Opera in A Prologue and Three Acts: New Production
Opera in A Prologue and Three Acts: New Production
Opera in A Prologue and Three Acts: New Production
ALBAN BERG
general manager
Peter Gelb
music director
James Levine
A co-production of the Metropolitan Opera,
principal conductor
Fabio Luisi Dutch National Opera, and English National Opera
2015–16 season
lulu
ALBAN BERG’S
co n duc to r
Lothar Koenigs
lu lu t h e pr i n ce
Marlis Petersen t h e m a n s er va n t
the marquis
co u n t e s s g e s ch w i t z
Alan Oke
Susan Graham t h e t h e at er m a n ag er
t h e b a n k er
a lwa , d r . s ch ö n ’ s s o n ,
a co m p os er
Julian Close
Daniel Brenna t h e fi f t een - y e a r - o l d g i r l
t h e pa i n t er
Ashley Emerson*
t h e a fr i c a n pr i n ce
h er m ot h er
Paul Groves*
Jane Shaulis
d r . s ch ö n
jack t h e r i pper t h e d e s i g n er
t h e a n i m a l ta m er the journalist
t h e acr o b at Tyler Duncan
Martin Winkler
t h e s er va n t
s ch i go lch Paul Corona
Franz Grundheber
t h e ph y s i ci a n
t h e wa r d r o b e m i s t r e s s t h e pr o fe s s o r
t h e s ch o o l b oy t h e p o l i ce co m m i s s i o n er
t h e pag e James Courtney
Elizabeth DeShong
s o lo per f o r m er s
Joanna Dudley
Andrea Fabi
* Graduate of the The Met will be recording and simulcasting audio/video footage
Lindemann Young Artist in the opera house today. If you do not want us to use your image,
Development Program please tell a Met staff member.
Yamaha is the
Official Piano of the
Metropolitan Opera.
Prologue
Act I
scene 1 The Painter’s studio in Vienna
scene 2 A drawing room in the Painter’s home
scene 3 The dressing room of a theater
Act II
scene 1 A room in Dr. Schön’s home
scene 2 The same
Act III
scene 1 Alwa’s home in Paris
scene 2 A garret over a pub in London
Act I
The Animal Tamer invites the audience to visit his menagerie—featuring
“the serpent Lulu.”
Act I
Lulu is sitting for her portrait, observed by Dr. Schön, a wealthy newspaper
publisher and her long-time lover. Alone with Lulu, the Painter tries to seduce
her. Just then her husband, the Physician, forces his way into the room and
collapses in shock from a heart attack. Lulu, seemingly unmoved, realizes she is
a rich widow, while the Painter wonders what will happen to her.
Lulu and the Painter have married. She is surprised to learn that Schön—who
years earlier had found her on the streets, given her an education, and then
made her his mistress—has become engaged. Schigolch, an old man and friend
of Lulu’s who may be her father or a former lover, pays her a visit and she gives
him money. Schön now wants Lulu out of his life so that he can marry. He reveals
the story of her past to the Painter, who is so horrified by it that he cuts his throat.
Schön is shocked by Lulu’s cold reaction but she, dismissing his protestations,
replies that he will eventually marry her anyway.
Visit metopera.org 35
Synopsis CONTINUED
Act II
Schön and Lulu, now married, live in a luxurious home, but she continues
to attract admirers, among them the lesbian Countess Geschwitz. Schön is
distraught that such people are now part of his life. The Countess, Schigolch,
an Acrobat, and a Schoolboy gather at the Schön house and all three men
declare their love to Lulu. Alwa appears and, thinking himself alone with Lulu,
also declares his love. Schön, who has observed the scene, drives his son away,
then hands Lulu a revolver, demanding that she shoot herself to protect his
reputation. Lulu justifies herself by saying that she has never pretended to be
anything but what she is. Schön forces her to her knees but is distracted by the
Schoolboy’s cries for help. Lulu fires five shots into her husband’s back and begs
the returning Alwa not to turn her over to the police.
Alwa, together with the Countess and the Acrobat, awaits Lulu’s return in Schön’s
former apartment. When she arrives on Schigolch’s arm, the Acrobat is appalled
by her wasted appearance and leaves, threatening to betray her to the police.
Alone with Lulu, Alwa again proclaims his love and agrees to go to Paris with her.
