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krj
The Metropolitan Opera Comes To Town Mark Unseen   Oct 10 17:22 UTC 2007

Well, via telepresence, anyway:
 
The Metropolitan Opera and Fathom Events have released the list of 
theaters which are participating in this season's live opera 
"moviecasts."
 
In the Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti area, both the Quality 16 and the Showcase
are listed.    ((Yay!!  No more stress about driving to Livonia 
in sloppy winter weather.))
 
Here's the list of theaters:

http://www.fathomevents.com/news/default.aspx?newsid=63
 
Last year I saw four of the "moviecasts."   They rank among the 
best times I have ever had watching opera, and also among the 
best times I have ever had in a movie theater.
 
These will be on 8 Saturday afternoons, between December and April.
If they follow last season's pattern, there should be repeat 
broadcasts for most of the programs.
39 responses total.
slynne
response 1 of 39: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 00:03 UTC 2007

sounds neat!
krj
response 2 of 39: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 04:01 UTC 2007

The repeat performances are on the schedule already -- most will be 
at 3 pm Sunday, the day after the live Saturday afternoon broadcast.
 
Here's the lineup:

"Romeo & Juliette" by Gounod -- with Anna Netrebko, but without the 
         promised Rolando Villazon, who has cancelled all his 
         Met appearances this season.   ???  They don't have a 
         replacement Romeo yet.   This is a blow to the Met; 
         reportedly, Villazon and Netrebko are so hot together on 
         stage that they have to constantly deny being lovers in 
         real life.

"Hansel & Gretel,"  Humperdinck -- suitable for children but musically
         this is quite satisfying for grownups, a sort of Wagner-lite.
         
"Macbeth," Verdi --  I'm looking forward to this, as I have never seen
         any of the early Verdi operas before.

"Manon Lescaut," Puccini

"Peter Grimes," Britten -- for straight drama, this would be the pick
          of the season.  In a small fishing village, Peter Grimes is
          an outcast fisherman whose last apprentice died
          under mysterious circumstances.

"Tristan & Isolde," Wagner -- Yes, we named our cat after this character.
          I'm not going to suggest a Wagner opera for anyone who doesn't
          already know what they are getting into.  :)
          For one thing, this presentation will be 5 and a half hours...

"La Boheme," Puccini -- This is the perfect opera for anyone who has 
          not seen an opera before.  It's relatively short and the 
          characters and emotions are quite modern -- the story is 
          about the loves and play of a quartet of poor students in Paris.
          This story is supposed to be the foundation of the recent
          musical RENT, which I have not seen.

"Daughter of the Regiment," Donizetti --  This is one of those dramatically
          silly stories which stays alive on the opera stage for the 
          beauty of the singing.  The announced stars are Natalie Dessay,
          who is wonderful, and Juan Diego Florez, the likely new 
          "King of the High Cs" and also a pretty decent actor.
          (If I remember correctly, this was Pavarotti's breakthrough
          role, about 40-45 years ago.)
          "An exceedingly yummy operatic cake," says the preview blurb.

Here's the schedule with the Met's own blurbs, plus dates.

http://www.metoperafamily.org/metopera/broadcast/hd_events.aspx
slynne
response 3 of 39: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 08:06 UTC 2007

it sounds kind of pricey though. $22 for an adult. Still cheaper than
actually going to the opera though. 
remmers
response 4 of 39: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 11:22 UTC 2007

Thanks for posting this.  Is it advisable to get tickets well in advance?
krj
response 5 of 39: Mark Unseen   Oct 11 16:00 UTC 2007

slynne:  Yeah, $22 is a significant increase from the $18 which was 
last season's price.   
 
remmers:  I do not think it is necessary to get tickets well in 
advance in Michigan.  Last year, I got my tickets two or three days 
before each show, and the only time I had problems was when Livonia
was sold out for EUGENE ONEGIN (with Renee Fleming, the hottest show
last year -- the one I went to see twice) and we ended up with tickets
for Walled Lake instead.   
 
It must be necessary to get very advance tickets in some locations, 
because the Met is trying to sell $125 memberships by offering 
members a window of exclusive ticket sales in early October.

The holiday presentation of Hansel & Gretel may be an issue, because
there are probably going to be lots of kids packed off to see it as 
part of school & community music programs. 

Advance tickets were never needed for the encore presentations,
in my experience last season.   The live screenings were always 
sellouts or close to sellouts, but the encores I saw were never
more than half full.
krj
response 6 of 39: Mark Unseen   Nov 9 06:03 UTC 2007

If eight opera moviecasts were not enough for you...

La Scala, the opera house from Milan, Italy which is sometimes 
considered the most prestigious opera house in the world, is 
launching its own series of opera moviecasts.  These will not 
be done live; these will be previously recorded performances,
transmitted in high-definition to movie theaters at flexible
times.

The series opens on December 5 (confirm date!!!) with a 2006
performance of AIDA, the infamous production in which Roberto 
Alagna walked off the stage.  This moviecast will be of the night
when Alagna did NOT walk out.

La Scala is starting with 56 theaters, 
roughly half of what the Met started with.  Curiously, 
seven of the 56 are in Michigan!   The closest one to Ann Arbor
is the Canton Emagine multiplex; there are also participating 
theaters in Lansing and Novi.   I have no information on 
ticket prices.
 
La Scala is going to do seven moviecasts, so that means there 
will be **15** available between December 2007 and June 2008.

http://www.playbillarts.com/news/article/7323.html
http://www.emergingpictures.com/opera_venues.htm

The two links have differing date information for the AIDA!!!
hera
response 7 of 39: Mark Unseen   Nov 20 17:21 UTC 2007

They made Romeo and Juliett and Hansel and Gretel into operas???
krj
response 8 of 39: Mark Unseen   Nov 20 19:10 UTC 2007

Yes, some time ago.  The French composer Gounod takes the blame 
for ROMEO & JULIET; the great Italian composer Verdi used 
three more Shakespeare plays as the basis for operas, with 
MACBETH, OTHELLO and FALSTAFF.  The Metropolitan Opera will be 
"moviecasting" MACBETH in January.

hera
response 9 of 39: Mark Unseen   Nov 20 20:49 UTC 2007

I shall ask my daughter what she thinks of this business of making
Shakespearian works into operas. She's "into" Shakespeare.
gelinas
response 10 of 39: Mark Unseen   Nov 29 01:08 UTC 2007

(Shakespeare borrowed the stories for his plays, so why shouldn't people
borrow from him?)
hera
response 11 of 39: Mark Unseen   Nov 29 03:56 UTC 2007

Did he now? Cites please.
mcnally
response 12 of 39: Mark Unseen   Nov 29 07:16 UTC 2007

 re #11:  Well, obviously there are the histories..
hera
response 13 of 39: Mark Unseen   Nov 29 15:53 UTC 2007

Unluckily for you, I have no idea what you are talking about.
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