[Met Performance] CID:132870
Carmen {372} Metropolitan Opera House: 02/4/1942.
(Review)
Metropolitan Opera House
February 4, 1942
CARMEN {372}
Carmen..................Lily Djanel
Don José................Charles Kullman
Micaela.................Licia Albanese
Escamillo...............Leonard Warren
Frasquita...............Thelma Votipka
Mercédès................Helen Olheim
Remendado...............Alessio De Paolis
Dancaïre................George Cehanovsky
Zuniga..................Norman Cordon
Moralès.................Wilfred Engelman
Dance...................Monna Montes
Dance...................Ruthanna Boris
Dance...................Alexis Dolinoff
Dance...................Michael Arshansky
Dance...................Alexis Kosloff
Dance...................Leon Varkas
Conductor...............Thomas Beecham
Review of Robert Bagar in the World-Telegram
Met Has a Carmen and No Mistake
Lily Djanel Sings Role This Time for Smith Scholarship Fund
The second performance of "Carmen" this season was given at the Metropolitan last evening for the benefit of the Smith College Scholarship Fund. The floral motif was a powerful one, what with a Flower Song on the stage and a bevy of pretty girls selling flowers around the corridors and lobbies for the good of the cause.
The Met has acquired a Carmen, and no mistake. She is as Gallic a Spanish Gypsy as must have haunted Bizet's fondest dreams. That Carmen is Lily Djanel and last night she demonstrated for a second time humors high and low, kindly and mean, according to the specifications. This "gypsy baggage" is intense - mostly through understatement. There is economy of gesture to her portrayal. There is also the sign of doom in her come-on smiles.
No Scene-Stealer
She acts well, she is always in the picture, yet never interfered with the work of the others. "Let them have their moments in the spotlight," she seems to say. "I, Carmen, the influence, the threat, at once the symbol and victim of evil, call me what you will, but always in the spotlight, whether in or out of it."
Mme. Djanel, it happens, quite gratifyingly, also sings well. There is much subtlety in her delivery of the lines. There is tremendous poise, serenity, one might call it in her vocalism. She achieves a great deal by implication. A slight wobble is discernible in her voice, but after the first few moments you forget that. Besides all that she is good to look at and, what's more, svelte. The large audience enjoyed her performance.
Charles Kullman was a fine Done José, Licia Albanese a show-stopping Micaela and Leonard Warren a girthy and phlegmatic Toreador. Sir Thomas Beecham got some interesting colors and effects, but his conducting often dragged.