Act III
A crowd has assembled in Alwa’s Paris mansion in honor of Lulu’s birthday. A
number of the company have invested in a new cable railway and question
the Banker about their prospects. The Marquis, threatening to reveal Lulu to
the police as Schön’s murderer, tries to blackmail her into working in a brothel,
but she defies him. The Acrobat also tries to blackmail Lulu, then Schigolch
appears, asking her for money. Lulu breaks into tears. Together with Schigolch,
she plots to dispose of the Acrobat by having him killed. There is uproar as the
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news spreads that the railway shares have collapsed—everyone is ruined. In the
confusion Lulu escapes, just as the Marquis arrives with the police.
In a shabby garret in London, Alwa, now syphilitic and a derelict, and Schigolch
await Lulu’s return from her first night as a prostitute. She arrives with a client,
the Professor, who remains silent throughout the proceedings. As he leaves the
now destitute Countess appears, bringing with her Lulu’s portrait. Lulu and her
three admirers contemplate its beauty and how their fate has been bound up
with it. Lulu goes into the street again, followed by the Countess, while Alwa
reflects on the mess he has made of his life. Lulu returns with another client,
an African Prince. In a clumsy attempt to protect her, Alwa attacks him and is
killed by him. In despair, Lulu rushes out into the street again. Schigolch drags
Alwa’s body away and disappears. The Countess returns. Gazing at the portrait,
she considers suicide when Lulu arrives with yet another customer, Jack the
Ripper. They argue about money, then go into her room. Suddenly Lulu is heard
screaming—Jack has killed her. The Countess tries to help but Jack stabs her as
well. He leaves as the dying Countess cries out for Lulu.
Visit metopera.org 37
In Focus
Alban Berg
Lulu
Premiere: Opera House, Zurich, 1937;
Théâtre National de l’Opéra, Paris, 1979 (three-act version)
One of the most important—not to mention notorious—stage works of the
20th century, Lulu is the drama of a young woman who sexually and emotionally
dominates a wide range of willing victims, both male and female. Herself
a victim of society, she seems to embody all the frightening aspects of the
human condition before and after civilization, a combination of primal instinct
and distinctly modern amorality. Alban Berg was a leading light of the Second
Viennese School of composers who sought to free art from the conventions
(and thereby the vices and hypocrisies) of contemporary society. With Lulu he
created a unique musical language to depict this new type of heroine. The score
uses the twelve-tone technique pioneered by Berg’s teacher Arnold Schoenberg
but in a keenly dramatic way that makes it accessible to all kinds of audiences.
Bringing Lulu to the stage was a difficult process. Berg died before completing
Act III of the score, and the opera was first performed as a fragment. Efforts to
finish the score based on Berg’s notes were hindered by his widow and only
realized, after her death, by the composer Friedrich Cerha, in 1977. Ever since,
Lulu has commonly been performed in the completed edition.
The Creators
Alban Berg (1885–1935) came of age amid an explosion of artistic and intellectual
creativity in Vienna. Among the most visionary and influential composers of
his (or any) time, his vocal and instrumental writing infuses the compositional
techniques of Schoenberg with the grandeur of such late Romantic composers
as Gustav Mahler. Berg’s first atonal opera, Wozzeck, caused a sensation at
its Berlin premiere in 1925. Friedrich Cerha (b. 1926) is an Austrian composer
and conductor who has championed the works of various and diverse artists.
Frank Wedekind (1864–1918) was a German playwright whose works are searing
and often scandalous critiques of bourgeois society and especially its sexual
hypocrisy. Among his most famous works is the 1891 drama Frühlings Erwachen
(Spring Awakening). The Lulu plays, Erdgeist (Earth Spirit, 1895) and Die Büchse
der Pandora (Pandora’s Box, 1904), were banned from public performance
throughout Wedekind’s lifetime.
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The Setting
The drama unfolds in Vienna, Paris, and London. No time is specified in the
libretto, but references to current events (revolution in Paris) and characters
(Jack the Ripper) suggest a late-19th-century setting. The Met’s new production
takes its visual inspiration from the period of the opera’s composition.
