Roméo Et Juliette: Opera in Five Acts
Roméo Et Juliette: Opera in Five Acts
CHARLES GOUNOD
juliette
conductor Opera in five acts
Gianandrea Noseda
Libretto by Jules Barbier and
production
Bartlett Sher Michel Carré, based on the play
by William Shakespeare
set designer
Michael Yeargan Saturday, January 21, 2017
costume designer 1:00–4:00 pm
Catherine Zuber
lighting designer New Production
Jennifer Tipton
choreographer
Chase Brock
The production of Roméo et Juliette
fight director
B. H. Barry was made possible by a generous gift from
The Sybil B. Harrington Endowment Fund
general manager
Peter Gelb
roméo et
CHARLES GOUNOD’S
juliette
This performance
is being broadcast
live over The
Toll Brothers–
Metropolitan Opera
International Radio
Network, sponsored co n duc to r
by Toll Brothers, Gianandrea Noseda
America’s luxury
® in order of vocal appearance
homebuilder , with
generous long-term t y b a lt fr èr e l au r en t
support from Diego Silva Mikhail Petrenko
The Annenberg
Foundation, The pâ r i s s t éph a n o
Neubauer Family David Crawford Virginie Verrez**
Foundation, the
Vincent A. Stabile capulet b en vo l i o
Endowment for Laurent Naouri Tony Stevenson*
Broadcast Media,
and contributions juliet te t h e d u k e o f v er o n a
Prologue
Verona, 18th century. A chorus tells of the endless feud between the Montague
and Capulet families, and of the love of their children, Roméo and Juliette.
Act I
At a masked ball in the Capulet palace, Juliette’s cousin Tybalt assures Count
Pâris that Juliette, who has been promised to him, will enchant him. Capulet
presents his daughter to the guests and invites them to dance. Mercutio and
Roméo, a Montague, have donned masks to sneak into the ball, together with
other friends. Roméo tells them about a strange dream he has had, but Mercutio
dismisses it as the work of the fairy Queen Mab. Roméo watches Juliette dance
and instantly falls in love with her. Juliette explains to her nurse, Gertrude, that
she has no interest in marriage, but when Roméo approaches her in a quiet
moment, both feel that they are meant for each other. Just as they discover each
other’s identities, Tybalt happens upon them and recognizes Roméo. Capulet
prevents him from attacking Roméo, who with his friends beats a hasty retreat.
Act II
Later that night, Roméo enters the Capulets’ garden, looking for Juliette. When
she steps out onto her balcony, he declares his love. Servants briefly interrupt
their encounter. When they are alone once again, Juliette assures Roméo that
she will be his forever.
Act III
Roméo visits Frère Laurent in his cell and confesses his love for Juliette. Shortly
thereafter, she also appears with Gertrude. Hoping that their love might
reconcile their families, Frère Laurent marries them.
Visit metopera.org 35
Synopsis CONTINUED
Act IV
Roméo and Juliette have spent their secret wedding night in her room. She
forgives him for killing Tybalt. The newlyweds passionately declare their love as
day is dawning. They can hardly bring themselves to say goodbye. After Roméo
has left, Capulet appears together with Frère Laurent and announces to his
daughter that she is to marry Pâris that same day. Desperate, Juliette turns to
Frère Laurent, who gives her a potion that will make her appear to be dead.
He promises that she will awaken with Roméo beside her. Love lends Juliette
courage: she overcomes her fear and swallows the poison. On the way to the
chapel where the wedding to Pâris is to take place, Juliette collapses. To the
guests’ horror, Capulet announces that she is dead.
Act V
Roméo breaks into the Capulets’ crypt. Faced with the seemingly dead body of
his wife, he takes poison. At that moment, Juliette awakes, and they share a final
dream of future happiness. When Juliette realizes that Roméo is about to die,
she decides to follow him so their love can continue in the afterlife. Before they
both die, they ask God for forgiveness.
