[Met Performance] CID:330027
Manon {237} Metropolitan Opera House: 10/1/1997.
(Review)
Metropolitan Opera House
October 1, 1997
MANON {237}
Massenet-Meilhac/Gille
Manon...................Renée Fleming
Des Grieux..............Marcello Giordani
Lescaut.................Roberto de Candia
Count des Grieux........Paul Plishka
Guillot.................Michel Sénéchal
Brétigny................John Del Carlo
Poussette...............Theresa Cincione
Javotte.................Anita Johnson
Rosette.................Reveka Mavrovitis
Innkeeper...............Vaclovas Daunoras
Guard...................Anthony Dean Griffey
Guard...................Nathan Gunn
Maid....................Lee Hamilton
Sergeant................Nico Castel
Porter..................John Hanriot
Croupier................David Frye
Croupier................Robert Maher
Conductor...............Julius Rudel
Production..............Jean-Pierre Ponnelle
Stage Director..........Peter McClintock
Designer................Jean-Pierre Ponnelle
Lighting designer.......Gil Wechsler
Review of Martin Mayer in Opera (UK)
Massenet's Manon, with Renee Fleming in the title role, was the triumph of the first month in the Metropolitan Opera's new season, mostly for musical reasons. The piece itself is, of course, dramatically problematic, based on one of the earliest novels in western literature, written by a priest with moral instruction in mind but prurience (and sales) at heart. The characters are humours as much as they are people - and one of them, Manon's brother (in the opera, her cousin), is as nasty a piece of goods as opera offers. But Manon herself has one moment of stage opportunity - the recitative "AlIons, il le faut" and the lovely aria about the dinner table - and Fleming made it poignant. Vocally, she was beyond praise on October 1, especially in the two showpieces of the Cours-la-Reine scene, where she sang the very fancy alternative aria Massenet wrote for Mme Brejean-Silver. We now have to wait a full year before hearing her again, which is very sad.
The strong cast was delicately but firmly led by Julius Rudel, for whom Massenet is a special Fach. Marcello Giordani was a fine Des Grieux, John Del Carlo an outstanding Brétigny (it's dramatically useful to have a giant Brétigny), and Michel Sénéchal, of course, an incomparably confident Guillot. Robert De Candia in a debut as Lescaut was okay but a little woolly. The very elaborate Jean-Pierre Ponnelle production, a heavy weight for this charmer to bear, has been trimmed down just a bit, for its own good.