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Tosca
Metropolitan Opera House, Fri, December 13, 1996
Debut : Thomas Hammons
Tosca (783)
Giacomo Puccini | Luigi Illica/Giuseppe Giacosa
- Tosca
- Carol Vaness
- Cavaradossi
- Vincenzo La Scola
- Scarpia
- Jean-Philippe Lafont
- Sacristan
- Thomas Hammons [Debut]
- Spoletta
- Anthony Laciura
- Angelotti
- Richard Bernstein
- Sciarrone
- Bradley Garvin
- Shepherd
- Andrew Jablon
- Jailer
- Vaclovas Daunoras
- Conductor
- Christian Badea
- Production
- Franco Zeffirelli
- Costume Designer
- Peter J. Hall
- Lighting Designer
- Gil Wechsler
- Stage Director
- Max Charruyer
Tosca received thirteen performances this season.
Review 1:
Paul Griffiths in The New York Times
A Night at the Opera, Or at the Multiplex
All other things being more or less decent, the star attractions at the Metropolitan Opera's current revival of "Tosca" are Franco Zeffirelli's sets, which undeniably match the music and enhance the impression this work gives of live cinema. They lead one to wonder if Puccini had some experience of the movies in their infancy, or if it is just that film composers followed his way here of using the orchestra to set atmosphere, to direct movement and even to sing, as when "E lucevan le stelle" starts out as an aria for instruments with tenor accompaniment.
Even so, the piece does not have to sound quite so much like movie music as it did at Friday night's [first] performance, when the conductor, Christian Badea, encouraged brash fortes and slovenly rhythms. The point is not that film scores are badly played, but rather that they are badly heard. This was the effect: of a bad hearing, one lacking in nuance, detail and connection.
Carol Vaness, in the title role, was altogether and characteristically more noble, to a fault. She avoided the scoops and snarls that have entered the role in emulation of Callas, but she also avoided commitment and danger. What she offered instead was, to some extent, a just and effective performance: Tosca is, after all, a professional singer, and might reasonably have more care for a well-placed high note than for Cavaradossi. But for such an interpretation to stick thoroughly would have required more vim and more size of voice. Ms. Vaness seemed not so much proud in her role as careful for herself. A lot of her singing was beautiful but aloof; the coldness needed to be brought closer, so that we could feel the chill.
The Cavaradossi, Vincenzo La Scola, had to press himself hard, except in the third act, when the prison set gave him a more enclosed space in which to sing. Under those conditions he was engaging; when he had to force, any good qualities in his singing were swamped by vibrato.
Jean-Philippe Lafont offered an unusual Scarpia, drawn as if with soft pencil. The gray clouds of his tones were bleak, but at the same time they implied a possible humanity and a more interesting character: a good man who has turned away from goodness in order to turn away from himself.
Nothing else much counts in this opera of threes: three characters, three acts, three chords. There were nice features in the bit parts, however. Richard Bernstein was an appealing Angelotti, and Thomas Hammons offered a vocally strong and for once not too hammy Sacristan.
Search by season: 1996-97
Search by title: Tosca,
Met careers
- Christian Badea [Conductor]
- Carol Vaness [Tosca]
- Vincenzo La Scola [Cavaradossi]
- Jean-Philippe Lafont [Scarpia]
- Thomas Hammons [Sacristan]
- Anthony Laciura [Spoletta]
- Richard Bernstein [Angelotti]
- Bradley Garvin [Sciarrone]
- Andrew Jablon [Shepherd]
- Vaclovas Daunoras [Jailer]
- Franco Zeffirelli [Production]
- Peter J. Hall [Costume Designer]
- Gil Wechsler [Lighting Designer]
- Max Charruyer [Stage Director]