36
In Focus
Charles Gounod
Roméo et Juliette
Premiere: Théâtre Lyrique, Paris, 1867
Roméo et Juliette, perhaps the most enduringly successful of the many
operatic settings of the world’s most well-known love story, is sophisticated,
intelligently wrought, and ravishingly beautiful. It is an excellent example of
French Romanticism, a tradition that values subtlety, sensuality, and graceful
vocal delivery over showy effects, and the music provides a powerful dramatic
vehicle worthy of its Shakespearean source. In the opera, there is a slight shift of
focus away from the word games of the original play and a greater focus on the
two lovers, who are given four irresistible duets. Some readjustment of plot was
necessary to allow for this (the lovers have a brief final reunion in the tomb scene,
for example, which does not happen in the play). But audiences have been well
compensated for these minor infractions against Shakespeare.
The Setting
In Shakespeare’s lifetime, Italy was a land of many small city-states in constant
conflict with one another. The blood feud between families that is at the core
of this story, set in Verona, was a central feature of Italian political and social
life during this era. Yet this same war-scarred land was also the cradle of the
Renaissance, with its astounding explosion of art and science. The image that
this mythical Verona evokes, then, is a beautiful but dangerous world where
poetry or violence might erupt at any moment. The Met’s new production
moves the action to the 18th century.
The Creators
Charles Gounod (1818–1893) showed early promise as a musician and achieved
commercial success with Faust in 1859, followed eight years later by the equally
well-received Roméo et Juliette. Among his most famous works is a setting of
the “Ave Maria” based on a piece by J. S. Bach. Later in life, he composed
several oratorios. Jules Barbier (1825–1901) and Michel Carré (1821–1872) were
the leading librettists of their time in France, providing the texts for many other
successful operas, including Faust for Gounod, Mignon (also from Goethe) and
Hamlet for Ambroise Thomas, and Les Contes d’Hoffmann (Barbier alone) for
Jacques Offenbach. The plays of William Shakespeare (1564–1616) have provided
an abundance of material for such diverse opera composers as Giuseppe Verdi,
Benjamin Britten, Gioachino Rossini, Samuel Barber, Thomas Adès, and even
Richard Wagner (whose youthful work from 1836, Das Liebesverbot, is based on
Measure for Measure).
Visit metopera.org 37
PHOTO: KEN HOWARD / MET OPERA
ROSSINI
IL BARBIERE
DI SIVIGLIA
JAN 9, 13, 18, 21 eve, 24, 28 mat FEB 1, 4 eve, 8, 11 eve
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In Focus CONTINUED
The Music
Gounod infuses this classic drama with an elegant musical aura that reflects
the soaring poetry of the original. A solo flute, for example, sets a fragile and
painfully beautiful mood in the prelude to the bedroom scene in Act IV. When
Gounod explores the darker and more violent side of the story, his music creates
drama without resorting to bombast. A reserved melancholy creates all the
necessary tension. This is apparent in the striking opening chorus and especially
in the arresting ensemble “Ô jour de deuil” in Act III, when the various characters’
destinies intersect in a tragic instant. For the story’s more lighthearted moments,
Gounod supplied the sort of buoyant melodies that made his Faust a huge hit
with audiences. The baritone sets an eerie and frivolous mood with his song
about Queen Mab and her fairy world of dreams, “Mab, la reine des mensonges,”
early in Act I. Shortly after, the heroine takes the stage with the giddy coloratura
gem “Je veux vivre.” Moments such as these add musical and dramatic texture
to the tragedy, admired for its contrast of light and dark. The focus of the story,
however, remains firmly on the two lovers.
Met History
Roméo et Juliette (or rather, Romeo e Giulietta) received a single performance in
the Met’s first season (1883–84), sung in Italian. The brothers Jean and Édouard
de Reszke and the American soprano Emma Eames performed the work in 1891,
which was the first performance of a French opera given in French at the Met.
