[Met Performance] CID:125140



Die Walk?re
Ring Cycle [65] Uncut
Metropolitan Opera House, Thu, February 16, 1939 Matinee





Die Walk?re (304)
Richard Wagner | Richard Wagner
Br?nnhilde
Kirsten Flagstad

Siegmund
Lauritz Melchior

Sieglinde
Elisabeth Rethberg

Wotan
Friedrich Schorr

Fricka
Ris? Stevens

Hunding
Emanuel List

Gerhilde
Thelma Votipka

Grimgerde
Irra Petina

Helmwige
Dorothee Manski

Ortlinde
Irene Jessner

Rossweisse
Lucielle Browning

Schwertleite
Anna Kaskas

Siegrune
Helen Olheim

Waltraute
Doris Doe


Conductor
Artur Bodanzky


Ring Cycle [65] Uncut








Review 1:

Review of Pitts Sanborn in the World-Telegram

Flagstad Sings Br?nnhilde

In spite of the ineptitudes of the staging - that foolish "battle in the clouds" without a cloud touches the nadir of Metropolitan absurdity - there was much to admire in yesterday's "Die Walkeure" at the Metropolitan, continuing the matinee Wagner series.

First of all there was Kirsten Flagstad. Her voice rang out with thrilling splendor. Particularly memorable was her delivery of Br?nnhilde's last speech, the second "Diess Eine musst du erhoeren!" etc. And then she was one element of the performance that could be looked at, to the eye a real Norse goddess.

Friedrich Schorr sang admirably the parts of Wotan's music that lay within his vocal compass. A noteworthy case in point was the passage beginning "De labie suess dich selige Lust." But his Wotan seems to be inseparable from that preposterous red velvet cloak, and sometimes yesterday he behaved like a male shrew.

Vocally magnificent was the Siegmund of Lauritz Melchior, and Elisabeth Rehtberg, the Sieglinde, sang spiritedly and in better voice that she has done on occasion. Rise Stevens as Fricka grappled intelligently and painstakingly with a task that overweighted her. Emanuel List provided his usual Hunding.

Artur Bodanzky conducted with energy and authority, and the orchestra got along with a minimum of quacking.

Search by season: 1938-39

Search by title: Die Walk?re, Ring Cycle [65] Uncut,



Met careers