I saw Il Trovatore at the Metropolitan Opera yesterday. According to the program, David McVicar’s “look” of the production was taken from Goya’s visuals: “The Third of May, 1808″ and The Disasters of War series.
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Goya, Francisco. "The Third of May, 1808." 1814. Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain.
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Goya, Francisco. "Great Deeds! Against the Dead!" The Disasters of War, plate 39. 1810-1820
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Goya, Francisco. "Not Either." The Disasters of War, plate 36. 1810-1820
You can look up all of these 80 aquatint prints HERE.
The curtain was a zoom-in on a detail of “Pilgrimage to San Isidro’s Fountain.”
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Goya, Francisco. "Pilgrimage to St. Isidro's Fountain." 1821. Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain.
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this is what my berry saw
I did recognize the soldiers’ clothing and some of the decorations on stage, but Goya gives me a much gloomier and darker feeling than this particular production of Il Trovatore. Verdi is stunning though, and I got my doze of chills down the spine from the music.
In case somebody likes reading boring reviews in a newspaper, here is
NYT on this production. I actually recommend going to that page and listening to Dolora Zajick. I am an uncultured peasant and normally don’t really care for any kind of female opera voices. Yet, I was mesmerized by this “
true dramatic Verdi mezzo-soprano“, and her performance more than matched.
Lastly, as I sat down, I had a flashback to this piece by Mary Cassatt. I love Cassatt’s idea of having an impecable front for display, yet remaining “an other.”
![Cassatt, Mary. Woman with a Pearl Necklace in a Loge. 1879]()
Cassatt, Mary. "Woman with a Pearl Necklace in a Loge." 1879. Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, USA.
Just like the woman depicted in the paining, I did lots of double-edged people watching: endlessly beautiful hedgefund wives, old men with bright scarves in a breastpocket, old women with “perfect hair” and inch-thick gold chains, sophisticated talk in German, French, Russian, etc… I saw many people coursing amongst expensive orchestra seats, “Oh hello, so wonderful to see you!” Looks like opera remains what it has always been – a social event, participation in the fancy ways of the higher society.