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Met plans to stage Donizetti Queens
Ronald Blum
NEW YORK—Anna Netrebko and Joyce DiDonato will each be a queen at the
Metropolitan Opera — but the company can’t find anyone to wear a third
crown. Venturing into new territory, the Met plans to stage the first
two operas of Donizetti’s Tudor Trilogy: “Anna Bolena” and “Maria
Stuarda.”
Netrebko, opera’s sex symbol, will star as Anne Boleyn on the opening
night of the 2011-12 season, Met general manager Peter Gelb said.
DiDonato is in discussions with the Met to sing Mary Queen of Scots in
2012-13. The Met has no current plans to stage “Roberto Devereux.” “The
problem is casting,” Gelb said of that opera’s lead soprano role, Queen
Elizabeth I. “There’s no singer around today who can sing it.”
Gelb had discussed with Netrebko having her perform all three queens,
but Netrebko decided she would commit to only one at this time. “I am
very excited to be taking on Donizetti’s `Anna Bolena,’” Netrebko said
in a statement. “Fortunately, it’s far enough in the future that I’ll
have time to learn it really well — the mad scene is even greater than
the one in `Lucia di Lammermoor,’ and the tragedy is awesome. But I
don’t get to die in this one: The opera ends just before she gets
beheaded!”
The Met, which has favoured Mozart, Verdi, Wagner and Strauss, has taken
a long time to get around to the queens. “Anna Bolena” premiered at
Milan’s Teatro Carcano in December 1830 starring Giuditta Pasta, and
“Maria Stuarda” opened at Milan’s Teatro alla Scala five years later
with Maria Malibran in the title role. Singers who take on these parts
in recent years usually are compared with Beverly Sills, who recorded
the roles from 1969-72 and sang the Three Queens at the New York City
Opera in the 1970s.
DiDonato, a mezzo-soprano, said she will use the version sung by Janet
Baker with the English National Opera in the early 1980s. It has Maria
as a mezzo and Elisabetta as a soprano — an arrangement used for
Malibran’s performances. |