It proved so popular that the work opened the Met season six times between
1891 and 1906. Eames shared performances with the Australian soprano Dame
Nellie Melba, who sang Juliette 33 times between 1894 and 1901. Swedish
tenor Jussi Björling and Brazilian soprano Bidu Sayão teamed up for only two
performances of this opera, yet a recording of the 1947 broadcast continues
to impress listeners today as one of the most memorable performances in this
repertory at the Met. A new production in 1967 featured Franco Corelli and
Mirella Freni as the young lovers. Roméos featured in this production in later
seasons included Nicolai Gedda, Plácido Domingo, Neil Shicoff, Alfredo Kraus,
and Roberto Alagna, opposite such Juliettes as Anna Moffo, Judith Blegen,
Catherine Malfitano, Ruth Ann Swenson, and Angela Gheorghiu. In 2005, Guy
Joosten’s production premiered with Ramón Vargas and Maureen O’Flynn as the
lead couple, and Natalie Dessay and Anna Netrebko were notable Juliettes in
subsequent performances. This new production by Bartlett Sher, starring Diana
Damrau and Vittorio Grigolo and conducted by Gianandrea Noseda, opened
on New Year’s Eve, 2016.
VERDI
RIGOLETTO
JAN 20, 26, 30 FEB 4 mat APR 19, 22 eve, 27
metopera.org
Program Note
“G
od! What a fine subject! How it lends itself to music!” French
composer Hector Berlioz wrote these words as he contemplated
turning Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet into an opera; instead, he
made his own Roméo et Juliette a unique hybrid of dramatic symphony and
cantata in 1839.
His younger colleague Charles Gounod chose the more conventional path
and with his opera Roméo et Juliette of 1867 created one of the most beautiful
and compelling treatments of this now more than 400-year-old romantic tragedy.
At the time he wrote it, Gounod was in extreme need of an operatic success.
Having chosen to ally himself with Paris’s recently formed and innovative Théâtre
Lyrique rather than the long-established Paris Opéra, he had become one of
France’s leading opera composer in 1859 with his Faust, suavely adapted from
Goethe’s epic verse drama. But since then, he had suffered three disastrous
opera premieres, including his Provençal pastoral tragedy Mireille, one of his
personal favorites among his operas. Yet Léon Carvalho, the energetic manager
of the Théâtre Lyrique, had not lost faith in him, and French opera lovers still
eagerly looked to him to produce another hit like Faust.
One of the most successful moments in that opera was the sensuous love
scene between Faust and Marguerite in her garden. Though he once flirted
with studying for the priesthood, Gounod was a man who easily succumbed
to romantic temptations—a weakness that tormented his wife. As biographer
Steven Huebner put it, “tension between the bon vivant and the ascetic would
remain an integral part of his character.” So it is not surprising that by 1865, he
had become captivated with the possibilities of Romeo and Juliet, although,
pessimistically, he told colleagues that it would be his last work for the stage.
Carvalho chose a seasoned team to create the libretto: Jules Barbier and
Michel Carré. They had scripted many successful French operas, including Faust
and Ambroise Thomas’s Mignon and Hamlet; Barbier alone had written the
libretto for Offenbach’s Les Contes d’Hoffmann. Unlike the librettist for Vincenzo
Bellini’s 1830 Romeo and Juliet–based opera I Capuleti e i Montecchi, they were
reasonably faithful to Shakespeare’s original, even translating many lines directly
into French. Their major change was to allow Roméo to live long enough to
enable a heartbreaking final duet with Juliette. The need for embellishment
was minimal, as Shakespeare had given operatic adaptors much to work with.
“The play is itself notably rich in lyrical ‘set pieces,’” writes Huebner, “including
Mercutio’s burlesque Queen Mab speech, Friar Lawrence’s sermons, Juliet’s
soliloquy with the vial, the sonnet of the two lovers at their first meeting, and
their later dawn poem about the nightingale and the lark.”
