Photo Journal: It's Three Times the Opera - Puccini's Trittico at the Met
By Matthew Westphal It's quite an evening at the theater, Puccini's Il trittico (The Triptych). Three one-acts — a horrific incident (Il tabarro, about a love triangle gone terribly wrong), a sentimental tragedy (Suor Angelica, about a young nun terribly wronged), and a light comedy (Gianni Schicchi, about one of opera's great tricksters). And we're pleased to offer you photos of all of them below. For such a wide range of material, one needs an exceptionally versatile stage director. And the Met got one of the best — Jack O'Brien. He's comfortable with Shakespeare (he's artistic director of the Old Globe Theater in San Diego, and one of his Tony Awards is for Henry IV), high-spirited Broadway musicals (The Full Monty and Hairspray, for which he won his other Tony), and cerebral drama (he just finished directing the other high-profile trilogy now running in New York, Tom Stoppard's The Coast of Utopia at Lincoln Center Theater). He's no stranger to opera, either: his most famous outing in the genre is Houston Grand Opera's Porgy and Bess, which was presented around the U.S. for the next decade and completely remade the work's reputation.
* UPDATE: This evening, for opening night, Frederick Burchinal will replace Pons, who is ill. There are eight performances of Il trittico at the Metropolitan Opera House from tonight through May 12. This evening's performance will be available in free streaming audio at the Met's website (www.metopera.org); the April 28 Saturday matinee will be simulcast live, in high-definition video and audio, into selected movie theaters in North America, Europe and Japan. (For locations and times, go to metopera.org and click on the "Live in HD" box near the bottom of the screen.) * * * * * * * * All photos by Ken Howard/Metropolitan Opera.
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