chailly coaxed the most gorgeous, intelligent, satiny flavor from the Orchestra della Scala, a sound so inspiring and delicate, perfectly controlled and shaped, he complimented every voice that rang across the stage, but managed to hold the spotlight. Il Tabarro, Suor Angelica, and Gianni Schicchi were attacked differently, each one with a marked flare. Chailly was the indisputable champion of the evening, leaving the singers to trail behind. Of the most competent singing, we had, well, slim pickings. Gianni Schicchi’s Rinuccio was sung by lithe yet powerful Vittorio Grigolo, one of the brightest lights of the entire evening with a forceful, gorgeous voice. Close behind was Leo Nucci in the title role of the third Il Trittico opera, although it’s more his charisma than his twilight, tepid tone. Barbara Frittoli as Suor Angelica sang laudably, but her Puccini is not terribly resonant, and constituted as one of the weakest performances I’ve seen her in. Of course, you can't speak about Il Trittico without mentioning Lauretta's O mio babbino caro, but as sung by an acidic Nino Machaidze, let's not.

Luca Ronconi’s offensive and frankly lazily executed sets detracted greatly from Chailly’s creaminess, the orchestra’s flawless gift-wrapping, and the entire ensemble’s singing efforts. The most jarring and incongruous was Suor Angelica’s set, which consisted of stark bluish walls and a gigantic plastic form of Madonna (not the Dior-wearing, Brit-speaking, Lourdes-spawning singer) prostrate on the ground, which the sisters of the order traversed across and walked through tunnels snaked above and through her. wtf? Gulliver’s Travels. Alice in Wonderland. Who dropped mushrooms before laying down the sketches??  We get the symbolism ok ok but the execution came off like a Madonna slip-n-slide water theme park. As Frittoli lamented over her dead son, she was sprawled across the comically immense saint, and all sympathy for her trauma was nullified in light of such an odd, drug-induced visualization. The set for Gianni Schicchi was equally armature, and was simply a sunken bedroom with every square inch of surfaced draped in maroon red fabric with gold accents. The harsh, unyielding, and static lighting didn’t help much either.

At the end of the night, my outfit was more memorable than the production, although Chailly's genius will haunt my dreams. v(º_o)v

February 28, 2008

The Familiar Landscapes of La Bohème. With (.) (.)

Boheme_6

Below are some exclusive shots from the Austria set of director Robert Dornhelm's La Bohème, with *~opera stars~* Anna Netrebko and Rolando Villazón singing the leads. We all know we're gonna see this one, so here's a preview. Her cap in the picture above looks like a giant thong.

Boheme01

~*~

Boheme_4

~*~

Boheme_1

~*~

Boheme04

~*~

Boheme02

SUM1s BEAN CRYI?NG!-->

Boheme03

No bebbe! Not in the snow! You'll get all chapped!

La_boheme_2_2

She DEYUHD!!!

:"[
 

January 29, 2008

Graham Vick Continues to F*@k Up UR Opera House: La Rondine In Venezia, The Full Opera Chic Review

Rodine00c_2

Fondazione Teatro La Fenice di Venezia opened its stagione 2008 with Giacomo Puccini’s La Rondine. (See initial review here for more information.)

Unless you have an undying Cedolins fetish -- OC doesn't, as she finds Cedolins correct, attractive, and with a good dose of charisma but essentially uninspiring -- or a penchant for operas with boring characters, this production, in the end, was better seen than heard. Not that the Venice populace would have cared anyway, as the 2008 Carnevale holiday had just kicked-off the evening prior.

The opening night of the 2008 season at La Fenice began with an announcement commemorating the recent deaths of two oil refinery workers who had perished in a work-related accident close to Venice, and followed appropriately with a moment of silence. The crowds were greatly mixed, many choosing formal dress while others sat in tourist casual flavor. OC chose her new Louboutins, black Wolford stockings, Giambattista Valli black empire waist baby-doll dress with ribbed sleeves, black Balenciaga wool lady coat, and a tiny Paul Smith black (with white hearts) zipped leather purse to hold a few things (earplugs & tylenol PM hahah aha aaaaa…just playin).