Premiering on April 27, 1867, only a month after Verdi’s Don Carlos debuted
at the Opéra, Roméo et Juliette was the spectacular success everyone was
longing for. Audiences packed the Théâtre Lyrique night after night to see
it. Its immense popularity was amplified by the Exposition Universelle, which
had opened on April 1; this gigantic world’s fair—celebrating all things French
and the glories of Haussmann’s recently rebuilt Paris—drew national and
international visitors to the capital in numbers never seen before.
By July, Roméo et Juliette had opened at London’s Covent Garden, and
before the year was out, it had reached Belgium and Germany. With this opera,
Gounod was at the summit of his career: a peak he would never again achieve.
In the words of Camille Saint-Saëns, “all women sang his melodies, all young
composers [in France] imitated his style.” He would hold an enduring influence
over such composers as Georges Bizet and Jules Massenet; his lyrical style
would inspire Gabriel Fauré’s early songs; and even artists like Debussy and
Ravel, who took very different paths, would feel his sway. When, in 1869, the
impresario Auguste Mariette began to search for a composer to write the opera
to open the new opera house in Cairo—what would eventually become Aida—
his stated candidates were Verdi, Wagner, and Gounod.
Roméo et Juliette triumphed in spite of the fact that it did not follow in
the French grand opera tradition that had dominated Parisian opera houses—a
style that favored dazzling stage effects, massive choral scenes, and interpolated
ballets. Despite the chorus that opens the opera and foretells Roméo and
Juliette’s fate, the jubilant crowd at the Capulet ball, and the heroically tragic
choral finale of Act III, this is predominantly a very intimate opera that focuses
on the four glorious duet scenes for the two lovers.
Gounod was also generous in providing stunning moments for each of his
lovers to shine on his and her own. For his first Juliette, he had Marie Miolan-
Carvalho, the wife of Léon Carvalho and the undisputed star of the Théâtre
Lyrique, who had earlier created the roles of Marguerite and Mireille. Because
she had a brilliant coloratura technique and an effortless upper range, she
prevailed upon the composer to add the exuberant waltz aria at the ball, “Je
veux vivre” (Gounod instead had wanted to concentrate his energies on her
second aria as she takes the potion). We can be very grateful to Miolan-Carvalho
for insisting on this scintillating showpiece, with its exacting chromatic scales
and its thrilling roulades cresting at a high D.
The aria the composer cared most about for his heroine was the so-called
“Poison Aria”—“Amour ranime mon courage”—of Act IV, in which Juliette
contemplates taking the potion Frère Laurent has prepared for her. A demanding
scena combining sections of recitative and aria and expressing a wide range of
emotion, it is more suited to a dramatic soprano than a lyric coloratura. Here,
Gounod takes Shakespeare’s extended soliloquy for Juliet in the play and sets it
to music of electrifying sweep and power.
Roméo’s two arias are also strongly contrasted: the first more conventional, the
second a tragic scene in a strikingly innovative style and form. “Ah! lève-toi, soleil”
38D
is his Act II showpiece, sung as he arrives below Juliette’s balcony. Solo clarinet
and harp color this beautiful display of legato ardor, topped by golden B-flats.
In Act V, Roméo’s second aria, “Salut! Tombeau,” is something quite different:
a tissue of musical reminiscences of happier times carried by the orchestra as
melodic leader, with the singer given a flexible mixture of recitative and arioso
molded to the words. At the words, “O ma femme,” we hear the cellos reprise
their unforgettable melody from the wedding night, now transformed from
sensuality to aching loss.
Two secondary characters are given arias that bring touches of lightness to
relieve the drama’s shadows. In Act I, Mercutio’s famous Queen Mab speech
about the diminutive fairy who torments the dreams of all sleepers is turned
into a quicksilver scherzo. The page Stéphano’s equally mocking “Que fais-tu,
blanche tourterelle?” instigates the series of fatal duels. This is the obligatory
aria for the dugazon: the traditional second-soprano role in French operas of
the day, like Siébel in Faust.
