[Met Performance] CID:68150

New Production

I Puritani
Metropolitan Opera House, Mon, February 18, 1918




I Puritani (2)
Vincenzo Bellini | Carlo Pepoli
Elvira
Maria Barrientos

Arturo
Hipolito Lazaro

Riccardo
Giuseppe De Luca

Giorgio
Jos? Mardones

Enrichetta
Flora Perini

Gualtiero
Giulio Rossi

Bruno
Angelo Bad?


Conductor
Roberto Moranzoni


Director
Richard Ordynski

Set Designer
Mario Sala

Set Designer
James Fox

Costume Designer
Giuseppe Palanti





I Puritani received six performances this season.

Review 1:

Review of Pitts Sanborn in the Globe

There are a number of old works of genius that ought to be heard here oftener than has been the custom, provided a performance can be obtained that approximates adequacy. Such of these operas as were written in the palmy days of Italian song Mr. Gatti-Casazza can approach with more assurance than many a fellow impresario for, with all that is said about the present decline of the art of singing, it happens to be certain bel canto operas that our distinguished impresario has of late years presented with a maximum of vocal success. Witness performances at his house this season of "L'Elisir d' Amore" and "Martha," and the matinee performance of "Rigoletto."

The old work of genius he revived at the Metropolitan last night, the "Puritani" of Bellini, is an opera which ill deserves the generation of silence it has suffered at that house, broken only by such echoes as strayed over from West Thirty-fourth street, where the enterprising Oscar Hammerstein let it be heard four times during his tenancy of his own Manhattan Opera House. After three and eighty years enough of beauty and power remain in the score of "I Puritani" to make a satisfactory performance worth an attentive hearing by any one who has escaped or outgrown the late Victorian prejudice against the older Italian repertory, accompanied by a blind - and deaf - devotion to every measure Wagner ever wrote.

Wagner, by the way, for all his thunderous warfare on operatic convention and his intolerant, calculated dogmatism, granted some praise to Bellini and the Maestro Mancinelli, whose words are listened to in Italy and ought to be in New York, not so long ago spoke of Bellini as the Italian Wagner. At first glance such an attribution is, in view of Verdi, Ponchielli and the moderns, to say the least astonishing. Compared even with Donizetti's orchestration, that of Bellini is thin, nor was Bellini an innovator in the harmony of the day or a daring dissenter from established form.

What the Maestro Mancinelli had in mind was the truthfulness of Bellini's declamation, as well as the justice of expression in his sustained melody. In "La Sonnambula." in "Norma," and in "I Puritani" one finds the same unaffected truthfulness in the treatment of recitative. In "La Sonnambula" the recitative is genuinely simple, without either pretentiousness or false modesty, as befits the simple, pastoral subject. In "Norma." it has an elevation that never becomes stilted or bombastic. Neither Gluck nor Wagner found a loftier declamatory utterance than the magnificent recitative that preludes Norma's "Casta Diva." Thence spoke the Maestro Mancinelli?

(re Arturo) not as many other tenors have cared attempting the part in the original keys. Mario, the husband of Grisi succeeding Rubini in the celebrated quartet did sing it successfully, and within more recent memory the Spanish

tenor Gayarre and the Italian tenor Bonci have rather specialized in the part.

Mr. Bonci sang it at the Manhattan in 1906, winning instant recognition not only for the range of his voice, but tor his fluent execution and his pure and elegant style. In 1906 Hammerstein's Arturo was the Spaniard Constantino, but the music was too high for him and he craned for top notes in falsetto. For Mr. Bonci the Elvira was Regina Pinkert, a light soprano rather of the Barrientos order, who did better in "Rigoletto" and "L'Elisir d'Amore." With Constantino, Luisa Tetrazzini sang. Never having heard Grisi I liked her singing very much.

Mr. Lazaro has an exceptionally high voice for Arturo, and an exceptionally rich voice as well, and all the fervor any part requires. In the last act his high notes - the highest I am sure I have ever heard a tenor sing, though I cannot be certain whether he stopped at D, E flat, E or mounted even to F! - were in their power and quality, as well as their dizzy altitude, simply electrifying.

He often sang, too, in admirable style and with the finesse and the repose the music demands. But in those latter particulars he showed at times that he still has something to learn. I fancy he will learn it quickly if he profits by his opportunity to listen attentively to Mr. Caruso, his admitted elder and therefore in no sense a rival, every time the incomparable Italian sings in "L'Elisir d'Amore," "Martha," or any other of the bel canto operas.As Elvira Mrs. Barrientos, though in a part written for Grisi, did the best singing I have ever heard fromt her in any part, not only as regards quality of tone, but in speed, rhythm, and phrasing, The audience applauded her thunderously at the end of "Qui la voce." She was always a distinguished figure.

So was Mr. de Luca in Tamburini's part of Riccardo, and no bel canto of the evening was finer than his. The voice of Mr. Mardones sounded so beautiful in the music of Giorgio that one regretted the r?le is short. However there is the great "Liberty Duet" for baritone and bass, which Rossini, writing from Paris to a friend in Rome, assured the latter he must have heard in that holy city when Tamburini and Lablache boomed out its measures on the stage of the Italiens in Paris. Throughout that piece Messrs. de Luca and Mardones kept the house in a volcanic eruption of applause. If, at the fall of the curtain, Mr. Gatti-Gasazza had had the orchestra swing right into the "Marseillaise" nothing could have prevented a riot.

The chorus, Mr. Setti's chorus, was again superb. Mr. Moranzoni conducted with understanding, sympathy, infinite care, and an exhilarating sense of effect; the scenery was all one need ask for. And all these elements had their due part in one of the most brilliant evening's Mr. Gatti-Casazza has ever provided our town.



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