Rodine00b

Graham Vick’s direction saved the production, because La Rondine, in Puccini's original idea was a sort of deluxe operetta, but it ended-up plagued by a long list of problems, with many revisions that never made il maestro completely happy. It is one unusual piece of work -- there are only two arias (one of which is pretty meaty), and Act II has moments that go off totally Broadway, which by the way is brilliant, because it's 1917 and opera will soon die its spectacular death after three centuries of beauty (yeah, Nixon In China, blah, blah, Tan Dun, Die Bassariden, yah -- let's face it: opera is dead, and we're OK with it because there's trillions of major works still to dig out of the dust of the centuries, and we'd rather go see a Haendel than a Corghi, sorrie)...so as we said...it's 1917 and opera is about to die and be reborn as the Broadway musical, so it's OK that Puccini already had that sound in his head, because it's the sound of the imminent future, of what opera will soon become. And big sequences of big arias are so 1850 anyway, am i rite?

The characters, as per Giuseppe Adami's libretto are obvious flaws, and are all too vague; it's a "Traviata Lite", without Germont's scheming, with an Alfredo who's even more of an a$$hole, and with a Violetta who's not really that complex a creature, but instead she simply wants to have some clean fun the way she wanted to have as a young girl, before she starting turning trix. And here to avoid Verdi's big downer-thing, and keep the opera light and funny, Puccini figured out that the girl doesn't have to die at the end (contradicting Puccini's standard modus operandi, "ze geerl must DIE BWAHAHAHAHA").

But yeah, the ending where the soprano just walks away from the relationship (as opposed to dying a tragic heroine’s death like Butterfly, Traviata, Boheme, et al) is terribly anti-climactic -- try staging that. This opera is a by0tch of an experience for OC. The love between our two main players, Magda and Ruggero, is reduced to the novice epiphanies you’d hear between two smitten preteens who are drowning in catastrophic hormones guised as rapturous love. Magda has flashbacks, though, and this is interesting -- Puccini sticks simple musical themes to her flashbacks, and the same themes come back later, in disguise, sometimes just a few bars to bookmark the action: now I'm sad, now I'm happy -- the way composers for film scores will learn how to do in later decades with the same sprezzatura.

Rondine00a_2

Anyway, Vick -- who trained as a conductor, by the way, before choosing directing as his profession -- was able to supersede all limitations (for this versione 1917 of La Rondine), and gave an overall wash of Old Hollywood/Broadway fabulousness, executed tactfully with a light hand. The entire opera had been pulled into a mixed compromise between Parisian flair and American chic, resulting in a nostalgic late 40s-very early 50s infusion between the two settings. Act I, instead of a scripted salon in a 19th century Paris apartment, appeared as a penthouse apartment imagined in the Thin Man series, all sleek glass towers, metallic accents, Martini tumblers, higballs, tuxedos and soaring glass windows. Costumes by Sue Willmington had been melded as a synthesis of the 1940s, with austere wartime cuts (early 40s) mixed with fuller skirts and silky satin puffs from post-war abundance.   

Rondine05

(Above: Sketch taken from the La Fenice program for La Rondine)

Carlo Rizzi’s conducting was trying to be sumptuous, painting lush shiny dashes of sound but given the wrong touch when held up against Antonio Pappano’s flawless read in the Alagna/Gheorghiu version. Although Rizzi was in decent control he still drowned out the blandness of the vocal lines quite a few times, he ended up giving the composition a more earthbound, sentimental, at times corny feel.

Act I introduced us to poet Prunier, sang by an uncharismatic Emanuele Giannino as demonstrated with his “Chi il bel sogno di Doretta”. Magda's three friends, Yvette, Suzy and Bianca weren’t terribly impressive, with one of them even failing to remember key Italian gender agreements in the libretto. Fiorenza Cedolins sang a flawless Magda, but again...the whole Cedolins thing doesn’t really flow with OC’s vernacular, although she can understand the appeal.

Rondine01

Puccini’s noted Easter egg in Act I was roundly delivered -- when Prunier shares with Magda the type of woman who is worthy of conquering his guarded heart. “La donna che conquista,”….must be a Galatea, Berenice, Francesa, or Salome…and with that we have the famous leitmotif from Strauss’s SalomeAh! Ich habe deinen Mund geküsst, Jokanaan” inserted into the score, a delicious poke at Strauss. This is like the old skool version of the East Coast vs. West Coast rappers snappin on each other in their rhymes. Like Notorious B.I.G vs. 2Pac, Jay Z vs. Nas, LL Cool J vs. Jay-Z, and we’re all waiting to see who steps next.

Rondine04

(Above: Image from La Fenice program of La Rondine.)

