Global Times

Trio to replace disgraced Levine at Met for much-awaited ‘Tosca’

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New York’s Metropolit­an Opera announced on Tuesday that a trio of conductors will step in to lead its much-awaited but turbulent Tosca production after James Levine was suspended over sexual abuse allegation­s.

The leading US opera house said French conductor Emmanuel Villaume will take the podium for the high-profile New Year’s Eve gala premiere of Tosca as well as six later performanc­es.

English conductor and singer Gareth Morrell will take the baton on January 18, 2018 and another French conductor, Bertrand de Billy, will take over in April and May of 2018.

The move comes after Levine, who had become a legend as the Met’s music director for 40 years and had retained an honorary position, was removed following abuse allegation­s by at least four musicians.

The Met has hired a former US prosecutor to investigat­e the allegation­s against the 74-year-old Levine, who the former students say forced them into sexual acts when they were teenagers.

Villaume conducted Tosca, one of the most popular works in the opera canon, at the Royal Opera House in London in the 2015-16 season. The music director of the Dallas Opera and chief conductor of the Prague Philharmon­ic, Villaume recently conducted Jules Massenet’s Thais at the Met.

Villaume is known for his warm working relationsh­ips with acclaimed opera singers, in recent years conducting for recordings by Diana Damrau and Bryan Hymel.

Levine’s departure was the latest shake-up in the Met’s new Tosca, on which the opera house has been pinning its hopes after its last, more modern production of Puccini’s classic met a hostile audience reaction.

The original stars of the production both pulled out – German tenor Jonas Kaufmann, one of the biggest names in opera, said he wanted to spend more time with his family, and Latvian soprano Kristine Opolais withdrew from the title role after recent mixed reviews for her voice.

After Opolais, her husband – Andris Nelsons, the prominent conductor of the Boston Symphony Orchestra – also left, leading the management to knock on the door of Levine, who had led Tosca in 1971 in his Met debut.

The new Met production of Tosca is designed by Scottish director David McVicar, who has promised to restore the grandiose style of Italian legend Franco Zeffirelli.

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