Plácido Domingo

May 06, 2008

Listen Up, Y'all! (But Maybe Wear Your Earplugs)

Domingooo1

The powers that be has deemed May the official "Better Hearing and Speech Month" so can everyone just shut the f**k up and stop screaming? In celebration of glorious May’s message, the Hear the World Foundation is offering the public a chance to peruse photographic art for the sake of raising awareness on hearing loss and preservation.

Hear the World is a 2-year-old international foundation created by Phonak, a Zurich-based company, which has developed & produced hearing systems for improving one’s hearing abilities. They asked former rawker/now photographer Bryan Adams (who JDF asked to photograph his recent wedding extravaganza in Lima, although Adams had to gracefully decline) to be their official photog, and to take portraits of their many musical ambassadors for the sake of hearing & hearing loss awareness.

One of those Hear the World ambassadors is Plácido Domingo, and we also have in the mix Annie Lennox, the Wiener Philharmoniker, Bobby McFerrin, Josh Groban, Lindsay Lohan (??), Mick Jagger, and Rod Stewart.

The portrait endeavor is currently being shown in one of NYC's meatpacking district galleries (@ 413-415 W. 14th Street) for the next two weeks (and here online), which will culminate in an auction with all proceeds aiding the Hear the World Foundation.

I’m not a fan of what Adams did with the Dominger. He looks like he’s been embalmed. I see a point & shoot portrait with a lot of fancy back-end manipulation. heh. It's like..."hey, i'm bryan adams. With a 'y'. Today i ate pastrami on rye and washed it down with welsh;s grape soday. My dog's name is zeus like higgens's dog from magnum p.i."

*click*

Domingooo

April 19, 2008

Listen Like A Pope: San Placido Live From L.A. On KUSC

Placido_on_the_radio_crop

Tutti lo cercano, tutti lo vogliono; and Placido Domingo, fresh from his meeting with the Pope will tonight celebrate his 40 years of professional activity in Los Angeles by giving a LA Opera gala (with Patricia Racette, James Conlon cond.).

The good men and women at KUSC classical fm 91.5 will broadcast the Yay Placido Yay event
tonight -- 730PM Los Angeles time, 1030PM NYC time, 430AM Milan time

Listen without prejudice by clicking here

And, if by the time you read this, the recital will be already over (or not yet begun), you can simply listen to the regular KUSC programming.

(via Maldito Candelabro)

April 17, 2008

Tu Quoque

Placido_domingo_and_teh_pope


Spanish Angelicus

February 29, 2008

Che Soave Sephirot: Jenkins-Domingo In China

Katy03

Plácido Domingo poses with guest star Kathy J (and conductor Eugene Kohn) at a press conference in China earlier today. They will sing together this Saturday night @ the AsiaWorld-Expo, which will mark the first time The Dominger has ever sung in Hong Kong.

Katy01

Katherine, a Montblanc "brand ambassador" *rolls eyes* was seen shilling the Montblanc jewellery collection. Jokes on her cuz the Montblanc emblem is a 6-sided star. We thought at first the shiksa was wearing a pair of magen david, the Star of David -- but we could prolly tell her it's the "Star of Woody Allen" and she'd believe us.

Katy02

(photo credit: Reuters)

February 13, 2008

R U Ready 4 The Trifecta? Villazón, Domingo, and Netrebko

Photos from a press conference in Vienna on Monday, February 10, between journalists and Rolando Villazón, Plácido Domingo, and Anna Netrebko. They were there to play nice for their upcoming June 27, 2008 concert which will be at Schloss Schönbrunn, with Vienna's Radio Symphony Orchestra. Anna, again, is rocking that "I'm So Over It" face.

Rolandotrebs03

*~*~*~*

Rolandotrebs02

*~*~*~*~*

Rolandotrebs01 

*~*~*~*~

Rolando is sporting his Gerbil King Lemmiwinks knit polo. Heed my words, Lemmiwinks! Your time is running out! Make for the large intestine, all will be made clear then.

Lemmiwinks

February 01, 2008

Again With Placido Domingo as Cyrano @ La Scala: Bigger, Better, Nasalier. The Full Review

Cyrano00

(Above: Franco Alfano's Cyrano de Bergerac in the Francesca Zambello production, with Sondra Radvanovsky as Roxane & Placido Domingo as Cyrano. All shots below courtesy of Ken Howard. Source. La Scala Disclaimer: All photos are not from the La Scala production, since La Scala's lawyers forbade us to use their promotional stuff among other things -- rather these are shots from 2005 at The Metropolitan Opera).