An important—but often overlooked—aspect of Gounod’s operatic
innovation is his use of the orchestra. “According to Gounod,” writes Huebner,
“the voice must be assisted by the orchestra in its mission to communicate
‘truth.’ … At Gounod’s best moments, voice and instrumental strain enter into
a symbiotic relationship where each is given nearly equal importance in the
lyrical whole.”
We hear this in several extraordinary passages. The Act II balcony scene
begins with an orchestral prelude of mysterious beauty for strings and harp. It
then returns at the end of the act with Roméo’s exquisite countermelody “Va!
repose en paix” floating above it. In Act IV, the wedding night scene opens
with perhaps the most magnificent melody in the entire opera and, remarkably,
one that will never be sung. Four cellos launch it in their richest, most sensuous
tones; Verdi may have been inspired by this to use the same scoring in his
Act I love scene in Otello. Huebner calls it “a small, but graphic, tone-poem
about the night that has just passed.”
As Frère Laurent instructs Juliette to take his potion, Gounod provides an
equally potent brew in his blending of bass voice with the orchestra to create
an uncannily chilling atmosphere. In this unusual replacement for an aria, the
flutes and other woodwinds sing the melody while the singer chants in a near
monotone below.
The four love duets are among the greatest music Gounod ever wrote. The
lovers’ first meeting at the ball in Act I is the most formally structured, as they
express their mutual attraction in metaphorical language. Gounod gives it a
charmingly old-fashioned quality, like a court minuet of a century earlier.
Gounod’s great gift for rendering intimate conversations in music, using an
exceptional plasticity of vocal style, gives them a naturalness and truthfulness
his French predecessors had never achieved. We hear this especially in the
balcony scene, which is divided in two by a comic interlude when some of the
Capulet men come to investigate and banter with Gertrude. Having individually
declared their love, only in the duet’s second portion do the lovers blend their
voices together in rapturous close harmony.
In the wedding night scene’s “Nuit d’hyménée,” this lush, unified duet style
is enhanced by sensual contrapuntal lines between the two lovers. This scene is
structured around three repetitions of the words “Non! ce n’est pas le jour” as the
lovers resist the idea of parting—each sung a step higher as the tension builds.
Act V’s final duet is the duet of death as the lovers succumb to the cruelty
of fate. The anguish of this scene is made virtually unbearable by the many
reminiscences, in both the orchestra and the lovers’ lines, of music from their
most joyful moments: the ecstasy of the wedding night, their joint prayer at their
wedding, Roméo’s delirious reprise of “Non! ce n’est pas le jour.” Gounod’s last
and most poignant musical transformation is his recasting of Act IV’s passionate
orchestral interlude as the lovers embraced into a heartrending farewell as
Juliette sings her dying words.
—Janet E. Bedell
38F
The Cast and Creative Team
Gianandrea Noseda
conductor (milan, italy)
this season Roméo et Juliette at the Met; La Bohème, Manon Lescaut, and Macbeth with
Teatro Regio Torino; Così fan tutte at the Mariinsky Theatre; The Fiery Angel and Macbeth
at the Zurich Opera; and Manon Lescaut in Geneva.
met appearances Les Pêcheurs de Perles, Prince Igor, Andrea Chénier, Macbeth, La Traviata,
Il Trovatore, War and Peace (debut, 2002), La Forza del Destino, and Un Ballo in Maschera.
career highlights He is music director of Teatro Regio Torino, principal guest conductor
of the London Symphony Orchestra and the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, principal
conductor of the Orquestra de Cadaqués, and artistic director of Italy’s Stresa Festival.
Beginning in the 2017–18 season, he will become Music Director of the National Symphony
Orchestra. He is also conductor laureate of the BBC Philharmonic and was formerly
principal guest conductor of the Mariinsky Theatre, a position he held for a decade, and
of the Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra.