Act II’s curtain rose after a half-hour pause (one bYotch of a scene change, a Vick trademark) on Bullier’s, which had been restructured by Vick as a funny sendup on La Bohème’s Café Momus, updated to an American early 1950s sock hop. The stage was flooded with dozens of extras, flowers, balloons, and crammed in every spot with café tables splayed from a 1950s VW van turned fast-food joint (Bullier’s now a hot-dog vendor), complete with matching Vespa scooters parked onstage. Giant cut-outs of four Moulin Rouge cabaret women overcame the stage, their bare limbs outlined in vanity bulbs. Sock-hop dancers and swingers strutted all over the stage, delivering the “love, joy and pleasure” promised at Bullier’s. Hot sailors dancing with buxom women. Little tables overflowing with beer glasses. Sexy (foxtrot) time!

Rodine00

(Above: photo by Michele Crosera for La fenice)

The duets between Magda and Ruggero -- she's the 'ho who meets the nice guy who reminds her of the nice boy she fell in love once upon a more innocent time -- went well enough “Io non so chi siate voi…” but of course, as is the main problem inherent to the opera, nothing was greatly moving. Ruggero’s “Bevo al tuo fresco sorriso” was embarrassingly derivative and made OC squirm with discomfort. It was followed later by Magda’s affirmation that she was upset at herself for loving Ruggero because she was afraid to be so happy. Yawnzies.

Act III opened after the last half-hour pause to a stark terrace overlooking the French Riviera sea, a splay of sand on stage with two gigantic umbrellas – one sheltering a table for two, and the other sheltering vases and vases of red roses. Magda was in a mint green dress, and Ruggero was in white pants with a gingham red short sleeved dress shirt. They both rolled around barefoot in the sand like bathing chinchillas. When Lisette and Prunier entered (he the Pygmalion of the maid who wants to become a singer, bah), it was unmemorable. They were both so unanimated and awkward.

Rondine03

Then, towards the end, when Magda comes clean and tells her boi that she cannot marry him because of her past, she abandons the blubbering Ruggero, strutting offstage. At that moment, the hanging backdrop of the blue, cloud-filled sky plummets to the stage floor,  crashing down with a shocking THUD! -- the sky has literally fallen, after the death of love. Revealing a penitent Magda walking slowly and mournfully to a waiting Packard and motorcycle escort. The former backdrop of an idealized, halcyon day on the French Riviera, made Ruggero’s laments of “Non lasciarmi” even more chilling.

It was a fantastic, bada$$ ending to a very difficult to realize opera, and Vick demonstrated his elegant genius, which unlike an equally-gifted Robert Carsen, he didn’t foist into your face with hammy bareknuckled fists.

Vick slam dunked it like Jordan, and the audience went wild. We were content to golf clap for the voices of the evening, but after a few curtain calls, Vick & Co. appeared from backstage and took their much-deserved applause. The house went wild for a few minutes, and bravi all around, with Vick surrounded by the chorus and the extras who gave him the applause he deserved. Then OC took in a well-deserved fish-galore meal at La Fenice, the very nice restaurant adjacent to the theater, and there was much rejoycing. amen hallelujah!

It’ll probably take the second coming of Jesus to bring OC back to Venezia for la prima @ La Fenice again, though, as Carnevale is the Italian equivalent of the American furry fandom and cosplay, RPGers, otaku fanboys & girls emulating their favorite anime characters, while grown women run around the city with glitter smeared on their faces, designs that emulated scarred birthmarks or traumatic burns.

OC doesn’t h8 the players, just h8s the game. She *hearts* Graham Vick though, because he knows that opera seriously needs to have its s#1t f*çked up real bad.

And doesn't he deliver.

January 27, 2008

Graham Vick Will F@?k Your S#^t Up: How To Bring A Dead Stuffed Bird Back To Operatic Life

Graham_vick_fenice_rondine

A few words -- full review coming much later or better yet, tomorrow, because Opera Chic is tired after a champagne-fueled Carnevale weekend in Venice -- on Graham Vick's staging of La Rondine that last night opened the season at Teatro La Fenice.