After the initial Tuesday night recap of Franco Alfano's Cyrano de Bergerac we saw opening night at La Scala, here we are less than 48 hours l8r and the impressions haven't changed much, although we've changed outfits a few times. In black Prada heels, more Wolford black leggings (just like mah gurl Linds-say) a white Comme des Garçons long t-shirt, an oversized Jil Sander grey cashmere cardigan, and Aquascutum grey trench, La Scala wasn't quite as scalding as when they welcomed our poor JDF one night prior, and OC was thankfully not sweating through her cashmere.   

Cyrano01

(Above: Franco Alfano's Cyrano de Bergerac in the Francesca Zambello production. Act I. Photo credit: Ken Howard. Source.)

With the libretto written in French by Henri Cain, inspired from the play by Edmond Rostand based on the real life tales of Cyrano, Alfano's Cyrano de Bergerac is an expressive, at times jarringly sad masterpiece, which we can all thank Maestro Domingo for exhuming from obscurity, as it fell out of popular stage space quickly after its premiere in 1936. Throughout its paltry performance history, the libretto has been in constant flux between Italian and French translations, although we prefer this suitably in French.

First performed in pre-WWII Europe (o say what?), and a close contemporary to Berg's Wozzeck, and Schoenberg's Moses und Aron, Cyrano experiments with some gorgeous sounds of theater. This is musical theater's infancy, and Alfano just gets it right. The plot is amazingly simple to follow, and the story delivers comic relief without eliciting crude guffaws. The music is full of beauty, sweeping passages, and the purity of truth and love bubbles on the surface of every note. The colors are very, well, French, totally romantic, but never sappy or clumsy.

Cyrano02

(Above: Franco Alfano's Cyrano de Bergerac in the Francesca Zambello production. Act I. Photo credit: Ken Howard. Source.)

Every single musical phrase had been practiced and studied, and carefully shaped. The music dutifully, yet gorgeously, pushes all the action: At the first encounter between Cyrano and Roxane, the strings literally climax to a shattering, vibrating crescendo, and then ripple away as a breaking wave, and you can truly imagine Cyrano's heart literally engulfed in Roxane's devastating beauty. Thanks to Maestro Patrick Fournillier, who aimed to fill the house with an enormous, but never overwhelming sound coaxed from the Scala Orchestra, and even elicited a round of Bravo from the super-discerning gallerie when he came back out after the intermission to take the stand. 

The vocal lines that Sondra Radvanovsky as Roxane sang were fierce and powerful, and she not only brought it but brang it. Ms. Radvanovsky has not the most gorgeous voice, but properly implemented it throughout every single scene, and pushed along the narrative line when the libretto failed in parts. She's had the good fortune to successfully weather a three year run of the same production, already singing the role @ The Metropolitan Opera in both 2005 & 2006, and at the Royal Opera House in 2006, all opposite Domingo. She choose her acting well, and used her limbs very practiced, posed, and careful. She was passionate and reserved at the same time.

Cyrano03

(Above: Franco Alfano's Cyrano de Bergerac in the Francesca Zambello production. Act II. Photo credit: Ken Howard. Source.)

Francesca Zambello's elegant and complex direction paid careful attention every single entity on stage. Every extra from the bakers to the soldiers had been given specific direction, and carried out with great acting their sub-minor roles. The effect was very Les Mis, where the chorus was pushed into a prominent thrust of the action, and the Scala chorus and extras delivered fabulously, void of hamminess or eye-rolling mockery. Appealing romantic costumes were generalized and idealized like Disney's Robin Hood with a touch of elegance.

Cyrano04

(Above: Franco Alfano's Cyrano de Bergerac in the Francesca Zambello production. Act III. Photo credit: Ken Howard. Source.)

The other stars of the night, Pietro Spagnoli as De Guiche, Simone Alberghini as Carbon, and German Villar as Christian were all well enough supporting singers, but the attention was all on Domingo and Radvanovsky.

