Twice as Nice
By Matt Dobkin Starring in La traviata and Otello at the Metropolitan Opera in 2007–08, it's all Verdi, all the time for the extraordinary Renée Fleming.
At the Met alone, Fleming's wide-ranging repertory includes the expected Mozart and Strauss roles like the Countess, Donna Anna, the Marschallin, and Arabella, but also such diverse fare as Imogene in Bellini's Il pirata, Ellen Orford in Britten's Peter Grimes, and the title roles of Dvorák's Rusalka, Carlisle Floyd's Susannah, and Handel's Rodelinda. Last season she sang her first Met Tatianas in Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin to tremendous acclaim from critics and audiences — both at the Met and in movie theaters around the world when the production was transmitted live as part of the company's Live in HD series.
That's one of the reasons her performances of this challenging role, with its mix of Verdian heft and rapid-fire coloratura, have appeared only sparingly on Fleming's calendar. Desdemona, on the other hand, is a part she's had thoroughly in her voice since early in her career. She first sang the role at the Met back in 1994 opposite the renowned Otello of Plácido Domingo. With that role well-suited to her voice, even in the soprano's early days, why has she not performed it more often? "Part of the problem is that there aren't that many Otellos!" jokes Fleming, who has called Domingo "the greatest Otello for 30 years." "A lot of people can sing Desdemona, but who's going to sing Otello?"
At the Met this season, that task falls to Johan Botha, whose performances of Radamès in Aida and the title role of Don Carlo in 2006 marked his own first forays into Verdi territory at the Met. The clarion-voiced tenor will be fortunate to have an experienced Desdemona opposite him in the fabulous Fleming.
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