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135 stories by "James Jorden"

Give this 'Don' a trophy by James Jorden

After a sketchy start to the season, the Met hit its stride on Friday with a revival of Donizetti's "Don Pasquale" that's as crisp as autumn in New York. This farce about an elderly bachelo…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Regal cast in Verdi work about European royalty by James Jorden

A flawed Verdi masterpiece inspired a superb performance Monday night when the Met unveiled its new, richly cerebral production of “Don Carlo.” Spanish history inspired this saga…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

God's love, he delivers by James Jorden

Roberto Alagna an swers questions even before they're asked. Strolling through Central Park the other day, chatting in lightly accented English about his performances tonight at Carnegie Ha…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Soprano dies after 'Stupenda' career by James Jorden

Even in the twilight of her career, Dame Joan Sutherland delivered more bang for the buck than sopranos half her age.The diva, who died yesterday at 83, played the teenage virgin Gilda in V…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

'Hoffmann' tenor has his own tale by James Jorden

In the Met's "Tales of Hoffmann," Giuseppe Filianoti plays a poet defeated by life. In reality, the 36-year-old singer's brush with tragedy had a far happier ending. The Italian tenor seemed…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Strong voices, clear diction rise above 'Smoke' by James Jorden

Next year's centennial of Tennessee Wil liams' birth got off to an early start Wednesday with a revival of Lee Hoiby's "Summer and Smoke." But while the Manhattan School of Music's producti…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Nixon opera is a tricky shtick by James Jorden

A milestone in history, a hyped Met premiere and a gaggle of A-list artists added up to something less than a sensation Wednesday night when the Metropolitan Opera offered its first performa…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Some dings in Met's ‘Ring' by James Jorden

The loudest cheers at the Met on Monday rang out before the curtain went up on Wagner's “Das Rheingold,” the company's most expensive staging ever.A pre-show standing ovation for…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Wasn't in the cards by James Jorden

The first rule of gam bling is: You win some, you lose some. Still, it's heartbreaking that on Friday at the Met, an opera about a compulsive gambler, "The Queen of Spades," barely broke ev…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Tenor is the night by James Jorden

Saturday night's Met debut of Vittorio Grigolo in "La Bo heme" was promising enough to suggest the tenor may one day live up to his own hype. An onslaught of advance hoopla for the 33-year-…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Plotting fiancés fail to engage by James Jorden

What do you call a sex comedy that's neither funny nor sexy? At the Met on Tuesday night, you'd have called it "Cosi Fan Tutte." The theme of the opera is revealed in the title: "All women …

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Not the right kind of 'Place' by James Jorden

You'd think that anything written by the man who gave us “West Side Story,” “Candide” and “On the Town” would be worth at least a listen, yes? Well, despi…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

A Mozart 'Tutte' made for Twitter Opera by James Jorden

Can a 220-year-old opera be taught new tricks? That's the goal of operamission, which, starting tonight, will present Mozart's "Cosi Fan Tutte" in a format that's part miniseries, part town…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Sets not good enough for marvelous ‘Godunov' by James Jorden

At the close of “Boris Godunov,” a leaderless Russia churns in chaos. Happily, the Met's new production of Mussorgsky's masterpiece — despite a last-minute turnover on the …

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Met revels in star sub & a hot new gypsy by James Jorden

This year may go down as one filled with surprises at the Met, kicking off with an unexpected role for a familiar tenor and a dazzling debut for a budding superstar. The tenor is Roberto Al…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Something new for old favorites by James Jorden

This year may go down as one filled with surprises at the Met, kicking off with an unexpected role for a familiar tenor and a dazzling debut for a budding superstar. The tenor is Roberto Ala…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Wherefore art thy chemistry? by James Jorden

Shakespeare called Romeo and Juliet "star-cross'd lovers" -- and the Met's performance Thursday of Gounod's operatic version, "Roméo et Juliette," was also plagued by hard luck. The offsta…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Met set for safe season by James Jorden

Math is hard, even for Met master mind Peter Gelb. The company's general manager kicked off his season preview last week boasting that, since he took office in 2006, the average age of the …

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

An opera worth wading for by James Jorden

When a show takes place by a lake, its director can take several ap proaches: hang a backdrop, proj ect watery ripples on the stage -- or have someone say, "Hey, look at that beautiful lake!…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Left cold by an icy Carmen by James Jorden

'But we don't see Carmen!" sings the chorus -- in French -- in Bizet's opera, before the gypsy temptress saunters in. But even after Elina Garanca arrived on the Met stage Thursday night, we…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 5:58pm on May 25, 2015

Who Can Fix Opera in New York? The Germans! by James Jorden

7 lessons the Met can learn from Stuttgart and Berlin.

SOURCE: The New York Observer at 1:24pm on May 22, 2015

'Two Boys' brings cyberspace to the Met by James Jorden

Who knows what to expect from an opera about the Internet? But when Nico Muhly's "Two Boys" evokes the complex mysteries of cyberspace in a series of shimmering choruses, it's...

SOURCE: The New York Post at 4:33am on October 23, 2013

James Levine's back in the Met pit for 'Cosi' by James Jorden

My fellow opera lovers, our long Metropolitan nightmare is over. After more than two seasons sidelined by illness and injury, James Levine returned to the Met Tuesday to lead Mozart's "Cosi …

SOURCE: The New York Post at 12:59pm on September 25, 2013

Anti-Putin protests the liveliest part of 'Eugene Onegin' by James Jorden

Don’t blame Tchaikovsky if his opera “Eugene Onegin” proved to be the least exciting part of the Met’s opening night. Monday’s gala sprang to life only for a fe…

SOURCE: The New York Post at 1:54pm on September 24, 2013

Savor these musical masterpieces under the stars by James Jorden

The whole city's a New Yorker's living room, and as temperatures rise, the parks of Gotham double as concert halls, as well. The grandfather of NYC's outdoor music events, the New York Phil…

SOURCE: The New York Post Subscription at 11:54am on May 22, 2013
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