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Die Walk?re
Metropolitan Opera House, Mon, February 14, 1887
Die Walk?re (23)
Richard Wagner | Richard Wagner
- Br?nnhilde
- Lilli Lehmann
- Siegmund
- Anton Schott
- Sieglinde
- Auguste Seidl-Kraus
- Wotan
- Emil Fischer
- Fricka/Gerhilde
- Marianne Brandt
- Hunding
- Georg Sieglitz
- Grimgerde
- Miss Kemlitz
- Helmwige
- Leonore Better [Last performance]
- Ortlinde
- Georgine Von Januschowsky
- Rossweisse
- Isabel Escott [Last performance]
- Schwertleite
- Wilhelmine Mayer [Last performance]
- Siegrune
- Ida Klein
- Waltraute
- Sylvia Franconi [Last performance]
- Conductor
- Anton Seidl
Review 1:
Review in The New York Times:
METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE
Yesterday evening's representation of "Die Walk?re" drew a larger audience to the Metropolitan Opera House than foregoing performances of the work would have led one to expect. "Die Walk?re," in fact, has worn less well than any of Wagner's achievements, and its occasional production last season was scarcely encouraging enough to warrant its revival this year. If the promised appearance of Herr Anton Schott as Siegmund exercised last night a marked influence upon the numbers of the assemblage, it is only just to the German tenor to mention, at the very outset of this notice, that the good points of his portrayal rewarded handsomely the confidence placed in him by his admirers. The tenor's opportunities in "Die Walk?re" lie, as will be remembered, in the first act, wherein the long story of Siegmund's woes tests the variety and eloquence of his declamation, and the "Spring song," the duet, and the "sword song" reveal the quality of his voice and the proportions of his art. Herr Schott's narrative was not to be compared, as may be imagined, with Herr Niemann's, but he sang the exquisite "Spring song" with refreshing tonal beauty and the "sword song" with much timbre and with a broad and spirited delivery that accorded perfectly with its heroic character. The curtain was raised four times after it had fallen upon the closing measures of the scene and twice after the second act, in which, however, Herr Schott bore off but a fraction of the honors of the representation. The remaining personages in "Die Walk?re" were assigned to familiar artists, Fra?lein Lehmann embodying Br?nnhilde, Fra?lein Brandt Fricka, Frau Seidl-Krauss Sieglinde, and Herr Fischer that dreariest or demigods, Wotan. The charm of Fra?lein Lehmann's tones and presence made amends for such fervor and breadth as are at times missed from her delineation of Br?nnhilde, while Fra?lein Brandt's consummate skill as an actress imparted some interest even to her share of the wearisome duet - fortunately reduced in length - between Fricka and Wotan. Frau Seidl-Krauss was an earnest Sieglinde, and Herr Fischer a becomingly dissatisfied Wotan. The orchestra was in capital form, and the "Ride of the Walkyries" and the "magic fire scene" called forth, as usual, its best endeavors.
Search by season: 1886-87
Search by title: Die Walk?re,
Met careers
- Anton Seidl [Conductor]
- Lilli Lehmann [Br?nnhilde]
- Anton Schott [Siegmund]
- Auguste Seidl-Kraus [Sieglinde]
- Emil Fischer [Wotan]
- Marianne Brandt [Fricka/Gerhilde]
- Georg Sieglitz [Hunding]
- Miss Kemlitz [Grimgerde]
- Leonore Better [Helmwige]
- Georgine Von Januschowsky [Ortlinde]
- Isabel Escott [Rossweisse]
- Wilhelmine Mayer [Schwertleite]
- Ida Klein [Siegrune]
- Sylvia Franconi [Waltraute]