La Rondine, a very interesting, surprising Puccini that in modern times hasn't really found the audience it deserves -- suffice to say, in its 1917 premiere in Monte Carlo, the opera had the best conductor of the 20th Century and the best tenore di grazia, Marinuzzi and Schipa of course, and so much for "minor" works -- has been staged by our main man Graham Vick with Act I as commedia brillante, a sophisticated comedy from Hollywood's golden era that could have been made by Gregory La Cava or Jean Negulesco, Act II as a funny sendup -- with Jayne Mansfield lookalike supervixens, hawt sailors and giant Moulin Rouge pinup girls neon statues -- on  Puccini's own Cafe Momus scene, and Act III as a minimalist, abstract  beach where the end of love makes -- literally -- the sky fall down to earth. And Vick adds a final scene -- Casablanca in reverse -- that gives depth to a truly problematic libretto (that after 1917 was revised many times, since Puccini himself was far from satisfied).

Fiorenza Cedolins was Magda -- a correct Magda, with strong dramatic presence and good looks and undeniable charisma, but then OC does not subscribe to her cult, as I'll explain later. The rest of the cast, we'd rather not discuss.

But then, it was Signor Vick's night.

January 08, 2008

Frengo's "Happy 150th Birthday" To Giacomo Puccini: Martina Serafin Is Tosca, Exactly 108 years After The Original "Prima".

Roma

Opera di Roma is about to debut the new Franco "Frengo" Zeffirelli production of Tosca, to celebrate the 150th anniversary of Puccini's birth.

Next Monday, Jan. 14, (a super-anniversary: on Jan. 14, 1900, Tosca had its prima assoluta in Rome's Teatro Costanzi) all eyez on Frengo, on conductor Gianluigi Gelmetti, Martina Serafin (Tosca), Marcelo Alvarez (Cavaradossi), and maestro Renato Bruson (Scarpia). (In the photo above, courtesy of Opera di Roma, Serafin and Bruson at the press conference)

Opera di Roma GM Francesco Ernani pointed out in a press conference earlier today that "Since that January 14, 1900, Tosca  has been staged  all obver the world: it is only fair that she comes back to Rome  to start the celebrations for Puccini's 150th birthday".

Maestro Glemetti said that Tosca "is for me a great adventure, Tosca is an icon, with a life of its own, beloved by Italians, Germans, Brits, Americans, Japanese, without distinction of nationality. Tosca truly belongs to all humanity -- she belongs to our hearts".

Tru dat.

January 07, 2008

Carlo Felice Orchestra Complains Of The Cold, Conductor Riccardo Frizza Quits; Manon Lescaut Frozen By Strikes + Tantrums

Orsopolarechedorme

As OC wrote the other day, la prima of Teatro Carlo Felice's Manon Lescaut in Genova, the season opener, has been sunk by unions; but the  constant interruptions of rehearsals  -- with the  orchestra complaining of  low temperatures in the pit -- has convinced the conductor, Riccardo Frizza, to quit: the maestro has announced that, after completing only five good hours of rehearsals with the cast, he is leaving the production. Three days before the premiere (that would not have happened anyway).

September 01, 2007

E Lucevan Le Stelle (In Iraq): Brian De Palma's Redacted

3_2
Opera lover Brian De Palma has chosen to close his new film Redacted (it has been wildly acclaimed, with a long standing ovation, at the Venice Festival yesterday)  with a montage of many of the horrific photographs taken in Iraq that are too graphic to be published in the papers or shown on television (the faces of the dead and wounded have been blacked out); and the music he has chosen to accompany the montage is Puccini -- E Lucevan Le Stelle

May 11, 2007

Vermont is Kind of Wack

The Green Mountain Opera Festival is looking for a child to play the role of Sorrow in its production of "Madama Butterfly" at the Barre Opera House on June 22 and 24. Sorrow is the son of Madama Butterfly, or Cio-Cio-San, and the American Lieutenant Pinkerton. He appears on stage for five minutes in the second act in a non-speaking, non-singing role. [...] The child could be either a girl or boy, from 4 to 6 years of age, relatively fair-skinned and under three feet tall.

February 16, 2007

Sofia Coppola is all like DON'T HOLD YOUR BREFF

Lovely Opera Chic reader Donna Anna has so graciously pointed us towards this retraction in today's New York Times blurb "No Opera Debut for Sofia Coppola", which states that the planned directing of Montpellier's 2009-10 Manon Lescaut with Roberto Alagna by Sofia Coppola is false false false, and that, "She [Coppola] has no knowledge of nor has she agreed to direct a production there." Opera Chic had reported the curious news here a week ago.

