El Dorado News-Times

Poignant return for Met Opera after 18-month pandemic pause

- By Ronald Blum

NEW YORK — Even before the first note, there were a pair of standing ovations — one when the chorus filed in and another when concertmas­ter Benjamin Bowman walked on to tune up the orchestra.

About 90 minutes later, when conductor Yannick Nézet-Séguin relaxed his arms, the 3,600 people filling the seats of the Metropolit­an Opera House responded with 8 1/2 minutes of thunderous applause, bringing wide smiles and hints of tears to the 200-plus performers on stage.

For the first time in 550 days, an audience was inside the auditorium at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts on Saturday night, attending a poignant performanc­e of the Verdi Requiem. The night was in commemorat­ion of the 20th anniversar­y of the Sept. 11, 2001, er3dwwwdfc-grvszterro­rist attacks but in fact marked much more.

The company was performing in its home for the first time since hundreds of thousands of deaths caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic, including Met violist Vincent Lionti, assistant conductor Joel Revzen and chorister Antoine Hodge.

It also marked the first performanc­e in the house since the death of conductor James Levine, the Met’s towering figure of the last half-century. He died in March at 77, a little over three years after was he was fired for sexual impropriet­ies. Verdi was a specialty, and the last of his 2,552 Met performanc­es was the company’s previous Verdi Requiem in December 2017.

Levine’s successor as music director was on the podium. The 46-year-old Nézet-Séguin led a performanc­e of far more impact and subtlety than Levine’s final efforts, when his conducting was hampered by Parkinson’s Disease.

Following a year of labor strife that culminated in new contracts, the Met orchestra of 90 and chorus of 120 led by chorus master Donald Palumbo showed the world-class status they reached under Levine, basking in the rapturous applause of an audience starved for live music.

The pandemic caused the Met to cancel more than 275 performanc­es, including its entire 2020-21 season, plus an internatio­nal tour. The gap was the longest since the company began in 1883.

In the first performanc­e at the house since Mozart’s “Così fan tutte” on March 11, 2020, the four soloists were all superb: soprano Ailyn Pérez, mezzo-soprano Michelle DeYoung, tenor Matthew Polenzani and bass-baritone Eric Owens.

Some in the audience congratula­ted long unseen friends and acquaintan­ces for making it through the 18 months. There were no speeches from the stage. This was the second step in the Met’s return following a pair of Mahler Seconds performed outdoors last weekend in Lincoln Center’s Damrosch Park.

Accounting for the pandemic, the audience appeared to be 100% masked. Proof of vaccinatio­n was required for entry, leading to lengthy lines.

The first two rows of the orchestra were covered, increasing separation between the performanc­es and audience.

Gregory Zuber’s bass drum thundered during the a “Dies Irae (Day of Wrath). Perez and Polenzani sang ethereally. Nézet-Séguin conducted spaciously.

Still ahead is the formal opening night of the season on Sept. 27, when Nézet-Séguin conducts Terence Blanchard’s “Fire Shut Up in My Bones,” the first work by a Black composer in the Met’s 138-year history and another milepost in New York City’s return to normalcy.

 ?? (Richard Termine/The Metropolit­an Opera via AP) ?? This photo provided by The Metropolit­an Opera shows a rehearsal for Verdi Requiem on Thursday at The Metropolit­an Opera in New York.
(Richard Termine/The Metropolit­an Opera via AP) This photo provided by The Metropolit­an Opera shows a rehearsal for Verdi Requiem on Thursday at The Metropolit­an Opera in New York.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States