Product Description
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This staging, by Robert Carsen, of Tchaikovsky's popular
romantic opera was broadcast live to cinemas worldwide from the
Metropolitan Opera to great critical accl in February 2007.
Renee Fleming and Dmitri Hvorostovsky star as the doomed lovers
in Pushkin's tragic tale of unrequited love and their onstage
chemistry made for some rave reviews. Valery Gergiev, widely
considered to be Russia's greatest living conductor, leads the
Metropolitan Opera Orchestra and Chorus.
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This set, filmed at the Metropolitan Opera's February 2007
performances of Tchaikovsky's most popular opera, has just about
everything going for it: an all-star cast in peak form, a great
orchestra led by today's leading Russian conductor, and a
striking stage production whose minimalist, often stark, sets
manage to superbly suit this most Romantic of operas.
Drawn from Pushkin's classic, the opera tightly focuses on the
story of Tatiana, a naive young girl who declares her love for a
dashing rake (Onegin) who rejects her overtures. His arrogance
surfaces leads to flirting with his best friend's fiancée and
then to killing him in a duel. Plagued by remorse, a
superficially reformed but still impossibly self-centered Onegin
meets Tatiana at a ball, but now the childish country bumpkin is
the glamorous wife of a Prince. He declares his love but she
rejects him and leaves him alone, a solitary, tragic figure.
Renée Fleming's Tatiana is a triumph, her gorgeous soprano
voice, intense acting and precise characterization make the
complex young woman come alive. Her "Letter Scene," in which the
singer must reveal the innermost thoughts of a confused soul, is
as good as it gets, as Fleming fully reveals the young woman's
joyous hopes of requited love and also her fears of rejection. In
the final act, she's still attracted to the dashing Onegin but
resolved to preserve her marriage. In the title role, Dmitri
Hvorostovsky is her equal; his firm baritone fits the music like
a velvet glove and his acting matches Fleming's in its intensity.
He's especially fine in his last-act monologue, bursting with
despair and passion. Tchaikovsky gave the work's most beautiful
arias to Lenski, Onegin's friend. Ramon Var' mellifluous tenor
is well-suited to the lyricism of Lenski's Act One love aria and
to the poignant aria before his duel with Onegin. Lenski's anger
at his friend in the ball scene is palpably menacing. As Olga,
Tatiana's high-spirited sister and Lenski's fiancée, Elena
Zaremba is fully up to the rest of the cast, her rich mezzo and
pointed phrasing a strong point. Sergei Aleksaskin's Prince
Gremin is a dignified presence, Larisa Schevchenko as Tatiana's
old nurse is convincing, and the smaller roles are well sung and
acted. Jean-Paul Fouchécourt is not only in excellent voice in
the beautiful aria of Triquet, Tatiana's French tutor, but
manages to invest his song with an apt touch of parody as well.
Valery Gergiev's conducting is a major asset, and the MET
Orchestra is in terrific form, with special kudos due to the
soulful clarinet solos that are so important in the musical
texture.
Producer Robert Carson imbues the work with Romantic glow and
Michael Levine's spare sets are far more effective than one might
think. The stage is strewn with leaves and framed by textured
rods doing duty as birch trees in Act One; the ball scene
similarly framed by a rectangle of chairs and side tables, both
sets analogues for the character's imprisonment in their
unbridled emotions. Video director Brian Large keeps his cameras
well-focused on the action, to complete an Onegin that's the DVD
version to get. --Dan Davis
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Review
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"Breathtakingly beautiful."--New York Magazine "Miss Fleming's
sympathetic, exquisitely sung Tatiana was a major achievement."
-- The New York Times
"Hvorostovsky's creamy baritone...purling legato, and elegant
musical manners have seldom sounded more seductive." -- New York
Magazine
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