The Music
The score of Lulu is built on an elaborate technique based on so-called “rows”
of twelve notes to encapsulate ideas and feelings. This compositional system,
devised by Schoenberg, replaces the traditional theory of harmony of the
Classical and Romantic era with a new structure in which all twelve notes within
an octave are treated equally. But there are also several self-contained units
that recall earlier forms, with such titles as “Chorale” (late in Act I) and “Canon”
(early in Act II). Lulu has a song with a clear beginning and end (“Canzonetta,”
Act I, Scene 1, accompanied by saxophone), and again in Act II, Scene 1, when
she declares that she has never pretended to be anything but what she is. There
are even love duets (Act I, Scene 1, and Act II, Scene 2). Besides the saxophone,
the vibraphone provides an unusual and evocative sound throughout the score,
seeming to “purr” in the first love duet and signifying a suspenseful moment
when heard after the interlude between the two scenes of Act II. And while there
may be no real melody, there are recognizable themes: one, heard at three
fateful encounters between Lulu and Dr. Schön, reminds many commentators of
the central theme in Wagner’s Tristan und Isolde, with its suggestion of the fatal
nexus of love and death. Themes representing the men in Lulu’s life return at
the end, implying that her tragic fate is a form of vengeance from her previous
victims. Effects like this allow audiences to appreciate this extraordinary score,
whether they’re familiar with twelve-tone style or not.
Met History
The Met first performed the incomplete Lulu in 1977, with James Levine
conducting a cast headed by Carole Farley in the title role alongside Donald
Gramm, Tatiana Troyanos, and William Lewis. John Dexter’s production was
designed to be adapted to Cerha’s three-act edition once it became available.
The complete Lulu premiered in December of 1980, with Levine conducting
Teresa Stratas in the title role, Franz Mazura in his Met debut as Dr. Schön/Jack
the Ripper, and Kenneth Riegel as Alwa. Julia Migenes, Catherine Malfitano,
Christine Schäfer, and Marlis Petersen have been among the memorable
interpreters of the title role in subsequent years; with James Courtney and
James Morris as Dr. Schön; Evelyn Lear, Hanna Schwarz, and Anne Sofie von
Otter as Countess Geschwitz; and Ronald Hamilton, David Kuebler, and Gary
Lehman as Alwa. William Kentridge’s new production opened November 5,
2015, with Petersen in the title role, Johan Reuter as Dr. Schön, Susan Graham
as Countess Geschwitz, Daniel Brenna in his Met debut as Alwa, and Lothar
Koenigs conducting.
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Program Note
O
n May 6, 1934, a year and a half before his death, Alban Berg wrote
to his close friend and fellow composer Anton Webern that he had
completed the composition of Lulu but would still need “two or
three weeks” to “overhaul” the work and to fill in a few gaps before starting
on the orchestration. Of the time that remained to him, he spent about three
months writing the Violin Concerto. The rest he devoted to scoring the opera,
beginning with excerpts for a concert suite that includes the Intermezzo from
Act III and extensive sections of the finale. He then scored the remainder of
the work consecutively from the beginning, but died before completing the full
score of the last act.
In an article on Lulu in the October 1936 issue of Musical Quarterly, the com-
poser’s biographer, Willi Reich, wrote: “Berg left a complete and very carefully
worked out preliminary score of Lulu. Only the instrumentation of a few places
in the middle of the last act was not finished and this could easily be carried out
from the given material by some friend familiar with Berg’s work.” Erwin Stein’s
vocal score of Acts I and II was published in the same year with a prefatory note
by the publisher, Universal Edition, stating that the vocal score of Act III would
be published “at a later time.” Stein’s reduction of the final act was, in fact, com-
pleted, but the publication was interrupted after 70 pages had already been
engraved. The Nazi takeover of Austria was imminent and there was no longer a
German or Austrian opera house where Lulu could be staged. On June 2, 1937,
the opera was performed for the first time, in Zurich. Of the music for Act III,
only those portions that Berg had incorporated in the Lulu Suite were presented,
as “background” music to an adaptation of the final episode of the drama: the
murder and death of Lulu and the Countess Geschwitz.
The completion of the scoring by another hand could have but one pur-
pose—the preparation of the opera for performance. But in the following years
of political reaction and war this can hardly have seemed a matter of urgency.
