Theatre Collectibles, Gifts, and more available at The Playbill Store! Click here to enter

February 12, 2012

Home
Playbill Club
Join Newsletter
Member Services
Features
Classical Music
Opera
Dance
Jazz/Blues
New Recordings
Spotlight
All
News
Archive
Classical Music
Opera
Dance
Jazz/Blues
All
Playbill Store
Storefront
Casting & Jobs
Job Listings
Post a Job
FIND YOUR NEXT JOB ON PLAYBILLARTS.com! Click Here!
Interactive
Polls
Quizzes

RSS News Feed

News: Opera
Related Information
Email this Article Email this Article
Printer-friendly Printer-friendly

Bookmark and Share

RELATED ARTICLES:

19 Oct 2007 -- Alagna and Kaiser to Share Remaining Met Roméos

23 Aug 2007 -- Transcontinental Tenor: Joseph Kaiser Withdraws from L.A. Jenufa to Fill In for Villazón at Met

14 Aug 2007 -- Roberto Alagna to Replace Rolando Villazón in Early Performances of Met's Roméo et Juliette

Revolving Romeos: Marcello Giordani Makes Last-Minute Substitution in Gounod Opera at Met

By Matthew Westphal
09 Oct 2007

Romeo seems to be an unusually star-crossed lover at the Metropolitan Opera this fall — an unusual number of stars have been crossing the stage in the role.

Tenor Rolando Villazón had been scheduled to sing the male lead in this season's revival of Gounod's Roméo et Juliette at the Met, opposite his frequent stage partner, soprano Anna Netrebko. Late this summer, however, Villazón cancelled all of his upcoming performances for health reasons. Roberto Alagna — who was to be at the house already to sing Pinkerton opposite Patricia Racette's Madama Butterfly (that revival opened last night) — took on the first two Romeos; Matthew Polenzani (who just opened as the Duke in Rigoletto in Philadelphia) was booked for the final two performances in December, including New Year's Eve. At the special request of Plácido Domingo, who is conducting the Gounod score at the Met, handsome young tenor Joseph Kaiser was released from his contract to sing in Los Angeles Opera's Jenufa in order to make his Met debut, filling in for Villazón in three performances this month.

The second of Kaiser's Romeos was to have been last Saturday evening, Oct. 6. But he developed a bad cold the previous day, and he decided that morning that he couldn't go on. Met general manager Peter Gelb likes to provide stars as substitutes when possible, especially when the house is sold out as it was for that night. The star tenor who was close at hand was Marcello Giordani, who is singing Edgardo in the Met's Lucia di Lammermoor. It had been four years since he sang Romeo, but Giordani went through the role with his vocal coach and decided that he could do it.

"I was afraid I couldn't remember," the tenor told the Associated Press, "but I remembered 95 percent of the score."

Marcello Giordani in his last-minute substitution as Gounod's Romeo, with Anna Netrebko as Juliet.
photo by Ken Howard / Metropolitan Opera
Giordani worked through the staging of the first three acts with Netrebko that afternoon, according to The New York Times, and intermission ran ten minutes longer than planned so that the two leads could rehearse this staging's famous suspended-bed scene.

Everything went quite smoothly, according to a review by Allan Kozinn in the Times; the Met's own website reports that cast and crew backstage let out some hearty whoops after Giordani nailed one particular high C.

"Marcello's great performance was nothing short of miraculous," said Gelb after the show, "when you consider that he hadn't sung the part of Romeo since 2003, wasn't familiar with this production, and had sung the leading tenor role in Lucia only the night before." Netrebko said, "He's a hero for me."

This was the second last-minute substitution in as many nights at the Met: in Friday's Lucia, Mariusz Kwiecien, feeling ill, withdrew after the second act, and his cover, baritone Stephen Gaertner, made his house debut with the Wolf's Crag scene in Act III.

Kaiser is set to return to the Met stage for Roméo's last performance of this month, on Thursday, Oct. 11. But there are, as yet, four performances in December without a Romeo ...




Keyword:

Features/Location:

Writer:

 


advanced search

SIGN UP for the PlaybillArts Newsletter and enjoy special opportunities and discount ticket offers for classical music, opera, dance, and jazz events.


Click here to see all of the latest polls !


Email this page to a friend!