...looks like someone is even flakier than Alagna (it is Coppola). *oh snap* oh no she didn't! omg ok j/k j/k playin'. We teh ♥ Coppole. Coppolas. and ♥ the Alagne. Alagnas.

February 11, 2007

Cedolins Wins; All Is Well With Perahia

Cedol

Half-asleep in her South Beach Corbusier chaise longue, Opera Chic hears happy news from her hardcore Scala-going, Conservatorio-going Milanese friends.

On Friday night, despite the not-so-good buzz coming from her very first rehearsal, la signora Fiorenza Cedolins has gotten a b0ttload of applause for her Cio Cio San. Huge ovations for Maestro Chung, too, our favorite mullet-wearing Zen maestro.

Perahia_1

NYC's own Maestro Murray Perahia has, as we expected, rawked tha house at Conservatorio Verdi in Milan. He appeared in fine, fine form with a perfectly healthy hand! Yay! Expect pictures, and a little audio snippet, later -- thanks to one of Opera Chic's spies: now we have some serious brunch and shopping commitments! First things (ie, Miami Beach) first. 

February 08, 2007

Kabaivanska vs Gheorghiu: aka The Puccini Chainsaw Massacre

Puccitxs

"Puccini? A sadist. He tore his heroines apart. He loved women but he was afraid of them : he could only exalt them through suffering.  He mistreated women even when it came to their performances: think about Tosca: the soprano has to be on stage nonstop, maiming her voice. His hatred had deep-seated reasons: Puccini lived with a woman, she was dominating him... Liu', Tosca, Cio-Cio-San: Puccini's sadism is there, in his tragic heroines. It's only absent from Turandot, because she's a winner. And Puccini is unable to allow a woman to win". 

-- Raina Kabaivanska, 1997, Corriere della Sera


Puccifems

"If Puccini were alive today, I'd be in love with him. I am sure of it. He knew how to write for sopranos: he really loved them"

-- Angela Gheorghiu, 2005, The Independent


Less than 24 hours before la prima of Madama Butterfly at La Scala, Opera Chic wonders about the nerdy mustachioed hunting-obsessed composer: male chauvinist payg or feminism pioneer in disguise? Raina or Angela?

And Angela, whatever you do please don't dump Roberto for some Eurotrashy Puccini lookalike -- the poor man's already way 2 scr3wed up, girl, m'kay? k thx

Finally Tosca @ Maestranza

Guleg_1

Tomorrow night is opening night for Maria Guleghina and Sergej Larin in Tosca at the tasty Maestranza Theatre in Seville. Luca Ronconi's genius staging just gets better with time.

February 07, 2007

Sofia Coppola + Roberto Alagna = Manon Lescaut

Sofialagnas

OMGOMGOMGBREAKING NEWS!!!111OMGOMGOMG

AFP dispatch:

Sofia Coppola is to stage her first opera, Puccini's romantic tragedy "Manon Lescaut", at the Montpellier Opera house in southern France during its 2009-2010 season.

Coppola's cast? Opera Chic's own Roberto Alagna!!!

Alagnagr

Roberto don't leave her UbadboyU!!!

I mean y wuld she want 2 work with him? Shell catch teh lamorz! Sofia pleez! Marc Jacobs won't take ur callz anymore and buhbye free swag!

Sofiavogue_1

(Sofia photo by Mario Testino for French Vogue)

^^^update^^^

A big CIAO to our Swedish friend Gunilla and her readers! Thanks!

February 04, 2007

This Just In: Viva Chung. Cedolins, not so much.

This just in from La Scala rehearsals for the upcoming Madama Butterfly: Opera Chic hears that maestro Myung-Whun Chung's conducting seems to be heart-breakingly beautiful, leaving many professori d'orchestra and the famously jaded rehearsal hanger-ons from La Scala's staff completely spell-bound. As former assistant of our beloved Carlo Maria Giulini in Los Angeles and frequent guest conductor at La Scala, the soft-spoken Chung is well-liked by the orchestra (in the photo above, the maestro is wearing the official badge of our GIULINI4EVAR fan club).

Not nearly as convincing, at least in these early rehearsals, is Cio Cio San (a fact that in Madama Butterfly could create quite a few problems, especially with the loggionisti all too eager to hurl a few verbal spitballs against a soprano who, OMG, dares to sing Tebaldi's and Kabaivanska's and Freni's role: things could get ugly). Things, for poor Fiorenza Cedolins -- a.k.a Bocelli's Tosca -- could get ugly. Let's hope they don't, because Opera Chic won't be in Milan to report.

