[Met Performance] CID:124880
Louise {24} Matinee Broadcast ed. Metropolitan Opera House: 01/28/1939., Broadcast

(Broadcast
Review)


Metropolitan Opera House
January 28, 1939 Matinee Broadcast


LOUISE {24}
Charpentier-Charpentier

Louise..................Grace Moore
Julien..................René Maison
Mother..................Doris Doe
Father..................Ezio Pinza
Blanche.................Helen Olheim
Marguerite..............Maxine Stellman
Suzanne.................Lucielle Browning
Gertrude................Irra Petina
Irma....................Marisa Morel
Camille.................Thelma Votipka
Élise...................Pearl Besuner
Madeleine...............Anna Kaskas
Errand Girl.............Natalie Bodanya
Forewoman...............Maria Savage
Ragpicker...............John Gurney
Young Ragpicker.........Pearl Besuner
Coal Gatherer...........Anna Kaskas
Noctambulist............Alessio De Paolis
Newsgirl................Lucielle Browning
Junkman.................Louis D'Angelo
Milkwoman...............Maxine Stellman
Policeman...............Max Altglass
Policeman...............Carlo Coscia
Street Arab.............Natalie Bodanya
Streetsweeper...........Maria Savage
Painter.................Wilfred Engelman
Sculptor................George Cehanovsky
Songwriter..............Nicholas Massue
Student.................Giordano Paltrinieri
Poet....................George Rasely
Philosopher.............Norman Cordon
Philosopher.............Louis D'Angelo
Chairmender.............Anna Kaskas
Peddler.................George Cehanovsky
Artichoke Vendor........Marisa Morel
Birdfood Vendor.........James Demers
Carrot Vendor...........Alessio De Paolis
Watercress Vendor.......Anna Kaskas
Greenpeas Vendor........Nicholas Massue
Old Clothes Man.........George Rasely
Pope of Fools...........Alessio De Paolis
Dance...................Maria Gambarelli

Conductor...............Ettore Panizza

Director................Désiré Defrère
Designer................Joseph Urban

Louise received eight performances this season.

Review by Olin Downes in the New York Times:

Miss Moore's Louise is a thoughtful, sincere and dramatically effective accomplishment, as it stands. She can do more, we believe, to intensify, as Mary Garden did so wonderfully, the struggle of the daughter against parents, the clash of wills, the revolt, the final throwing off and out of the window of every restraint, once rebellion has been declared, and the headlong escape from the house of bickerings and frustrations straight into the jaws of glittering, splendid, devouring, Paris.

But the conception, dramatically as well as in song, is excellently constructed, carried out in detail, and, if it is held down, or if it develops comparatively slowly to the final scene, does so on a scale that meets the needs of the final climax. There is logic in this, in Louise's character. She is the daughter of poor, honest, obstinate parents, whose toil and hard lives have caused them to forget their own youth and its dreams. She has been properly trained from the parental point of view-"suppressed", as our friends the psychoanalysts would say.

Her dresses fit her tightly and in not too flexible a design. Her shoulders are not free. They are pinched, in an invisible straitjacket, born of hard discipline, unconscious resignation, exhausting and underpaid work. She is ripe for the lure of Julien, the intoxication of his youth and the glamour of the life that he and his boon companions lead, and he is full of the isms of the day-the ideologies, as they now say-and talks constantly of liberty and freedom to live and love.

This is the broth that brews and makes drama of Charpentier's sociological and domestic tragedy of Paris at the turn of the century. Miss Moore conveyed this motive, for the present observer, extremely well. She did not yield gracefully to Julien, ecstatic as the yielding was. She could have made more of Louise's desperate exit from the workroom and the conversation of the sewing-girls had she chosen and in so doing might have stepped out of the frame of the unsophisticated character she was portraying.

Miss Moore did well by the music. Her voice has developed in late years in volume and quality; there is more security, a finer perception of pitch. "Depuis le jour" was a little stiff. It would have been better, and more finished, with less caution. That may well come with the second performance. Probably the sensation of a public test in a first American appearance in this role did not conduce to the utmost spontaneity.


Photograph of Grace Moore as the title role in Louise by Wide World Studio.



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