[Met Performance] CID:161000

Opening Night {68}, New Production, General Manager: Rudolf Bing

La Forza del Destino
Metropolitan Opera House, Mon, November 10, 1952

Debut : Laura Castellano




La Forza del Destino (58)
Giuseppe Verdi | Francesco Maria Piave
Leonora
Zinka Milanov

Don Alvaro
Richard Tucker

Don Carlo
Leonard Warren

Padre Guardiano
Cesare Siepi

Preziosilla
Mildred Miller

Fra Melitone
Gerhard Pechner

Marquis de Calatrava
Luben Vichey

Curra
Laura Castellano [Debut]

Surgeon
Algerd Brazis


Conductor
Fritz Stiedry


Director
Herbert Graf

Designer
Eugene Berman

Choreographer
Zachary Solov





Until the revision of 1/17/75, this production omitted the original inn scene, Act II, Scene 1. In some revivals, but not all, the overture served as a bridge between the opening scene, set in the Calatrava palace, and the second scene, set at the Church of the Madonna degli Angeli.

Review 1:

Review of Louis Biancolli in the Telegraph and Sun

MET OPENS WITH A SONG IN ITS HEART

Overshadowing everything else at the Metropolitan last night-the social ?clat, the excited hubbub, the ermine brigade, even Verdi's "Forza Del Destino"-was the beauty of the singing.

The Metropolitan Opera House might be said to have opened its 68th season and its third under the management of Rudolf Bing with a song in its heart. If last night was any test, there are magnificent things ahead for those who have long been mourning the passing of the great days of Italian singing.

Mr. Bing is to be applauded for launching the new season with 'La Forza." The fact that the opera was first produced exactly 90 years ago to the night made it an irresistible choice. More important is that it is still one of Verdi's most unjustly neglected children. How timely the revival was could be seen and heard in the behavior of the crowd.

I have rarely seen a Metropolitan audience so absorbed and concentrated at an opening. There were those who floated foggily along the corridors while the music was on and a few unfortunates who returned too late to their seats to catch the prize song of the evening--Leonora's famous "Pace, Pace."

By and large, however, the audience gulped down every note and Verdi, as I suppose everybody knows, is a pretty good provider that way. "La Forza" fairly drips with warm melody. There are arias and duets and trios worth their weight in molten gold, and if anybody ever wrote a greater aria than the "Pace, Pace," I'll eat the whole opera score it comes from.

That aria, incidentally, brought the loudest and most sustained ovation of the evening. And no wonder! It was sung by Zinka Milanov-the new Zinka Milanov who spins out tone as if it were a natural function and who caresses a phrase with the tender solicitude

I couldn't resist "bravoing" at that point myself, though I know a critic's enthusiasm is supposed to be confined to his typewriter. Mme. Milanov's rendering of the aria was the best since Muzio and Ponselle. Among other things, hers is the most moving pianissimo of our time.

If Mme. Milanov's singing was symbolic of Mr. Bing's new outlook, so was the singing of Richard Tucker as Don Alvaro and Leonard Warren as Don Carlos. These two Spaniards, sworn enemies, have the opera pretty much to themselves, that is when Leonora isn't around. When she isn't "La Forza" is one long angry male duet.

Mr. Tucker has been called the Brooklyn Caruso. Knowing the generosity of lamented Enrico, I am certain he would have been proud to be called the Italian Tucker, had fate made them con- temporaries. That's how good Tucker sounded last night. In one scene where he was flat on his back, tone poured up from him like a sunlit geyser.

If Mr. Warren goes on singing the way he did last night, I shall have to restore him to first place in my own private book of baritones. And as for Cesare Siepi, his splendid basso never sounded so broad and spacious as it did in the stately lines of Padre Guardiano. Mildred Miller was pert and spirited in Preziosilla's harmless "Rataplan," and the chorus backed them all up with volumes of fresh and vibrant tone. Everybody's thanks go to Fritz Stiedry for a sound job of conducting.

I liked Herbert Graf's staging of the opera-the vivid battle scenes, the monastic solemnities, the

brooding desolateness of the finale -and I didn't mind finding "La. Forza" in the 17th century instead of the 18th. It is the kind of sprawling, globe-trotting opera that could be put in the age of Charlemagne without offending anyone but the pedants. Spaniards go to Italy to fight Germans. The chances are history is even more foolish than an opera libretto.

Much has been written about Fritz Stiedry's cuts and restorations. I had no objection to any of them. He kept in the beautiful "Solenne in Quest'ora" and the even more beautiful "Pace, Pace." Had he left either of them out, I would be picketing the Metropolitan today.



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