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Die Walk?re
Ring Cycle [49]
Metropolitan Opera House, Thu, March 1, 1928 Matinee
Die Walk?re (227)
Richard Wagner | Richard Wagner
- Br?nnhilde
- Florence Easton
- Siegmund
- Rudolf Laubenthal
- Sieglinde
- Maria M?ller
- Wotan
- Michael Bohnen
- Fricka
- Julia Claussen
- Hunding
- William Gustafson
- Gerhilde
- Phradie Wells
- Grimgerde
- Marion Telva
- Helmwige
- Dorothee Manski
- Ortlinde
- Mildred Parisette
- Rossweisse
- Ina Bourskaya
- Schwertleite
- Dorothea Flexer
- Siegrune
- Elda Vettori
- Waltraute
- Henriette Wakefield
- Conductor
- Artur Bodanzky
Ring Cycle [49]
Review 1:
Review signed M. W. in the New York Tribune
Easton is Heard As Br?nnhilde in 'Walk?re' Matinee
Metropolitan Has Decorous Gathering for Its Third Performance in Cycle
The performance of "Die Walk?re" at the Metropolitan Opera House yesterday, the third matinee in the current Wagner cycle, was not one of the best which has been given there in this or any other season. The two stars of the afternoon were the late Mr. Richard Wagner, whose mighty conception and deathless music prevailed over a singularly inept performance, and the audience, which was a notably decorous, attentive and intelligent gathering of people brought together by a common and sincere desire to enjoy a great master-work and for no other reason.
In the orchestra pit, presided over by Mr. Bodanzky, things went as they have gone before with this score, a rough and shallow tone, a hurrying, impatient tempo, lacking breadth and nobility.
On the stage there was a collection of gods and demi-gods which sometimes satisfied, but more often strained, the imagination. Vocally the honors and dishonors were also even. The most credible of all were the Volsung twins, Miss M?ller's personal loveliness and strong young voice make some amends for an affecting awkwardness in her Sieglinde, and Mr. Laubenthal's sincerity and ingenuous observance of the role's conventions redeem his Siegmund from its lyrical short-comings. The solitary human in the cast, Hunding, was conveyed by Mr. Gustafson with his familiar lack of distinction. As for the royal family of Valhalla, Mr. Bohnen may have meant well in so arresting our attention with his consistently "different" Wotan - the audience was certainly more often dismayed than bored - but nothing can excuse the liberties which he allowed himself with those majestic and moving vocal lines not so carelessly compiled by Mr. Wagner. His farewell to Br?nnhilde was a miracle of misguided zeal!
The impersonator of Fricka, the outraged goddess of hearthstone virtue, was Mme. Julia Claussen, making yesterday afternoon her first appearance with company this season. Mme. Claussen is routine in gesture, adequate in voice, somewhat strident and shrewish in disposition.
And what Mme. Florence Easton accomplishes as Br?nnhilde, the gloriously disobedient Valkry, is well known here and accepted by many with enthusiasm. It is, from the point of view of intrepidity, an admirable performance, for Mme. Easton's conspicuous talents are not most at home among the sweeping and elemental passions and actions of the Wagnerian hierarchy. Her voice coped righteously with the written notes, but its quality was not intended to be heard among the thunders, and her dramatic efforts were the more commendable in view of her natural limitations.
Search by season: 1927-28
Search by title: Die Walk?re, Ring Cycle [49],
Met careers
- Artur Bodanzky [Conductor]
- Florence Easton [Br?nnhilde]
- Rudolf Laubenthal [Siegmund]
- Maria M?ller [Sieglinde]
- Michael Bohnen [Wotan]
- Julia Claussen [Fricka]
- William Gustafson [Hunding]
- Phradie Wells [Gerhilde]
- Marion Telva [Grimgerde]
- Dorothee Manski [Helmwige]
- Mildred Parisette [Ortlinde]
- Ina Bourskaya [Rossweisse]
- Dorothea Flexer [Schwertleite]
- Elda Vettori [Siegrune]
- Henriette Wakefield [Waltraute]