[Met Performance] CID:159000



La Traviata
Metropolitan Opera House, Tue, February 19, 1952 Matinee





La Traviata (354)
Giuseppe Verdi | Francesco Maria Piave
Violetta
Delia Rigal

Alfredo
Eugene Conley

Germont
Renato Capecchi

Flora
Paula Lenchner

Gastone
Gabor Carelli

Baron Douphol
Lawrence Davidson

Marquis D'Obigny
Algerd Brazis

Dr. Grenvil
Osie Hawkins

Annina
Jean Madeira

Dance
Tilda Morse

Dance
Maria Karnilova

Dance
Socrates Birsky


Conductor
Fausto Cleva







Review 1:

Review of Robert Sabin in Musical America
In this performance of the Metropolitan's new production of ?Carmen,? the season's fourth, Kurt Adler conducted instead of Fritz Reiner, who had led the season's first performance of Strauss's ?Elektra? the previous evening. Mario Del Monaco appeared as Don Jos? for the first time at the Metropolitan; and Norman Scott took the role of Zuniga for the first time there. The cast, otherwise familiar, included Rise Stevens, as Carmen; Nadine Conner, as Micaela ; Paolo Silveri, as Escamillo; and, in other roles, Clifford Harvuot, Lucine Amara, Margaret Roggero, George Cehanovsky, and Alessio de Paolis.

Mr. Adler conducted the opera for the first time at the Metropolitan, and he was faced with a cast and orchestra trained to Mr. Reiner's wishes. Under the circumstances, the questionable tempos (too slow in Act I) and much too fast in Act II) and the occasional lack of co-ordination between stage and pit were understandable. Mr. Adler also had to deal with two singers new to the cast?Mario del Monaco and Norman Scott. He obtained generally efficient results.

Mr. Del Monaco's performance as Don Jos? was vocally and dramatically undistinguished. During the first three acts his acting was wooden, and in the fourth he indulged in exaggerations that made things difficult for Miss Stevens. In a few places the natural vitality of his voice made itself felt, and there was one well-spun piano phrase at the end of his duet with Micaela in Act I that showed that he was capable of better vocalism than he vouchsafed most of the time. His French diction, like that of almost all the other members of the cast, was poor. The lack of precision in his enunciation may have been the cause of a woolly quality of tone in soft passages.

Mr. Scott's Zuniga was a competent, if routine, impersonation, and he sang with considerable vitality. Miss Stevens and the other artists gave workmanlike performances, which was all that one could expect from them under these circumstances.


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