[Met Performance] CID:233070
Der Rosenkavalier {229} Metropolitan Opera House: 03/16/1973.
(Debuts: Yvonne Minton, Michael McClain, Elvira Green, Cecil Baker, Richard Firmin
Review)
Metropolitan Opera House
March 16, 1973
DER ROSENKAVALIER {229}
R. Strauss-Hofmannsthal
Octavian.....................Yvonne Minton [Debut]
Princess von Werdenberg......Leonie Rysanek
Baron Ochs...................Walter Berry
Sophie.......................Judith Blegen
Faninal......................Morley Meredith
Annina.......................Marcia Baldwin
Valzacchi....................Andrea Velis
Italian Singer...............Franco Tagliavini
Marianne.....................Carlotta Ordassy
Mahomet......................Michael McClain [Debut]
Princess' Major-domo.........Gabor Carelli
Orphan.......................Mary Fercana
Orphan.......................Joyce Olson
Orphan.......................Elvira Green [Debut]
Milliner.....................Elizabeth Anguish
Animal Vendor................Cecil Baker [Debut]
Hairdresser..................Harry Jones
Notary.......................Andrij Dobriansky
Leopold......................John Trehy
Lackey.......................Richard Firmin [Debut]
Lackey.......................Peter Sliker
Lackey.......................Lou Marcella
Lackey.......................Edward Ghazal
Faninal's Major-domo.........Nico Castel
Innkeeper....................Charles Anthony
Police Commissioner..........Richard Best
Conductor....................Christoph Von Dohnányi
Production...................Nathaniel Merrill
Designer.....................Robert O'Hearn
Der Rosenkavalier received seven performances this season.
Review of Ron Eyer in the Daily News
Minton Hit in Mixed-Up Role at Met
Making her debut with the company, Australian Yvonne Minton is the latest mezzo-soprano to tackle the bisexuality of Octavian in the Metropolitan Opera's "Der Rosenkavalier," and she scored a solid, if not spectacular, success in the boy-girl role. Octavian is not really bisexual at all, of course. In the baroque sophistication of poet von Hofmannsthal and composer Strauss, which seems naive amid today's frank complexities of sexuality, she is simply a girl who plays a boy who, in turn, plays a girl. But this can give no end of trouble to an opera singer. First of all, she must be able to sing the occasionally high-lying music of Octavian and fit in the surpassingly beautiful female trio and duet that end the opera. Then she must (sometimes) look and act like a young man. Other times she must look like a young man acting like a young girl. Quite an assignment.
Warm and Relaxed Voice
Miss Minton had no problems in the vocal department Friday night. Her voice is warm and relaxed and she had no trouble holding her own against Leonie Rysanek's Marschallin, Judith Blegen's Sophie or Walter Berry's Baron Ochs. She doesn't get much in the way of solos, but what she did have, as in the scene of the presentation of the silver rose, was most grateful to the ear. Her chiseled features gave her a good masculine appearance, though her military uniform didn't seem to fit too well. And thankfully, she didn't clown too much in trying make her boy characterization act like a girl in seducing old Baron Ochs.
She was an ornament to a cast including others new to the Met production. Walter Berry was a youngish and very exuberant Baron Ochs who managed some of the bass tones of the part remarkably well for a baritone. Judith Blegen brought real vocal dimension and a pretty pout to the usually vacuous role of Sophie. And Franco Tagliavini did a good imitation of Caruso (intentionally, one hopes) as the Singer.
New, too, was Christoph von Dohnanyi at the conductor's desk. He savored every phrase, but his pace was so leisurely that the opera at times seemed to be in slow motion and he didn't get the curtain down until after midnight. Leonie Rysanek grows steadily in the resplendent part of the Marschallin. She is as beautiful to look at as to listen to, and she has added some deft bits of acting that make her bittersweet performance ever more poignant.
Photograph of Judith Blegen as Sophie in Der Rosenkavalier by Louis Mélançon/Metropolitan Opera.