Vladimir Jurowski,
Conductor
Elijah Moshinsky, Production
Mark Thompson, Set and Costume Designer
Paul Pyant, Lighting Designer
Peter McClintock, Stage Director
John Meehan, Choreographer
Tchekalinsky:
Adam Klein
Sourin: Julien Robbins
Count Tomsky (Plutus): Frederick Burchinal
Ghermann: Plácido Domingo
Prince Yeletsky: Dmitri Hvorostovsky
Lisa: Adrianne Pieczonka
The Countess: Felicity Palmer
Pauline (Daphnis): Elena Zaremba
Governess: Sheila Nadler
Masha, Lisa’s maid: Rachelle Durkin
Master of Ceremonies: Bernard Fitch
Chlöe: Jennifer Welch-Babidge
Catherine the Great: Sheila Ricci
Naroumov: LeRoy Lehr
Piano solo:
George Darden
It was
almost worth the entire evening alone to see
veteran Felicity Palmer clawing her way up
through the floor of Plácido Domingo’s
bedroom near the end of Elijah Moshinsky’s
dark, moody 1995 production of The Queen
of Spades, when the ghost of the Countess
comes to deliver some crucial information
to the tormented Ghermann. (Suffice to say
that it concerns the identification of three
playing cards that form the crux of the plot.)
The scene is brief, but as she did all evening
Palmer almost stole the show with some characterful
singing and bold acting. I can still see her
gazing at Ghermann with that haughty, suspicious
glare, no doubt wondering why he is so inordinately
interested in her.
Palmer
was not the only sixtyish artist who could
show a thing or two to singers half her age.
If I recall correctly, the last time I saw
Domingo at the Met was in 1999 in Verdi’s
Otello, and while the memory of the
handsome production has faded somewhat, the
image of his keen, virile singing has not.
It just amazes me that he still sounds so
good – obviously not a young colt but
still doing far more than just marking time.
As far as vocal longevity is concerned, there
are hardly any guarantees considering genetics,
overeager singers trying things they shouldn’t,
and demanding audiences who may or may not
care about any of these issues. When he shot
himself in the final scene, he fell to the
ground with a swift, alarming and impressively
physical thud -- so real that a friend expressed
momentary concern. Fine acting, this is, and
when coupled with his very intact vocal prowess
– that’s the Domingo legend for you.
For
the entire evening, Moshinsky, with set designer
Mark Thompson, has envisioned a huge white
alabaster frame squaring off the stage, as
if the story were an Hermitage painting come
to life. The opening curtain portrays a bleak,
grayish blue Russian forest scene, that somberly
parts to reveal a vast corridor stretching
all the way to the back of the stage, with
tall black columns on either side allowing
diagonal shafts of light to interrupt the
gloom. With the exception of a few brightly
lit party scenes, the contents of the mysterious
interiors are occasionally hard to discern,
undoubtedly the effect intended by lighting
designer Paul Pyant. This St. Petersburg is
a black-and-white cage of desperation, always
with the more colorful outside world beckoning
just beyond, whether sky-blue glimpses of
the city skyline, or a deep vermilion backdrop
for the entrance of Catherine the Great.
Dmitri
Hvorostovksy, projecting with warmth and ardor,
drew enthusiastic applause for his melancholy
Prince Yaletsky. As Lisa, Adrianne Pieczonka
made a fresh, strong impression, singing the
lovely Why am I weeping? with real
passion. And as with everyone in the cast,
she really acted her way through the somewhat
farfetched story.
Some
small gripes: some of the lengthy pauses during
scenery changes seemed just too long, and
when the curtain came up again, the scenic
result didn’t always seem to justify the wait.
And a slightly botched opportunity for drama:
in the next-to-last scene, Moshinsky creates
a startlingly realistic, Stygian river with
the brownish night water gently rippling across
the stage, one of the nicest special effects
I’ve seen in any production at the Met. But
then the distraught Lisa simply darts across
it, rather than jumping in as one might
expect, somewhat undercutting the impact of
her suicide. (As far as I could discern from
the plot, Lisa is unable to walk on water.)
Vladimir
Jurowski, whom I last saw a few seasons ago
direct a completely engrossing production
of Prokofiev’s The Gambler, seemed
quite at home here, although I am not familiar
enough with Tchaikovsky’s score to compare
this with other versions. But Jurowski did
a fine job with the multitude of entertainments
devised by the composer, such as the vintage
"Pastorale" entertainment in the
middle of the opera (cleanly choreographed
by John Meehan), the sinister bassoon episodes
announcing the Countess, and the quiet final
chorus that leaves us on a wise and reverent
plain, if a sober one.
Bruce Hodges