Cedolins_tosca_1 

Everybody seems to like Venezuelan Aquiles Machado as Pinkerton -- vocally, he seems to be quite right for the role. Of course, Opera Chic hears, the stout, round-faced young man seems to lack a certain, um, physical grace, but Karajan himself, after all, cast, "Big Luciano" Pavarotti in the same role with pretty cool results. Lucky for Machado, it's only great awesome female singers who get fired for their size, and it was poor, great Violeta Urmana who (last December) got a lot of grief from her Aida director who imagined a svelte Aida in his feverish dreams.

So the Machado gentleman's job is safe -- he can enjoy the great ossobuco and cassoeula and pork chops that are so deliciously seasonal this time of the year in Milan, without fear of ending like Voigt. Or having to go to the gym every night after dinner (there's a very cute one right behind La Scala anyway).   

Anyway, here's Giulini on Chung, from 1994:

"A conductor produces a sound without physical contact. Mr. Chung had a capability to produce this and have contact, musical and human, with the orchestra. I believed in him. He is a great talent, a deep musician and a marvelous human being."

You can't say it any better than that, can you.


^^^update^^^

The excellent GTL Torn T, Liceu blogger with a name as cool as a rapper's, has more on Cedolins; his blog is already a favorite here at OC's headquarters, even if our horribly rusty high school Spanish is clearly in need of a masterclass, or twenty.

January 31, 2007

La Tosca di Siviglia

Tosca_setc

Lucky duckies in Seville are getting ready for the Teatro De La Maestranza premiere of Luca Ronconi's indescribably awesome staging of Tosca. Opera Chic, accidenti!, wasn't living in Milan yet, and she missed the beauty of maestro Muti's conducting for that production. And Leo Nucci's Scarpia, on DVD and cd, sounds just, well, perfect. Yes, OC managed to catch the Maazel-conducted Ronconi Tosca last year, with the b3wbalicious Daniela Dessì, much better than Guleghina: it was just not the same, without Muti (no disrespect to maestro Maazel).
Dessi_toscac

Instead lucky Spaniards will enjoy the burnished, dignified voice of Renato Bruson as a very interesting Scarpia (Tosca will be Guleghina, and OC is not really a fan, but what3vs).

Here's a Nucci, because he's our favorite sing-a-long baritone, like, ev4r

Nucci_toscac

January 11, 2007

Nicola Luisotti: Hunting with Puccini

Puccinihuntr01

This past Tuesday, forty-five year old Italian Maestro Nicola Luisotti has been appointed the new Music Director of the San Francisco Opera, and will assume his new position with the 2009-10 season. He will succeed Donald Runnicles. SF Opera General Director David Gockley said in a statement, “Nicola Luisotti is the ideal music director for the next stage in the company’s life, a passionate music maker who is especially experienced in the Italian repertory.”

Endearingly stated by the incoming Maestro Luisotti:

"Era stato il mio sogno quello di tornare a lavorare a San Francisco. Considero un grande privilegio dirigere l'orchestra di questa città così piena d'incanto, di tradizioni culturali. Mi piace la gente di San Francisco. Mi piace tutto di questa città."

Translation, "It had been my dream to return to work in San Francisco. I consider it a great privilidge to direct the orchestra of a city that is so full of enchantment, and of cultural tradition. I like the people of San Francisco. I like everything about this city."

Of Luisotti's cultural legacy and involvement with music, he gave an interview with Corriere a few years ago, and shared an anecdote of previous summers that his family passed with Maestro Giacomo Puccini:

"Mio nonno andava a caccia di folaghe in barca sul lago di Massaciuccoli con Puccini. E a Bergeggia, in Lucchesia, dove sta la mia famiglia, Puccini veniva sempre a sentire il gioco delle campane. Dall' epistolario ho appreso che lì ha tratto l' ispirazione per l' inciso delle campane all' alba nella Tosca".

Translation: "My grandfather would go duck-hunting in a boat on the lake of Massaciuccoli with Puccini. And to Bergeggia, in Lucchesia, where my family was, Puccini came always to hear the playing of the [church] bells. I later learned from his letters that he got the inspiration of the bells in Tosca from hearing them when he stayed with us."

In bocca al lupo al nuovo Maestro!

Luisotti01

May 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 11/2006