Bartlett Sher
director (san francisco, california )
this season Roméo et Juliette at the Met, OSLO at Lincoln Center Theater, and Fiddler
on the Roof on Broadway.
met productions Le Comte Ory, Les Contes d’Hoffmann, L’Elisir d’Amore, Il Barbiere di
Siviglia (debut, 2006), and Nico Muhly’s Two Boys.
career highlights He received a 2008 Tony Award for South Pacific, and has also directed
Broadway productions of The King and I, Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, Awake and
Sing!, The Light in the Piazza, and Golden Boy, all for Lincoln Center Theater, where
he is resident director. He was artistic director of Seattle’s Intiman Theatre from 2000 to
2010 and directed the world premiere of Two Boys for English National Opera in 2011.
His staging of Shakespeare’s Cymbeline for New York’s Lucille Lortel Theatre was also
seen at Stratford, England. He made his operatic debut in 2003 with Levy’s Mourning
Becomes Electra in a joint production of the Seattle Opera and New York City Opera. He
has previously directed this production of Roméo et Juliette at the Salzburg Festival, La
Scala, and the Chicago Lyric Opera. His future plans include Millions, a new musical by
Adam Guettel.
I PURITANI
FEB 10, 14, 18mat, 22, 25eve, 28
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The Cast and Creative Team CONTINUED
Michael Yeargan
set designer (dallas , texas)
this season Roméo et Juliette at the Met, Aida at the San Francisco Opera, Madama
Butterfly at the Dallas Opera, Fiddler on the Roof on Broadway, and OSLO at Lincoln
Center Theater.
met productions Set designer for Two Boys, L’Elisir d’Amore, Les Contes d’Hoffmann,
Otello, Don Giovanni, Il Barbiere di Siviglia, Le Comte Ory, and the world premiere of
Harbison’s The Great Gatsby; set and costume designer for Così fan tutte, Ariadne auf
Naxos (debut, 1993), and Susannah.
career highlights World premieres include Previn’s A Streetcar Named Desire for San
Francisco Opera, Central Park, a triptych of one-acts, for Glimmerglass Opera and New
York City Opera, Floyd’s Cold Sassy Tree for Houston Grand Opera, and Heggie’s Dead
Man Walking for San Francisco Opera. Theater credits include The King and I, Golden
Boy, The Light in the Piazza (Tony and Drama Desk Awards), South Pacific (Tony and
Drama Desk Awards), Joe Turner’s Come and Gone, Awake and Sing!, and Seascape
with Lincoln Center Theater, and Rudnick’s Regrets Only for Manhattan Theatre Club. He
has also designed sets for Wagner’s Ring cycle for Washington National Opera and San
Francisco Opera.
Catherine Zuber
costume designer (london, england)
this season Roméo et Juliette at the Met, Fiddler on the Roof and War Paint on Broadway,
and OSLO at Lincoln Center Theater.
met productions Otello, Two Boys, Le Comte Ory, L’Elisir d’Amore, Il Barbiere di Siviglia
(debut, 2006), Doctor Atomic, Les Contes d’Hoffmann, and the 125th Anniversary Gala.
career highlights She has won Tony Awards for The King and I, The Royal Family, South
Pacific, The Coast of Utopia, Awake and Sing! and The Light in the Piazza. Other Broadway
work includes Gigi, Golden Boy, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Born
Yesterday, and Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown. Work on television includes
The Sound of Music Live! and Peter Pan Live!, and opera includes Carmen and Two Boys
for English National Opera, Roméo et Juliette for the Salzburg Festival and La Scala, and
La Forza del Destino and Wagner’s Ring cycle for Washington National Opera and San
Francisco Opera.
