The Columbus Dispatch

Poignant return for opera after long pandemic pause

- Ronald Blum

NEW YORK – Even before the first note, there were a pair of standing ovations – one when the chorus filed 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 filling the seats of the Metropolit­an Opera House responded with 81⁄2 minutes of thunderous applause, bringing wide smiles and hints of tears to the 200-plus performers on stage.

For the first 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, terrorist attacks but in fact marked much more.

The company was performing in its home for the first 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 first performanc­e in the house since the death of conductor James Levine, the Met’s towering figure of the last half-century. He died in March at 77, a little over three years after was he was fired 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 final efforts, 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 first 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 first two rows of the orchestra were covered, increasing separation between the performanc­es and audience.

Programs were digital only – the Met said printed versions will be restored when the season starts.

Gregory Zuber’s bass drum thundered during the Dies Irae (Day of Wrath). Perez and Polenzani sang ethereally.

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 first work by a Black composer in the Met’s 138-year history and another milepost in New York City’s return to normalcy.

The Met’s opening night is a marker of the start of New York’s social season, a series of white-tie and black-tie gatherings that was largely skipped in 20202021.

A series of Broadway shows will start opening next week. The New York Philharmon­ic begins Sept. 17 at Alice Tully Hall, while David Geffen Hall undergoes reconstruc­tion expected to last another year. Carnegie Hall starts a limited fall season Oct. 6 followed by a fuller spring.

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