Hamlet-keenlyside * Notes * 
This new production of Thomas' Hamlet had a third performance at the Metropolitan Opera last night. The set, designed by Christian Fenouillat, was pretty much just two large curved walls arranged in different orientations to suggest the changes of scene. For the most part this worked splendidly, and though the set creaked a little, it was not too distracting. I was not entirely convinced by Act IV, Ophélie's mad scene seemed to take place in a decrepit ballroom. Evidently, is space was supposed to be her apartment, but it is simply very difficult for me to imagine this scene indoors.

The orchestra sounded lovely under Louis Langrée. The clarinet solo at the beginning of Act IV was particularly beautiful. As for singing, the chorus sounded together and quite fine. Toby Spence sounded youthful and fresh as Laërte. James Morris was a shaky Claudius, but this did not seem inappropriate for the role. Jennifer Larmore looked gorgeous as Gertrude, but she gasped more than a few times in the first half of the opera, her breathing was far too audible. She did sound better as the night wore on. Marlis Petersen took over the role of Ophélie for Natalie Dessay, who withdrew due to illness. Petersen does not seem to know what to do with her arms, and at times looked rather awkward. She has a pretty, flexible voice, with only the slightest trace of rawness that appeared in her demanding mad scene. Her duet with Simon Keenlyside in Act I Scene 2 duet was stunning. Keenlyside's Hamlet was persuasive, both in his physicality and compelling singing.

* Tattling * 
People talked during singing, and naturally whenever the orchestra played alone. Watch alarms were heard at 9pm and 11pm. One woman at the back of the Family Circle seemed to be unwrapping a sandwich for much of Act II. At least she had the good sense to leave after intermission, and her companion offered me her seat, which I respectfully declined.

Some audience members tittered when Keenlyside threw himself against one of the walls at the end of Act III, just before the ghost singings "Souviens-toi…mais épargne ta mère!"

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10 responses to “Hamlet at the Met”

  1. Not For Fun Only Avatar

    I am now tempted to see the HD broadcast this weekend. The performances sound great, though I am not convinced that Thomas’s music could be that interesting. My opera reference books hardly give it a mention, except to note that there is a big mad scene & that Hamlet is allowed to live at the end, except in a shorter version re-written for Covent Garden. Does the Met’s Hamlet live or die?

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  2. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    I am tempted to go to the HD broadcast as well, though I’m afraid it cannot be as great as it was in person. I was moved by Thomas’ music, despite myself. He is a lot better than Massenet, in my opinion.
    Hamlet does die in the Met version.

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  3. Jane Carlin Avatar
    Jane Carlin

    What is the meaning of Renee Fleming’s “teo, teo, teo”?

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  4. Immanuel Gilen Avatar

    So, um, don’t judge…but does Hamlet die in the Shakespeare version then?
    Didn’t some composer do that to Romeo and Juliet as well? Let them live?

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  5. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Was this during the broadcast? I didn’t end up going, but perhaps Fleming said “Toi toi toi?” It is to wish someone good luck before a performance: http://www.forward.com/articles/15158/.

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  6. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    I don’t want to ruin it for you, but I’m pretty sure the titular protagonists in Shakespeare’s 5 most famous tragedies die.
    The first version of Thomas’ Hamlet has him live, indeed, this seems to happen in French opera for some reason.

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  7. Immanuel Gilen Avatar

    Troilus AND Cressida die??? Man, that Shakespeare was a cynic…
    At least he didn’t make Huckleberry Finn die, right? Or was he eaten by the whale?

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  8. The Opera Tattler Avatar

    Should I even dignify this comment with a response? I did not realize Troilus and Cressida was considered one of the major Shakespearean tragedies!

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  9. Jane Carlin Avatar
    Jane Carlin

    Thank you very much. It was Fleming who said it at the end of her interview, and before the beginning of the next act.

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  10. Not For Fun Only Avatar

    During the broadcast intermission, Louis Langrée, in his charmingly fractured English, said something like, “For Anglo Saxon audiences it would be a ‘blasphemanity’ if Hamlet did not die.” I found it difficult not to react to the opera’s departures from the Shakespeare, though Keenlyside rightly said, also in the intermission, that this is not Shakespeare’s Hamlet.
    At least Mr. Gilen knows that Troilus & Cressida is also a play by Shakespeare, even if he doesn’t seem to get the jokes.

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