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About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

Please do not combine with the orchestra, chorus or ballet.

Series

Works by Metropolitan Opera

La forza del destino (sound recording) (1862) — Company — 102 copies
Aida: Live From the Metropolitan Opera [1989 film] (1992) — Company — 15 copies, 1 review
Cloisters Apocalypse (1971) 4 copies
Great Operas at the Met : Faust [sound recording] (1991) — Company — 2 copies
Wagner : Tristan and Isolde [sound recording] (1989) — Company — 2 copies
Wagner's Dream (2012) 2 copies
Martha (1961) 1 copy
Fedora: The Metropolitan Opera [1997 film] (2004) — Company — 1 copy

Associated Works

La Traviata [sound recording] (1853) — Company, some editions — 439 copies, 2 reviews
La Bohème [sound recording] (1985) — Company, some editions — 336 copies, 1 review
Puccini : Tosca [sound recording] (1900) — Company, some editions — 274 copies, 2 reviews
Carmen [sound recording] (1984) — some editions — 266 copies, 3 reviews
Il trovatore [sound recording] (1939) — Company, some editions — 188 copies, 1 review
Lucia di Lammermoor [sound recording] (2007) — Company, some editions — 149 copies, 1 review
Verdi: Otello [sound recording] (1887) — Company, some editions — 134 copies
Il Barbiere di Siviglia [sound recording] (1991) — Company, some editions — 126 copies, 1 review
Lohengrin [sound recording] (1990) — Company, some editions — 102 copies
Wagner's Ring: The Bayreuth Centennial Production: Die Walküre (2009) — Company, some editions; Orchestra, some editions — 45 copies, 2 reviews
Giordano : Andrea Chénier [sound recording] {Monaco/Cleva 1954} (1954) — Orchestra, some editions — 3 copies
Madama Butterfly [video recording : 2009] (2011) — Production company, some editions — 3 copies
Giordano : Andrea Chénier [video recording] [1996 film] {Pavarotti} (2011) — Production company; Orchestra — 2 copies
Madama Butterfly [video recording : 1995] — some editions — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
n/a
Occupations
opera company
Relationships
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
Metropolitan Opera Chorus
Metropolitan Opera Ballet
Nationality
USA
Places of residence
Metropolitan Opera House, New York, New York, USA
Disambiguation notice
Please do not combine with the orchestra, chorus or ballet.
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
The story in outline: randy husband with roving eye chases reluctant young woman while neglected wife schemes to rewin husband’s affections. Meanwhile, woman’s fiancé struggles with issues of trust as youthful neighbour comes to terms with coming of age.
Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro" embodied the spirit of the French Revolution when it premiered in 1786, portraying the comic triumph of skilled and quick-witted middle-class servants over their pompous and decadent royal masters. The show more Beaumarchais play from which this opera drew inspiration had been banned in Paris for its volatile political content: finding dark humour in class power struggles was dangerous business in pre-Revolutionary France. For the many fans of the effervescent masterpiece today, its revolutionary overtones are all but lost. Yet it endures because Mozart went beyond the class struggles of his day to weave many of life's timeless themes into the opera: love and betrothal, betrayal and justice, greed and vengence, innocent youth and jaded old age. Characters who Beaumarchais sketched as ideologically shaded silhouettes gain through Mozart’s music the hearts and souls of persons one might embrace. A youth trembling with new passions. A young man confident of his cleverness. A loving wife, forlorn, her husband estranged. Couples that, like real couples, can both quarrel and forgive. show less
Not sure if it's my familiarity with the material or that Tatiana Troyanos can enunciate the hell out of her part. Her tone is just a bit too mellow for a very young man, but ee-by-gum you can understand everything she says. Fischer-Dieskaw as the Conte comes off dark throughout. Surely there's room for some lightness. Delightful recording that includes some arias often left out of staged productions.
This commemorative book celebrates Maestro James Levine's forty years at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City. It presents a chronology of Levine's tenure, illustrated with tributes, anecdotes, and short essays by Levine and many of the people he worked with at the Met (mostly singers, but also administrators, musicians, directors, students, et al.) The book is lavishly illustrated with numerous pictures from the various productions described in the text.

Given Levine's long tenure in a show more leading role at the Met (his titles have included, Principal Conductor, Music Director, and Artistic Director), it was no surprise to see a lot of praise for his musicianship. I particularly appreciated the way the various tributes and anecdotes in this book illustrate Levine's other strengths---his ability to work with and advise singers of all stripes, his sheer joy in the music he creates, his team-oriented approach, his ability to build and maintain a world-class orchestra and chorus, and his efforts to expand the operatic repertoire both with modern works and with less commonly performed historic pieces.

