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World Premiere, New Production
Merry Mount
Metropolitan Opera House, Sat, February 10, 1934 Matinee Broadcast
Debut : Filomena Pangoni
Merry Mount (1)
Howard Hanson | Richard Stokes
- Lady Marigold Sandys
- G?ta Ljungberg
- Sir Gower Lackland
- Edward Johnson
- Wrestling Bradford
- Lawrence Tibbett
- Plentiful Tewke
- Gladys Swarthout
- Praise God Tewke
- Louis D'Angelo
- Myles Brodrib
- Alfredo Gandolfi
- Peregrine Brodrib
- Helen Gleason
- Love Brewster
- Lillian Clark
- Jack Prence
- Marek Windheim
- Thomas Morton
- George Cehanovsky
- Jewel Scrooby
- Millo Picco
- Desire Annable
- Irra Petina
- Jonathan Banks
- Giordano Paltrinieri
- Faint Not Tinker
- Arnold Gabor
- Bridget Crackston
- Henriette Wakefield
- Puritan
- Max Altglass
- Puritan
- Pompilio Malatesta
- Samoset
- James Wolfe
- Dance
- Rita De Leporte
- Conductor
- Tullio Serafin
- Director
- Wilhelm Von Wymetal Jr.
- Designer
- Jo Mielziner
- Costume Designer
- Filomena Pangoni [Debut]
- Choreographer
- Rosina Galli
Merry Mount received nine performances in one season. Hanson's opera had been presented in
concert form at Ann Arbor, Michigan, on May 20, 1933.
Review 1:
Review by Pitts Sanborn in the New York World-Telegram:
Fifteenth of the American works presented by Mr. Gatti-Casazza during his Metropolitan consulship, "Merry Mount", which attracted a vast and expectant audience Saturday afternoon, must be exceedingly gratifying to those musical patriots who insist on the one hundred per cent. It is not only American in authorship, but likewise in theme. Mr. Richard L. Stokes, the librettist, and Dr. Howard Hanson, the composer, both native-born have selected as their subject the brief invasion of the pious shores of Massachusetts Bay by some roistering cavaliers, who set up a big, bad Maypole and dance around it like unregenerate heathen.
Dr. Hanson's music is most effective in the choral passages, which are plentiful. Take the chant of the men within the church after the impressive choral prelude. True there is oftener the suggestion of Moussorgsky than of Massachusetts, but who would be so ungracious as to object to that? Nor has Dr. Hanson failed to assemble lively measures for the Maypole dance or to strike the witching note called for by the wild doings at the "Hellish RenDeszous". Unforfunately his writing for the solo voices is not free from awkwardness and at times the weight and density of the orchestral fabric constitutes a barrier between the word that is sung and the ears of the audience.
"Merry Mount" is almost a one-part opera and that part is Wrestling Bradford. In it Mr. Tibbett exhibits once more his intelligence and skill as a singing actor, as well as splendid courage and endurance. The wooden angularity of his movements and gestures, however, was a mistaken exaggeration. That the terrific tessitura of his part interferes with his vocal security and freedom was, of course, not his fault.
Search by season: 1933-34
Search by title: Merry Mount,
Met careers
- Tullio Serafin [Conductor]
- G?ta Ljungberg [Lady Marigold Sandys]
- Edward Johnson [Sir Gower Lackland]
- Lawrence Tibbett [Wrestling Bradford]
- Gladys Swarthout [Plentiful Tewke]
- Louis D'Angelo [Praise God Tewke]
- Alfredo Gandolfi [Myles Brodrib]
- Helen Gleason [Peregrine Brodrib]
- Lillian Clark [Love Brewster]
- Marek Windheim [Jack Prence]
- George Cehanovsky [Thomas Morton]
- Millo Picco [Jewel Scrooby]
- Irra Petina [Desire Annable]
- Giordano Paltrinieri [Jonathan Banks]
- Arnold Gabor [Faint Not Tinker]
- Henriette Wakefield [Bridget Crackston]
- Max Altglass [Puritan]
- Pompilio Malatesta [Puritan]
- James Wolfe [Samoset]
- Rita De Leporte [Dance]
- Jo Mielziner [Designer]
- Filomena Pangoni [Costume Designer]
- Wilhelm Von Wymetal Jr. [Director]
- Rosina Galli [Choreographer]