As for Placido The Minger, OC thinks it's lame to speak about his waning voice, because it's glaring, a given, that a man approaching his 70s couldn't retain his former glory -- although peeking through you still get those moments of beauty and flight that Domingo once mastered (like in Act I's "Ballade du duel" or Act II's "Ce sont les cadets de Gascogne". A contemporary of Bruson and Nucci, Domingo has refused to slow down, and still can support the role of a much younger tenor, believably sprite and graceful, albeit a bit tired. Lucky for him, the role is not terribly physical nor does it demand lots of singing aside from the last stirring act.

Cyrano05

(Above: Franco Alfano's Cyrano de Bergerac in the Francesca Zambello production. Act III. Photo credit: Ken Howard. Source.)

We left the theater knowing that Placido Domingo will soon hang up his performaning hat, so to still catch him on stage is something really quite spectacular. HE WAS THE BEST THEN HE IS THE BEST NOW NO ONE CAN TOUCH THAT $H1T BY0TCH$

Now go enjoy yourselves some nice b00tleggian clips that our YouTube opera brethren have uploaded of the very same Franco Alfano's Cyrano de Bergerac Domingo/Zambello/Radvanovsky production from MET 2005/2006 and ROH 2006.

Act I: SWASHBUCKLING DOMINGO!

Act II: DOMINGO THE K0çK-BLOCKER!

Act III: DOMINGO -- HE DAED!

November 20, 2007

Anthem In A Minor Key: It's Almost As Cool As Terme di Caracalla For The 1990 World Cup, Almost

Placido_soccer

Placido Domingo sings the national anthem before the 2007 Major League Soccer Cup, Houston Dynamo vs New England Revolution in DC  (Layton/Getty/AFP)

October 15, 2007

Puerto Rico Suave

Trebby01_2

San Juan showed some <3 for Netrebko & Schrott a few nights ago during "una noche de amor y pasion" @ Centro de Bellas Artes de Puerto Rico. La Orquesta Sinfónica de Puerto Rico, conducted by Plácido Domingo, led Erwin Schrott (for an indisposed Rolando) and Netrebko as part of the CulturArte de Puerto Rico festival.

While we were in Vienna scarfing loads of Einspänner & Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte, Anna was in NYC downing truckloads of Hebrew Nationals & Starbucks fraps. Ain't no shame in the game. OC goes on a Hostess/Betty Crocker/Aunt Jemimie/Welsh Grape Sody binge for the first 24 hours whenever she's back in the US&A. j/k. After eating all this belli freschi Italian food, that American crap is srsly like omg poison! Go Anna Go. We still <3 u with those sweet curves (and extensions).

Clickie click.

Trebby02

Trebby03

Trebby04

September 27, 2007

Anna & Roburto 2getha 4eva xoxoxo

Anna_roberto

A totally tranked out Roberto Alagna trying to defend his innocence (and his hairy thighs) from Anna Bananna's impure thoughts & horny hands; and, a great shot of Anna Netrebko togged to teh bricks in Gounod's "Romeo et Juliette" the other night.

Anna_b

September 26, 2007

Alagna's Antics and Netrebko's Triumph: Roméo et Juliette at the Metropolitan Opera

Romeo02

Certainly no booing last night, as The Metropolitan Opera’s packed house of Gounod's Roméo et Juliette la prima seemed to be comprised of both Alagna’s and Netrebko’s fan club entourages. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

Alagna was off to a strong start in front of the packed house, and although he impressed quickly, he tired noticeably, tampering-out shortly before the first intermission. Fair enough, since this performance has funky breaks, and finally splices a proper intermission only after the first two hours have elapsed.

It wasn’t until after the intermission that Alagna started reverting to a reoccurring issue that peppered Acts I-III: Sharping. Scattered through Act I, II, and III, he would at times rise-up to a sharp landing. By the second half, he was ####’ing all over tha ##ing place. Roberto Alagna? More like Al Sharpton. It was only during his duets with Netrebko that he was able to level-out and come back down to Gounod’s markings. The audience didn’t seem to mind, as his stage presence was charismatic and sprite, and he certainly won over his fans in Tiffany & Co. blue, well-tailored ensembles (tight pants & fitted jackets were favored).

However, the notes that he nailed sounded good, with decent control, as well as most of Acts I, II & III. His diction was (obvs) outstanding, clear, and bright. His acting was not overtly hammy, and he had a nice light and convincing touch. But something was up with Roméo’s stage exits, as just about every single egress was marked with a quick sprint off the stage into the darkness of the wings. He was srsly channeling Napoleon Dynamite.