Since I grew up in New York and started attending the Met at about the same time Levine started conducting there, I enjoyed this book tremendously. It was a fun trip down memory lane, as I heard (or heard of) many of the performers who contributed to the book. I also recognized many of the sets and productions in the pictures, either from seeing them live, or from the various Live from the Met telecasts. This book also provided new insights and new appreciation for the magic that has happened at the Met under Levine's leadership.
show less

Awards

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Associated Authors

James Levine Conductor, Introduction
Brian Large Director
Leontyne Price Artist, Leonora
Lorenzo Da Ponte Librettist
Renata Tebaldi Leonora, Performer
Mario Del Monaco Alvaro, Artist
Kirk Browning Director
Fabio Luisi Conductor
Plácido Domingo Alvaro, Actor
Sherrill Milnes Don Carlo, Actor
Cesare Siepi Padre Guardiano, Performer
Jeremy Sams Screenwriter
Otto Schenk Director
Richard Bonynge Conductor
Donald Palumbo Chorus master
René Pape Baritone vocals [Méphistophélès], Bass vocals [Méphistophélès]
Marina Poplavskaya Soprano vocals [Marguerite]
Maurizio Benini Conductor
Evelino Pido Conductor
Henri Meilhac Librettist
Ludovic Halévy Librettist
Giuseppe Adami Librettist
Peter Sellars Librettist
Sophocles Writer
Montagu Slater Librettist
Des McAnuff Stage director
John Adams Composer
Bruce Donnell Director
Giuseppe Patane Conductor
Robert Lepage Director
David McVicar Director, Contributor
Zhang Yimou Director
Adrian Noble Director
Patrick Summers Conductor
CESARE LIEVI Conductor
Andrew Davis Conductor
Carlo Rizzi Conductor
David Robertson Conductor
Boris Christoff Padre Guardiano
Maria Callas Leonora
Pietro Mascagni Composer, Compositeur
Fernando Corena Artist, Fra Melitone
Tancredi Pasero Performer
Pasquale Amato Performer
Peter Gelb Preface
Enrico Caruso Performer
Ezio Pinza Performer
Giuseppe Danise Performer
Rosa Ponselle Performer
Zinka Milanov Performer
Jan Peerce Artist
Helen Greenwald Contributor
Thomas May Contributor
Paul Thomason Contributor
Susan Youens Contributor
Donald McIntyre Actor, Artist
Renato Capecchi Fra Melitone, Actor
Jay Goodwin Contributor
Judith Blegen Performer
Kurt Moll Actor
Michèle Losier Vocals [Siébel], Mezzo-soprano vocals [Siébel]
Michel Carré LIbrettist, Librettist
Jules Barbier Librettist
Wendy White Vocals [Marthe], Mezzo-soprano vocals [Marthe Schwerlein]
Mirella Freni Actor, Performer
Jonathan Beyer Vocals [Wagner], Baritone vocals [Wagner]
James Morris Performer, Actor
Anton van Rooy Performer
Michael Bohnen Performer, Artist
Gavin Plumley Contributor
Janet E. Bedell Contributor
Nicholas Lord Contributor
Allan Hinckley Performer, Artist
LOUISE HOMER Performer
Johanna Gadski Performer
Otto Goritz Performer
Kelly Devine Choreography
Rudolf Laubenthal Artist, Performer
Adamo Didou Performer
William Shakespeare Original play
Frieda Hempel Performer
Mildred Miller Performer
Thomas Allen Performer
Naomi André Contributor
Albert Reiss Performer
Christa Ludwig Performer, Actor
Andrew Porter Contributor
David Hamilton Programme notes, Contributor
Grace Bumbry Performer
Joseph Kaiser Vocals [Narraboth]
Pol Plançon Performer
Eugene Conley Performer
Ira Siff Guest commentator
Jean Madeira Performer
Nellie Melba Performer
Walter Soomer Performer
Marie Mattfeld Performer
HermannWEil Performer
Leo Slezak Performer
Heinrich Knotte Performer
Edyth Walker Performer
Berta Morena Conductor
Jacques Urius Conductor
Juha Uusitalo Vocals [Jochanaan]
George London Performer
Jürgen Flimm Production
Emma Eames Performer
Kim Begley Vocals [Herod]
Helga Dernesch Performer
Oscar Wilde Librettist [original text]
Mary Jo Heath Presenter
Hedwig Lachmann Librettist [German translated text]
Jack Sullivan Contributor
Mary Zimmerman Contributor
Belen Amparan Performer
Marie Dietrich Performer
Fedora Barbieri Performer
William Berger Contributor
Heinrich Knote Performer
Fiedrich Schorr Performer
Nico Muhly Contributor
James Robinson Contributor
Nicholas Wright Contributor
Franco Zefirelli Production design
Sean Pittman Contributor
Camille A. Brown Contributor
Roger Parker Contributor
Michael Kennedy Contributor
Simon Estes Performer
Simon McBurney Contributor
Robert Merrill Performer
Cori Ellison Contributor
Roger Pines Contributor
Matt Dobkin Contributor
Jonathan Minnick Contributor
Carolyn Abbate Contributor
Jan Swafford Contributor
Elena Nicolai Preziosilla
Fiorenza Cossotto Preziosilla
David Stivender Translator
Susan Webb Translator

Statistics

Works
151
Also by
19
Members
643
Popularity
#39,229
Rating
½ 4.5
Reviews
4
ISBNs
18
Languages
2

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