Under Hitler and Stalin, “atonal” music was banned as an expression of “Jewish
Bolshevism” on the one hand and “bourgeois decadence” on the other. Even
where there was no political repression, “neo-classicism” had come more and
more to dominate the world of contemporary music from the late 1920s to the
end of the war. The first revival of the opera at the Venice Biennale in 1949 does
not seem to have aroused much attention. In 1952 a concert version recorded
in Vienna was released by Columbia Records, and in the following year there
was a second staged revival, the German premiere of the opera in Essen. The
preparation of a performable third act was again becoming a matter of practical
interest. In the meantime, Stein’s vocal score of Act III remained unpublished.
The musicologist Hans Redlich had been allowed to examine it in connection
with his study of the composer’s life and work published by Universal Edition
in 1957. He argued in the strongest terms for a completion of the score. At the
insistence of the composer’s widow, however, he was required to insert a state-
ment that badly undercut his own position. It was to the effect that Schoenberg,
Webern, and Zemlinsky—three of the finest musicians of the age, and among
Berg’s closest friends and colleagues—had each been shown the material of Act
III and had declined to complete the orchestration because they found the ma-
terial inadequate to this purpose. All three were dead by this time, and Helene
Berg’s supposed recollections were the sole source of their reported opinion.
The question of scoring and the question of performing the third act are
interdependent, and if Mrs. Berg’s refusal to allow either was to be respected,
then one could infer the elimination of the possibility or necessity of the oth-
er. But the implications of her position were interpreted to mean much more
than this. Not only was the vocal score of Acts I and II reissued with the original
prefatory reference to a forthcoming publication of Act III deleted, but Stein’s
partially engraved reduction and all other unpublished materials of Act III were
suppressed, in that all access to them was refused. Through the good offices
of one of the directors of Universal Edition, the late Dr. Alfred A. Kalmus, this
ban was temporarily lifted in the 1960s, and subsequent investigation confirmed
Redlich’s conclusions (and the original representations of the publisher) that
Berg had indeed completed the opera and that completion of the full score of
Act III by another hand was entirely feasible.
As Redlich had pointed out, this task is greatly facilitated by the formal de-
sign of the final scene, which is based on large-scale recapitulations of earlier
episodes that were fully scored by the composer. But beyond this, Berg’s overall
dramatic conception is a radical departure from Wedekind’s, in all-important re-
spects that had not been previously noted. The substitution of a fragment of the
play accompanied by “background” music taken from the Lulu Suite not only
misrepresents Berg’s own version of Act III, but retrospectively misrepresents
both the music and the drama of Acts I and II as well. And the published edition
of Acts I and II, in deriving its list of dramatis personae from Wedekind’s drama
instead of the music and libretto of the complete opera, was in itself a misrepre-
sentation of the composer’s intentions. Berg emphasizes the relative anonymity
of the subordinate roles by depriving them of the names assigned to them by
Wedekind, identifying them instead only by their titles or professions. Only the
five principal roles—Lulu, Schigolch, Dr. Schön, Alwa, and Countess Geschwitz—
are designated in the opera by their proper names. Thus the distinction that
Wedekind himself had made between the identity of Lulu, each of whose three
husbands has his own name for her, and that of the other characters is sharp-
ened in Berg’s libretto. Each of Lulu’s three victims in the first half of the opera—
the Physician, the Painter, Dr. Schön—is respectively paired with one of the three
clients whom she brings in from the street in the final scene—the Professor, the
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African Prince, and Jack the Ripper. They function as symbolic avengers of those
who have lost their lives because of their love for Lulu. It is these doublings, in
fact, that explain the musical recapitulations noted by Redlich.
These multiple roles are essential to the dramatic structure of the opera. But
others that are merely a matter of convenience and economy are also high-
lighted by musical means—leitmotifs, serial connections, vocal range and style,
musical quotations. Practical performance problems that are presumably the
province of the director rather than the composer are thus mapped into the
work itself. This is consistent with the change that Berg made in Alwa’s profes-
sion. In the play Alwa is a writer who does a bit of composing on the side, as
Wedekind himself did (the “Procurer’s Song” of Act III is one of Wedekind’s
own cabaret tunes), and he is explicitly identified as the author of Earth Spirit. In
the opera Alwa is by profession a composer, and allusions to two of Berg’s own
compositions, Wozzeck and the Lyric Suite, identify him as the composer of the
very work we are witnessing.