It also seemed that Alagna was not terribly synchronized with Maestro Domingo, or else his breath-control had waned. Or more rehearsals were needed. Or maybe someone forgot to bring Alagna his sugar cookies and orange juice. One aria he ended at least a dozen measures before Domingo completed the orchestral phrasing to couch it. Oh Alagna, how you charm us with your 45ish-going-on-21 physique, deepest tan, and naiveté. Regardless, he looked great [not sweaty, very good color], put lots of energy into his blocking, and worked extremely well with Netrebko who reciprocated and flattered his interpretation. His voice, when he had good control, filled completely the vast theater hall.

Netrebko, on the other hand, was impossible to cut-up. She was in perfect form, dramatically and lyrically. Her accents, her control, and her dynamic were everything the audience could ask for. She nailed it, and left nothing desired. She was able to pull off every range of emotion, a convincing and addictive performance. She came across as having understood her role thoroughly (not, however, played as a petulant 14-year-old, colored more as a slightly sophisticated college girl), and was synchronized intrinsically with Domingo. Her luxuriant voice was like a huge embrace, streaming through the hall and stunning the audience. Ok, well, her pronunciation is kinda teh suck compared to Alagna’s, but she looks better in stilettos than he does so whatevs.

The Prologue introduced the immense MET chorus and Johannes Leiacker’s sets, everyone in the chorus dressed in those garish colors seen at a yae olde renaissance fair. Under white lights it was a bit too circusy, but when washed and toned under the yellow floodlights, it was perfect. I remember reading that the Capulets and Montagues were dressed in opposing colors like Bloods & Crips, but it seemed more like Paint ‘N Swirl had hit the stage.

This two-year-old production had made its inaugural debut at the highly anticipated MET premiere during November 2005, created by Guy Joosten. Joosten took the concept of “star crossed lovers” literally, and filled the stage and scenery with celestial images. The floor was an immense checkerboard wood in tan and dark brown. Above that sat a raised circular platform that revolved and pitched according to action and scene, with astrological signs painted on the border. Above the stage there was a floating mobile of rings and orbs that turned at whim. Behind the circular stage, icky photo images of galaxies, moons, and eclipsed suns flickered. Super lame. Like stock photos they would have put on mouse pads circa 1995. Like a bootleg PowerPoint presentation. The background scenery consisted of sliding panels of faux wood that were etched/painted with Italian Renaissance architecture. Among the various scene transitions that seemed to be constantly spinning, there was great cohesion, sealing the story well.

With Netrebko’s appearance in Act I, all eyes were drawn to her, as she traipsed around the stage in a luscious Barbie pink dress and little matching shoes. Ah! Je Veux Vivre Dans Le Reve (the Waltz Song) was an obvious hit, Netrebko beguiling, charming, and flirtatious, her coloratura finely tuned. The applause and cheers were much louder, more concentrated, and more sustained than Monday night’s Lucia.

Act II’s courtyard was devoid of foliage or green, which kind of sucked, and made me feel like I had sawdust in my throat. Eeewww. No gardens, no trees, no flowers. Alagna’s L'amour, L'amour! was vary niiiice. i like. Netrebko appeared in a white nightgown, loose hair, looking splendid.

Cami

(Mezzo-soprano Isabel Leonard. Image: Columbia Artists Management Inc.)

Act III’s memory was mostly the man-pants Isabel Leonard’s Stéphano (pictured above...i just had to drop an image because she's so cute!) in her MET debut, who awed the audience and sent them into the rare laughs shared for the night. The fight scene, which always breaks my heart, was poorly choreographed. Or again, it seemed like there weren’t enough rehearsals. It wasn’t convincing or well-timed, and gawd knows OC loves herself a fight scene. I fear that so many resources were tied into facilitating the new Lucia that this production fell along the wayside. The one cool thing about the fight scene however is that the round platform began spinning and then tilted, which I'm convincing myself was done in homage to Flash Gordon’s fight with Prince Vultan on that Hawk-Man planet. So kewl!

At the first intermission, reeling a few minutes before 10 pm, it was apparent that Alagna et cetera had been performing for at least two hours (not counting warm-ups). This R&J version restored about a half-dozen cuts, so it ran long, but for Alagna, it was like twenty minutes too long.