Visit metopera.org 39
PHOTO: KRISTIAN SCHULLER / MET OPERA
D V O Ř Á K
RUSALKA
FEB 2, 6, 9, 13 17, 21, 25 mat MAR 2
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The Cast and Creative Team CONTINUED
Jennifer Tipton
lighting designer (columbus , ohio)
Chase Brock
choreographer (flat rock , north carolina )
this season Roméo et Juliette for his debut at the Met and numerous performances with
his contemporary dance company The Chase Brock Experience.
career highlights He choreographed this production of Roméo et Juliette at the Salzburg
Festival and the Chicago Lyric Opera. On Broadway, he choreographed Picnic and
provided additional choreography for Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark. His Off-Broadway
credits include The Blue Flower, Tamar of the River, Kwame Kwei-Armah’s production of
Much Ado About Nothing, Lear deBessonet and Todd Almond’s musical adaptation of
The Winter’s Tale, Irma La Douce, Lost in the Stars, and The Mysteries, a seven-hour, 50-
play event retelling climactic episodes from the Bible. He has also provided choreography
for television, including Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, Late Show with David
Letterman, and the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. As artistic director of the Brooklyn-
based contemporary dance company The Chase Brock Experience, he has commissioned
several original scores and choreographed dozens of dances.
Visit metopera.org 41
PHOTO: KEN HOWARD / MET OPERA
BIZET
CARMEN
JAN 19, 23, 27, 31 FEB 3, 7, 11mat, 15, 18eve
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The Cast and Creative Team CONTINUED
B. H. Barry
fight director (staines , england)
Diana Damrau
soprano (günzburg , germany)
this season Juliette in Roméo et Juliette, Elvira in I Puritani, and the 50th Anniversary Gala
at the Met; the Countess in Le Nozze di Figaro at La Scala and the Bavarian State Opera;
the Four Heroines of Les Contes d’Hoffmann at LA Opera; and the title role of Lucia di
Lammermoor at the Munich Opera Festival.
met appearances Leïla in Les Pêcheurs de Perles, Amina in La Sonnambula, Gilda in Rigoletto,
Rosina in Il Barbiere di Siviglia, Adèle in Le Comte Ory, Marie in La Fille du Régiment, Pamina
and the Queen of the Night in Die Zauberflöte, Zerbinetta in Ariadne auf Naxos (debut, 2005),
Aithra in Die Ägyptische Helena, Konstanze in Die Entführung aus dem Serail, Adina in L’Elisir
d’Amore, Violetta in La Traviata, the title role of Manon, and Lucia.
career highlights Recent performances include Manon at the Vienna State Opera; Elvira in
Madrid; Violetta at La Scala, the Paris Opera, Covent Garden, and the Orange Festival; Lucia
at Covent Garden, La Scala, Bavarian State Opera, Berlin, Teatro Regio Torino, and in Paris
and Essen; and Leïla and the title role of Iain Bell’s A Harlot’s Progress at Vienna’s Theater an
der Wien.
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Virginie Verrez
mezzo - soprano (saint- denis , france)
Vittorio Grigolo
tenor ( arezzo, italy)
this season Roméo in Roméo et Juliette, the title role of Werther, and the 50th Anniversary
Gala at the Met; the title role of Les Contes d’Hoffmann at Covent Garden and LA Opera;
and the Duke in Rigoletto at the Paris Opera.
met appearances Nemorino in L’Elisir d’Amore, the Duke, Hoffmann, des Grieux in Manon,
Rodolfo in La Bohème (debut, 2010), and a solo recital.
career highlights Recent engagements include Nemorino at La Scala, the Berlin Staatsoper,
and Covent Garden; the Duke in Rigoletto at La Scala and in Zurich; Werther and Rodolfo at
Covent Garden; Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor at La Scala; and Roméo at the Arena di
Verona. He has also sung Ruggero in La Rondine at Covent Garden, Alfredo in La Traviata at
the Vienna State Opera, the Duke at Covent Garden, Alfredo with the Deutsche Oper Berlin,
Hoffmann in Zurich, Roméo with the LA Opera, des Grieux at Covent Garden and in Valencia,
and Rodolfo at La Scala, the Bavarian State Opera, and for his 2007 U.S. opera debut with
Washington National Opera.
Visit metopera.org 45
The Cast and Creative Team CONTINUED
Elliot Madore
baritone (toronto, canada )
Mikhail Petrenko
bass (st. petersburg , russia )
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