Tag: Joyce DiDonato

  • Cendrillon Streaming Free From The Met

    Cendrillon Streaming Free From The Met

    If you missed it in June, you’ve got a second chance. The Met is streaming Jules Massenet’s “Cendrillon” for 24 hours, beginning this evening at 6:00 EDT.

    While I concede that Massenet may not be at the top of every opera-lover’s wish list, this production is a gem, and not to be missed.

    Massenet’s Cinderella springs from the page, with literal writing on the wall and a team-and-carriage rendered in typeset. Also, a playfully-imagined gallery of fairy tale grotesques in the supporting cast. There is a charm to Laurent Pelly’s staging that I find particularly refreshing, in an era when the thinking seems to be that everything has to trend toward the dark.

    If you’re a fan of classic children’s book illustrations, don’t miss this one. With Joyce DiDonato in the title role – and Stephanie Blythe as the wicked stepmother – it’s difficult to resist.

    To learn more, visit metopera.org.

  • Handel’s Agrippina at the Met Free Streaming

    Handel’s Agrippina at the Met Free Streaming

    If you’re a Baroque opera nut – or even if you’re not – do not miss this David McVicar staging of Handel’s “Agrippina,” from the Metropolitan Opera. I don’t always enjoy updated productions, but this one is a hoot. Joyce DiDonato may be the star – and she’s magnificent in the title role, as the conniving wife of the Roman emperor Claudius – but it is Kate Lindsey who steals the show as a young punk Nero, who, during one breathless number, cuts cocaine with a credit card, and literally winds up giving everyone the finger as he struts to the throne. It may not sound like your kind of thing, but believe me, it is! DO NOT MISS IT. Free streaming begins tonight at 6:00 EDT and continues for 24 hours at metopera.org.

    Just a 60-second sample of Kate Lindsey as Nero (but for the full effect, you really need to see her shake out the big bag of coke!):

  • Met Opera Streams: Why Cendrillon is a Must-See

    Met Opera Streams: Why Cendrillon is a Must-See

    My pick of the week from the current batch of Metropolitan Opera HD encores may seem like a slight one – especially in a week full of notable diversions – but I’m going with Jules Massenet’s “Cendrillon.”

    This Cinderella springs from the page, with literal writing on the walls and a team-and-carriage rendered in typeset. Also, a playfully-imagined gallery of fairy tale grotesques in the supporting cast. There is a charm to Laurent Pelly’s staging that I find refreshing in an era when seemingly everything has to trend toward the dark. If you’re a fan of classic children’s book illustrations, don’t miss this one. With Joyce DiDonato in the lead – and Stephanie Blythe as the wicked stepmother – it’s difficult to resist.

    Massenet is star of the week, apparently, since there also happens to be a “Manon” – admittedly side-by-side with John Adams’ “Doctor Atomic,” and Pavarotti and Kathleen Battle in Donizetti’s “L’Elisir d’Amore.”

    The Met has pledged to stream free opera for the duration of the house’s shutdown. Each opera is accessible for approximately 23 hours, starting every day around 7 p.m. EDT. Philip Glass’ “Satyagraha” streams through 6 p.m. today, at metopera.org.

    Here’s a complete schedule of this week’s offerings. You’ll find teasers and bonus materials when following the link:

    https://www.metopera.org/user-information/nightly-met-opera-streams/week-15/

    Monday, June 22
    Verdi’s La Traviata
    Starring Sonya Yoncheva, Michael Fabiano, and Thomas Hampson, conducted by Nicola Luisotti. From March 11, 2017.

    Tuesday, June 23
    John Adams’s Doctor Atomic
    Starring Sasha Cooke, Thomas Glenn, Gerald Finley, and Richard Paul Fink, conducted by Alan Gilbert. From November 8, 2008.

    Wednesday, June 24
    Saint-Saëns’s Samson et Dalila
    Starring Elīna Garanča, Roberto Alagna, Laurent Naouri, Elchin Azizov, and Dmitry Belosselskiy, conducted by Sir Mark Elder. From October 20, 2018.

    Thursday, June 25
    Massenet’s Manon
    Starring Lisette Oropesa, Michael Fabiano, Carlo Bosi, Artur Ruciński, Brett Polegato, and Kwangchul Youn, conducted by Maurizio Benini. From October 26, 2019.

    Friday, June 26
    Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore
    Starring Kathleen Battle, Luciano Pavarotti, Juan Pons, and Enzo Dara, conducted by James Levine. From November 16, 1991.

    Saturday, June 27
    Massenet’s Cendrillon
    Starring Kathleen Kim, Joyce DiDonato, Alice Coote, Stephanie Blythe, and Laurent Naouri, conducted by Bertrand de Billy. From April 28, 2018.

    Sunday, June 28
    Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte
    Starring Golda Schultz, Kathryn Lewek, Charles Castronovo, Markus Werba, Christian Van Horn, and René Pape, conducted by James Levine. From October 14, 2017.

  • Handel’s Ariodante Arias Celebrate His Birthday

    Handel’s Ariodante Arias Celebrate His Birthday

    Happy birthday, George Frideric Handel!

    The many moods of “Ariodante”:

    Scherza infida (Joyce DiDonato)

    Dopo notte (Emily D’Angelo)

  • Florence Foster Jenkins Mania Three Films!

    Florence Foster Jenkins Mania Three Films!

    They say that bad news comes in threes. But who would expect THREE films inspired by Florence Foster Jenkins?

    Florence Foster Jenkins, if you don’t know, was the Philadelphia matron and patron of the arts who began mounting vocal recitals in 1912, when in her early 40s. Despite her dubious sense of pitch and rhythm and seeming indifference to the nuances of breath control and the proper pronunciation of foreign languages, Jenkins shot to fame on the unintentional hilarity of her performances.

    Her swan song was her “finest” – a recital at Carnegie Hall on October 25, 1944, that achieved a kind of transcendence through the sheer scope of its awfulness. Jenkins was 76 years-old.

    Some find her recordings funny – and to an extent, they undeniably are – but it is difficult to not feel a little embarrassment for her and a touch of pity. If not for the fact that she was so blissfully oblivious, that is. This could have been the role of a lifetime for Margaret Dumont (who actually trained as an opera singer).

    The most high-profile of the three films is one starring Meryl Streep and Hugh Grant and directed by Stephen Frears (“Dangerous Liaisons,” “The Queen” and “Philomena”).

    A 2015 French film, “Marguerite,” is now making the rounds in the U.S. on limited release.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jnr78V0se3s

    And in January, Joyce DiDonato announced that she will appear in reenactments as part of a new documentary.

    Joyce DiDonato to star in documentary feature film as Florence Foster Jenkins

    Jenkins’ legendary recordings can be heard on the cult album, “The Glory(????) of the Human Voice.”

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