Act IV boasted the now-famous gorgeous floating, spot-lit bed suspended on cables, a completely dark stage with only pin-pricks of light filtered through. The effect was as though the lovers were floating in the heavens. Va! Je T'ai Pardonne was sumptuous, as Alagna and Netrebko fooled around convincingly on the sheet-draped bed, Alagna in blue capris and Netrebko in a nightgown. It was less hawt than Massenet's Manon, but much more tender. Netrebko’s Dieu! Quel Frisson Court Dans Mes Veines! was accompanied by wonderfully detailed acting, making her inevitable decision most wrenching and fraught with unseen danger.

Act V was brilliant. They both slammed it, and C'est La...Salut! Tombeau Sombre Et Silencieux! almost made OC shed a tear. Almost. Alagna's voice broke sorrowfully over his notes. They extinguished their love only as their lives respired their last. But at the end of the night, truth be told, we rilly missed Rolando!

Romeo01

(Above: the Metropolitan Opera house for Gounod's Roméo et Juliette on September 25, 2007, one night after the 2007-08 season opener.)

September 25, 2007

Alagna and Halo 3: Not Much in Common, But Here’s a Post Anyway

If a robot war erupts, I'm going to grab the only thing that I care about in this world and drive to my mountain bomb shelter: that's right, my xb0x & Halo 3. Today marks the official release of xb0x's Halo 3, and OC needs to cram as much gaming into her system before heading out for tonight's la prima of Gounod's Roméo et Juliette at The Metropolitan Opera. Yah i'm a gamer, so what of it? One thing's for sure...I'm sooo thankful to be in USA right now because my cyberfriends in Italy have to wait until tomorrow to get their hands on the new release. BWAHAHA! SUCK ON THAT EUOROP! You can take your free healthcare and shove it. You can't buy my vote! :D

btw, if you haven't seen the Halo 3 promo spot on television, check it out online: Chopin's Prelude in D Flat Major captures the mood that xb0x intended for their highly anticipated launch. No, it’s not this, or this, although it's easy to place the influence. /DAMN! Glass is a biter!

Opera Chic already reported on the Xbox team’s heavy reliance on Frederick Chopin, with touching homage to the late composer via his own video game, Trusty Bell: Chopin No Yume/Eternal Sonata. And although Chopin wasn't further pillaged to provide the Halo 3 soundtrack, American composer Martin O'Donnell (who also gave us that horribly infectious Flinstones Vitamins commercials "10 millions strong and growing") is back with the Halo team and is again the force behind the soundtrack.

Romeo

Anyway, I promise I’ll rip myself away from the box and make an appearance at tonight’s R&J, and share all about Maestro Plácido Domingo’s conducting, Anna Netrebko’s Juliette, and Roberto Alagna’s Roméo (if he shows up). 

Let’s hope the MET audience behave themselves, and refrain from booing our two previously-slighted men, Domingo & Alagna. Remember that before Alagna made booing so super cool, the NYC audience booed-off Placido just five days earlier than the Alagna Aida storm-off, with the Tuesday, December 5, 2006 production of Giacomo Puccini's La Bohème (with Villazón and Netrebko). Wait a sec, what am I talking about? BRING IT ON!

September 15, 2007

Domingo Conducts For Pavarotti Memorial In Modena

Grigolo

Placido Domingo will conduct the concert in Modena (the date is still up in the air) to celebrate the renaming of the Teatro Comunale as Teatro Luciano Pavarotti, tenor Vittorio Grigolo (former student of Pavarotti, he's appearing in his first Bohéme at Washington National Opera, and he had the fortune of doing a complete Bohéme walkthrough with the maestro himself) has said yesterday in an interview with Italian news agency Adnkronos.

Grigolo himself -- who this last spring appeared alongside Angela Gheorghiu (at least until she left in a huff) in Rome's Traviata -- will be among the singers.

June 26, 2007

Domingo + Jenkins Sing For Darfur

Domingo_jenkins

Maestro Placido Domingo and Katherine Jenkins have presented this morning in Athens their concert, that will take place tomorrow night in the Panathinaikon Stadium of Athens: organized by Medecins sans Frontieres (Doctors without Borders) and dedicated to the kids of Darfur,  Sudan. Domingo & Jenkins will be accompanied by ERT State Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Eugene Kohn. Also expected to make an appearance alongside Domingo is Greek vocalist Fotini Darra.

We'd make fun of this, but it's all for a good cause, so we can't. More powah to Maestro Domingo, La Jenkins & Fotini.