In these revisions of Wedekind’s Lulu plays, Berg was influenced by the revo-
lutionary developments in the German theater that followed Wedekind’s death
in 1918. A technical innovation of the period was represented in the composer’s
introduction of a film sequence in his original libretto. This served as a bridge
between Part I of the opera (Act I – Act II, Scene 1), based on Earth Spirit, and
Part II (Act II, Scene 2 – Act III), based on its sequel, Pandora’s Box. Part I shows
Lulu in her ascendant phase, culminating in her marriage to Dr. Schön, the news-
paper publisher and powerful man of affairs whose mistress she has been for
many years. It concludes with the murder of Dr. Schön. This he brings upon him-
self when he discovers Lulu with his son, Alwa. In a state of final desperation—as
a mad climax to his earlier attempts to marry her off, so that some external
power would enforce the break with her that he is too weak to effect—he hands
her his revolver and demands that she shoot herself.
An orchestral interlude between the two halves of the opera represents the
action implied between the conclusion of the first play and the beginning of the
second: Lulu’s arrest, trial, imprisonment, removal from prison because of illness,
commitment to the hospital, and escape. Part II shows Lulu in her descendant
phase: after her escape from prison, she returns to the murdered man’s apart-
ment to meet Alwa, who has helped to plot her escape. They find refuge in a
gambling salon in Paris, from where they are forced to run away a second time
when the Marquis threatens to turn Lulu in to the police if she persists in her re-
fusal to be sold into slavery. The opera ends with Lulu’s first and last evening as a
common streetwalker in London, where she dies at the hands of Jack the Ripper.
Shortly after Helene Berg’s death on August 30, 1976, it was revealed that
Viennese composer Friedrich Cerha had fulfilled the publisher’s secret commis-
sion to complete the score while she was still alive, and that the premiere per-
Anna Netrebko in
Tchaikovsky’s Iolanta
metoperaondemand.org
formance had already been promised to the Paris Opera. It is in the nature of
things that one cannot anticipate the insights, judgments, and second thoughts
of genius, so we can never know to what extent and in what respects Berg’s own
orchestration might have differed from Cerha’s. But nowhere does one have
the impression that a hand other than the composer’s has had to take over the
instrumental realization of the unscored portions of the third act. In spite of
Helene Berg’s attempt to perpetuate her ban beyond her own lifetime through
the stipulations of her will, the materials for an authentic performance of this
masterpiece of the lyric theater were at last available.
—George Perle
Lothar Koenigs
conductor ( aachen, germany)
this season Lulu at the Met, Elektra in Zurich, Ariadne auf Naxos at Covent Garden, Hansel
and Gretel at Brussels’s La Monnaie, and Le Nozze di Figaro at Welsh National Opera.
met repertory Don Giovanni (debut, 2008).
career highlights Recent engagements include Tristan und Isolde, Lohengrin, Die
Zauberflöte, Hansel and Gretel, Kat’a Kabanová, Fidelio, and Ariadne auf Naxos at Welsh
National Opera, Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny in Cologne, Daphne in Brussels,
and Wozzeck, Ariadne auf Naxos, and Lohengrin at Munich’s Bavarian State Opera. He
has also led performances at the Vienna State Opera, La Scala, in Hamburg, Brussels,
and Lyon. He became Music Director of the Welsh National Opera in 2009 and formerly
was General Music Director of the Theater Osnabrück, Germany. Concert engagements
include appearances with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Hallé Orchestra, Sydney
Symphony, Santa Cecilia Orchestra, Rotterdam Philharmonic, Vienna Symphony, and
Dresden Philharmonic.
William Kentridge
director (johannesburg , south africa )
Visit metopera.org 43
The Cast and Creative Team CONTINUED
Luc De Wit
co - director (brussels , belgium)
Catherine Meyburgh
projection designer (johannesburg , south africa )
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Sabine Theunissen
set designer (brussels , belgium)
Greta Goiris
costume designer (glabbeek , belgium)
Visit metopera.org 45
The Cast and Creative Team CONTINUED
Urs Schönebaum
lighting designer (munich, germany)
Susan Graham
mezzo - soprano (roswell , new mexico)
this season Countess Geschwitz in Lulu and Prince Orlofsky in Die Fledermaus at the Met,
concerts with the San Francisco Symphony and at Carnegie Hall with the Orchestra of St.
