[Met Performance] CID:89180



G?tterd?mmerung
Metropolitan Opera House, Sat, January 31, 1925 Matinee


Debut : Nanny Lars?n-Todsen




G?tterd?mmerung (89)
Richard Wagner | Richard Wagner
Br?nnhilde
Nanny Lars?n-Todsen [Debut]

Siegfried
Curt Taucher

Gunther
Friedrich Schorr

Gutrune
Maria M?ller

Hagen
Michael Bohnen

Waltraute
Karin Branzell

Alberich
Gustav Sch?tzendorf

First Norn
Merle Alcock

Second Norn
Henriette Wakefield

Third Norn/Woglinde
Laura Robertson

Wellgunde
Phradie Wells

Flosshilde
Marion Telva

Vassal
Max Bloch

Vassal
Arnold Gabor


Conductor
Artur Bodanzky


Director
Wilhelm Von Wymetal

Set Designer
Hans Kautsky





G?tterd?mmerung received four performances this season.

Review 1:

Review of Ernest Newman in the New York Post

For a good many minutes after the curtain rose at the Metropolitan on Saturday afternoon, three misguided young ladies on the stage-known officially as the Three Norns-did their obstinate best to render inaudible to us the noise of late corners finding their seats in the dark, having heart-to-heart talks with the attendants, greeting their friends, dropping their seats into position, and so on. When the contest of wills was over, and the Norns had left the stage thoroughly beaten, we settled down to what was in the main an admirable performance particularly on the part of Mr. Bodanzky and the orchestra.

It is true that Mr. Taucher sang with no more agreeable a voice than usual, and made a somewhat bourgeois Siegfried. Germany is full of Siegfrieds at the moment. It is true that few of them can sing beautifully, but most of them can sing as well as Mr. Taucher, and the majority of them have at any rate the physical presence. This being so, I can only wonder why Mr. Taucher should be singing Siegfried in New York-a part for which he is even less fitted by nature than he is for Tristan.

Mme. Nanny Larsen-Todsen made a good first impression as Br?nnhilde. She has not quite enough voice to be an ideal representative of the part, and her vibrato was at times trying; but she is an intelligent actress and she makes Br?nnhilde at once a dignified and a sympathetic figure. As with many another good Wagnerian singer, her gestures appeared at times over-studied and mechanical. The constant movement of her arms in the first act became rather tiring to watch. It was therefore all the greater surprise when in the second act, in the scene of recognition, she showed us what intensity she could throw into her body and her face while remaining immobile for some minutes. Perhaps an admirer may be allowed to suggest that a Br?nnhilde who can do what Mme. Larsen-Todsen did here has no need of three-fourths of the conventional attitude striking in which she had previously indulged. She became more and more impressive as the opera went on, and, though her voice was still not ideal for the part, successfully shouldered, as Br?nnhilde should do, the whole mighty drama, of the last scene.

Miss Maria Muller made a sufficiently fragile and pathetic figure of Gutrune, Mme. Branzell sang Waltraute's monologue with great conviction, and Mr. Schorr, besides singly nobly, solved the eternal problem of making the ineffective Gunther effective. Mr. Bohnen's Hagen was a fine piece of work, though he was not in his best voice.

The scenery was old-fashioned, but some of the lighting excellent.



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