March 09, 2007

Domingo: It Puzzles Me Why I Am Still Singing

Crop

It's a great day for opera's "No $h^t Sherlock" quotes: Placido Domingo gets all self-analytical with the Associated Press.

‘‘The voice is a mystery, you know? It puzzles me why I am still singing’’.

And in a delicious performance of the art of understatement, Gramophone editor James Inverne points out:

‘‘Some of the sheen in his voice is starting to wear away’.

Oh noes! Who cares, we *heart* U Signor Domingo! And when that sheen begins to really fall off, just start a new career as opera's first mime! Placido 4evah!

Marceau_marcel_1

December 22, 2006

A good look for Plácido

Domingosmall01

Plácido Domingo sings Emperor Qin in Tan Dun's The First Emperor at the NYC MET Opera, uniting China and building the Great Wall.

Oh Domingo, what *can't* you do? The whole opera world needs you, Plácido "Plácido Domingo" Domingo.

December 10, 2006

Domingo, don't you dare cry! LIFE'S TOUGH YOU'RE TOUGHER!

Booing

Since Wednesday, after reading the story about how Maestro Placido Domingo was gratuitously booed during his conducting of the NYC MET's Tuesday, December 5, 2006 production of Giacomo Puccini's La Bohème, I've wanted to express my aversion of the event, but was too busy preparing myself for the carousings of Festa di Sant'Ambrogio and La Prima at Teatro alla Scala.

However, let's get back to the matter at hand, shall we??!! An excerpt from The New York Sun article states:

"So why the booing during such a wonderful effort? Mr. Domingo's conducting had been the weakest link in the initial performance, and this evening brought his faults to the fore. [...] In order to fully realize her [Netrebko's] artistic vision, she allowed each phrase to develop organically, unhurriedly, employing tasteful rubato and holding high notes expertly and impressively. But Mr. Domingo trudged along inattentively at metronomic speed, running noticeably ahead of his diva." [...]

[...] "And thus the booing. When Mr. Domingo came out for his bow at the beginning of Act Three, the lusty response from the upper reaches of the house was raucously negative. Visibly shaken, he turned to give his first downbeat."

Soooo, what does Opera Chic think of booing i maestri? Non si fa! Booing to me is fictionalized behavior. I mean, children raised by wolves know that you don’t even do that. Damn...even the wolves know not to do it.

Booing at the opera reminds me of that old Saturday Night Live skit from the 90s, “The Sarcastic Clapping Family of Southhampton”, ("Quite a performance, Jeffrey. Oh...quite a performance, indeed"). It was hilarious because it was a skit glorying behavior that was so incredibly self-loathing and snarky, that it didn't even have context in reality, or any bearing on the way that normal people carried themselves.

As for those that booed Domingo on Tuesday night, the majority of Tuesday night attendees at the NYC MET are the seasoned aficionados. Monday and Tuesday performances are habitually the nights that we NYC opera-fiends reserve so we don't have to bump shoulders with Mr. & Mrs. Suburbs McSuburban who blindly applaud between Violetta's, "Croce e delizia al cor!", and, "Follie! follie delirio vano e' questo!" We also know that Domingo is still struggling to carve his niche as a conductor, without much experience under his belt. We know that as a conductor, he is a novice, somewhat mediocre, and is still learning control and leadership. Those in the audience that were able to hear Domingo's lapses in tempi, were surely familiar with Domingo’s conducting flaws. I mean, it's not a secret that he's unpredictable and sort of sucks as a conductor. Therefore, I find it inexcusable to leer like juvenile delinquents. Either sit patiently on you hands in a vacuum of applause, or exit before the curtain-call if you are really that indignant.

I'm just happy that tonight’s Saturday night evening performance of La Bohème is normally filled with tourist-ridden, novice-heavy, opera-ignorant ticket-buyers, who will surely be unaware of any aberrations of the score, and shower our deserving Maestro Domingo with applause.

Now that I got that out-of-the-way, please enjoy a picture of Anna Netrebko and Rolando Villazón in the NYC MET's current production of La Bohème. But if any of you readers are guilty guilty GUILTY of booing poor Domingo on Tuesday night: GET OUT! ;p

Bohemebody02

(Also, you can go to the Opera Chic flickr page here to view five more pictures of Anna Netrebko and Rolando Villazón, as well as pictures of Villazón with that "other" Mimi, Chilean soprano Angela Marambio.)

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

Categories