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Fidelio
Metropolitan Opera House, Wed, November 28, 1945
In English
Fidelio (69)
Ludwig van Beethoven | Joseph Sonnleithner
- Leonore
- Regina Resnik
- Florestan
- Arthur Carron
- Don Pizarro
- Kenneth Schon
- Rocco
- Lorenzo Alvary
- Marzelline
- Frances Greer
- Jaquino
- John Garris
- Don Fernando
- Hugh Thompson
- First Prisoner
- Anthony Marlowe
- Second Prisoner
- Louis D'Angelo
- Conductor
- Bruno Walter
- Director
- Herbert Graf
- Designer
- Joseph Urban
Translation by T. Baker
Fidelio received five performances this season.
Review 1:
Review of Francis D. Perkins in the Herald Tribune
"Fidelio" Is Given
Metropolitan Again Presents Beethoven Opera in English
The second evening of the season at the Metropolitan Opera House was Beethoven's only opera, ""Fidelio," which had returned to the active repertoire last March. The cast under the admirable direction of Bruno Walter was nearly the same as before - Osie Hawkins was to have sung his first Don Fernando, but he was indisposed, and the role of the beneficent Minister of State went to Hugh Thompson. Another substitution was that of Anthony Marlowe for Richard Manning.
In some distance from an ideal performance, last night's interpretation of "Fidelio" marked a considerable improvement over that of March 17. The merits included good co-ordination and balance between the voices in concerted numbers and between the voices and the orchestra, for which the major credit can presumably be assigned to Mr. Walter, whose devotion to this opera is notable and infectious. What was sometimes lacking was a sense of dramatic conviction in certain individual interpretations, and this affected the dramatic cogency of the production as a whole.
Miss Resnik's Leonora, in her disguise as the youth Fidelio, is more within the bounds of possibility than her predecessors' and her voice, when at its best, could be praised for the warmth of her lower tones and clarity and considerable volume in her higher ones. Sometimes her upper notes gave a certain hint of effort. From an expressive point of view, she strove for dramatic conviction, but could not achieve the sense of concentrated hate which marks the [very first] phrases of her principal aria, or that of ecstatic joy at the close of the dungeon scene. But the interpretation had its promising points.
Mr. Carron sang his [first] air with cloudy tones which gained in quality later on; dramatically his interpretation was fair. Miss Greer was a likable Marzelline, with tones that were usually commendable, sometimes edgy; Mr. Alvary was a sympathetic Rocco and Mr. Garris a creditable Jacquino. Some of the evening's best singing was that of Mr. Schon as the nefarious Pizarro; his voice was firm and well focused, but he did not quite manage to give an effect of genuine villainy in his utterances.
There was no difficulty in understanding the English in the spoken lines; and a very fair percentage of the sung text got across the orchestra pit. Dr. Baker's text is sometimes stagey, and the speeches sometimes had a touch of staginess; Mr. Alvary fared best in avoiding this.
A memorable feature of the evening was the orchestral performance of the third "Leonore" overture before the last scene, and for this Mr. Walter received a deserved ovation.
Search by season: 1945-46
Search by title: Fidelio,
Met careers
- Bruno Walter [Conductor]
- Regina Resnik [Leonore]
- Arthur Carron [Florestan]
- Kenneth Schon [Don Pizarro]
- Lorenzo Alvary [Rocco]
- Frances Greer [Marzelline]
- John Garris [Jaquino]
- Hugh Thompson [Don Fernando]
- Anthony Marlowe [First Prisoner]
- Louis D'Angelo [Second Prisoner]
- Herbert Graf [Director]
- Joseph Urban [Designer]