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Der Rosenkavalier
Metropolitan Opera House, Thu, January 3, 1980
Der Rosenkavalier (274)
Richard Strauss | Hugo von Hofmannsthal
- Octavian
- Agnes Baltsa
- Princess von Werdenberg (Marschallin)
- Anna Tomowa-Sintow
- Baron Ochs
- Aage Haugland
- Sophie
- Judith Blegen
- Faninal
- Ernst Gutstein
- Annina
- Shirley Love
- Valzacchi
- James Atherton
- Italian Singer
- Seth McCoy
- Marianne
- Elizabeth Coss
- Mahomet
- Derrick Jefferson
- Princess' Major-domo
- John Carpenter
- Orphan
- Mary Fercana
- Orphan
- Barbara Bystrom
- Orphan
- Ann Sessions
- Milliner
- Linda Mays
- Animal Vendor
- John Hanriot
- Hairdresser
- Donald Mahler
- Notary
- Andrij Dobriansky
- Leopold
- Glenn Bater
- Lackey
- Richard Firmin
- Lackey
- Frank Coffey
- Lackey
- Dennis Steff
- Lackey
- Donald Peck
- Faninal's Major-domo
- Nico Castel
- Innkeeper
- Charles Anthony
- Police Commissioner
- Philip Booth
- Conductor
- Erich Leinsdorf
Review 1:
Review of Patrick J. Smith in Opera
Of three revivals at the Met, the first, "Der Rosenkavalier," which I saw on January 3, achieved a generally high level of accomplishment as regards staging, mechanics and singing (no small achievement for this complex opera!), climaxing in a memorably seamless trio and duet. If Erich Leinsdorf's conducting did not explore the warmth and plasticity of phrasing inherent in the music, it was nonetheless briskly efficient and, at times, evocative.
The lack of final impact lay less in the singing than in the acting, specifically that of the two principal female roles. Anna Tomowa-Sintow's soprano has lost some of its bloom, but remains a most pleasing instrument; yet her Marschallin moved through her scenes like a disembodied wraith. Her non-interest in diction robbed all of her great set-pieces of their power and poignancy, and her general attitude of superciliousness left hollowness at the core of the opera. Agnes Baltsa possesses a lovely mezzo, but Octavian strikes me as temperamentally the wrong part for her. Her gamine flightiness - not really that of a young man but of some androgynous street urchin - was at odds both with the nobility of the character and with its coltish masculinity: an aimless flutter replaced assurance. Judith Blegen's Sophie is well thought-out and, again, radiant of voice, but its porcelain-doll fragility sacrifices the femininity that must suffuse the role.
In this ensemble, the Ochs of Aage Haugland stood out, and dramatically tipped the balance of the opera. His is a youthful, vivid conception, closer perhaps to what Hofmannsthal and Strauss originally envisioned when the opera took its title from his name, but one which, despite its gaucherie, is winning and positive. When the Marschallin dubbed him an "aufgeblasene schlechte Kerl," the comment reflected not upon him, but upon her. She seemed an affected product of a dying upper class not to appreciate the humanity - however coarsely rendered - of his nature. Indeed, Haugland's pervasive, joyous embracing of life and its vicissitudes so lit up the precincts of Vienna that, by its earthy light he transformed the rest into the attitudes of figurines in a Nyniphenburg shop window.
Search by season: 1979-80
Search by title: Der Rosenkavalier,
Met careers
- Erich Leinsdorf [Conductor]
- Agnes Baltsa [Octavian]
- Anna Tomowa-Sintow [Princess von Werdenberg (Marschallin)]
- Aage Haugland [Baron Ochs]
- Judith Blegen [Sophie]
- Ernst Gutstein [Faninal]
- Shirley Love [Annina]
- James Atherton [Valzacchi]
- Seth McCoy [Italian Singer]
- Elizabeth Coss [Marianne]
- Derrick Jefferson [Mahomet]
- John Carpenter [Princess' Major-domo]
- Mary Fercana [Orphan]
- Barbara Bystrom [Orphan]
- Ann Sessions [Orphan]
- Linda Mays [Milliner]
- John Hanriot [Animal Vendor]
- Donald Mahler [Hairdresser]
- Andrij Dobriansky [Notary]
- Glenn Bater [Leopold]
- Richard Firmin [Lackey]
- Frank Coffey [Lackey]
- Dennis Steff [Lackey]
- Donald Peck [Lackey]
- Nico Castel [Faninal's Major-domo]
- Charles Anthony [Innkeeper]
- Philip Booth [Police Commissioner]