"Lyric Opera of Chicago is closing its season with the company's most powerful production of the year," writes Andrew Patner in the Chicago Sun-Times about Dialogues of the Carmelites, which opened last Saturday (February 17) at the Civic Opera House in downtown Chicago.
This is the first time Lyric has presented Francis Poulenc's 20th-century classic (which had its world premiere 50 years ago last month) mdash; and the spare production by Robert Carsen, borrowed from the Netherlands Opera and restaged in Chicago by Didier Kerstin, carries "overwhelming emotional force," according to the Chicago Tribune's John von Rhein. Isabel Bayrakdarian heads the cast as Blanche de la Force, a pathologically fearful young aristocrat who joins a Carmelite convent just before the French Revolution mdash; and the ensuing Reign of Terror, which saw the entire community condemned to the guillotine.
(The opera is based on actual events.) Anna Christy plays Blanche's fellow novice, the tirelessly cheerful Sister Constance. Veteran English mezzo Felicity Palmer gives a "mesmerizing portrayal" (Tribune) of Madame de Croissy, the Old Prioress, who suffers an agonizing death; Patricia Racette sings Madame Lidoine, the New Prioress, who leads her charges through their final tumultuous days.
Mezzo Jane Irwin (replacing the late Lorraine Hunt Lieberson) takes the role of Mother Marie, who urges the nuns to take a vow of martyrdom yet ends up the community's sole survivor. Dialogues of the Carmelites receives seven more performances from Friday (February 23) through March 17. Information and tickets are available at www.
lyricopera.org.
Charles Dutoit makes his first appearance with the Philadelphians since being named their Chief Conductor Designate.
Pianist Martha Argerich is guest soloist. Meanwhile, the Philadelphia Orchestra's current music director, Christoph Eschenbach, conducts his other band in Beethoven and Berlioz on tour in Frankfurt. Renata Scotto's staging for Florida Grand Opera, having completed its Miami run, opens in Fort Lauderdale.
"...
it's a Tony winner, for sure. "
in His Pockets yet?