Luke’s, and solo recitals in Washington, D.C., Boston, Puerto Rico, Vienna, and at London’s
Wigmore Hall.
met appearances She has sung more than 150 performances of 19 roles including two world
premieres (Jordan Baker in Harbison’s The Great Gatsby and Sondra Finchley in Picker’s An
American Tragedy) since her company debut in 1991 as the Second Lady in Die Zauberflöte.
career highlights The title role of Gluck’s Iphigénie en Tauride at the Salzburg Festival
and in London, Chicago, San Francisco, and Paris, the title role of Handel’s Xerxes with
the Houston Grand Opera, Cecilio in Lucio Silla with the Santa Fe Opera, the title role of
Monteverdi’s L’Incoronazione di Poppea and Hanna Glawari in The Merry Widow with the
Los Angeles Opera, Anna in The King and I at Paris’s Théâtre du Châtelet, and Dido in Les
Troyens, Sister Helen Prejean in the world premiere of Heggie’s Dead Man Walking, and
the title role of Handel’s Ariodante with the San Francisco Opera.
46
Marlis Petersen
soprano (sindelfingen, germany)
this season The title role of Lulu at the Met and Munich’s Bavarian State Opera, and
Rosalinde in Die Fledermaus at Munich’s Bavarian State Opera.
met appearances Susanna in Le Nozze di Figaro, Adele in Die Fledermaus (debut, 2005),
and Ophélie in Hamlet.
career highlights She has recently sung Alaide in Bellini’s La Straniera at the Theater
an der Wien and May-Shan in the world premiere of Christian Jost’s Rote Laterne at the
Zurich Opera. She has also sung Susanna at the Los Angeles Opera and Salzburg Festival,
the title role in the world premiere of Aribert Reimann’s Medea at the Vienna State
Opera, Aphrodite in Henze’s Phaedra at London’s Barbican Centre, and Donna Anna in
Don Giovanni at the Aix-en-Provence Festival. Additional performances include Lulu with
the Vienna State Opera, Bavarian State Opera, and Lyric Opera of Chicago, Zerbinetta
in Ariadne auf Naxos at Covent Garden, Oscar in Un Ballo in Maschera at the Bregenz
Festival, Adele at the Lyric Opera of Chicago and Paris’s Bastille Opera, Elisa in Mozart’s
Il Re Pastore at the Salzburg Festival, and Konstanze in Die Entführung aus dem Serail at
the Aix-en-Provence Festival.
Daniel Brenna
tenor (prairie du sac , wisconsin)
this season Alwa in Lulu for his debut at the Met and Siegfried in Wagner’s Ring cycle with
Washington National Opera.
career highlights He has recently sung Alwa with the Dutch National Opera, Laca in
Jen ůfa with the Prague National Theatre, the title role of Tannhäuser with the Prague
State Opera, and Desportes in Zimmermann’s Die Soldaten for debuts at La Scala, the
Salzburg Festival, and Munich’s Bavarian State Opera. He has also sung Jim Mahoney in
Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny in Wiesbaden, Siegmund and Siegfried in Ring
performances in Dijon, Tannhäuser in Dortmund, Aron in Moses und Aron in Zurich, and
the Drum Major in Wozzeck, Aegisth in Elektra, and Siegfried in Stuttgart. He has also
appeared with the Komische Oper Berlin and opera companies in Gelsenkirchen, Leipzig,
Essen, and Klagenfurt.
Visit metopera.org 47
NEW PRODUCTIONS
T U R A N D O T ƌ I L T R O VA T O R E ƌ A N N A B O L E N A ƌ T A N N H ÄU S E R
T O S C A ƌ R I G O L E T T O ƌ L A B O H È M E ƌ D I E F L E D E R M AU S
L A DONNA DEL L AGO ƌ THE BA R BER OF SEV ILLE
C AVA LL ER I A RUSTIC A NA / PAGLI ACCI ƌ M A R I A S T UA R D A
M A D A M A B U T T E R F LY ƌ L E N O Z Z E D I F I G A R O
D O N PA S Q UA L E ƌ L’ E L I S I R D ’A M O R E ƌ S I M O N B O C C A N E G R A
D I E E N T F Ü H R U N G A U S D E M S E R A I L (The Abduction from the Seraglio)
Paul Groves
tenor (lake charles , louisiana )
this season Painter/African Prince in Lulu at the Met, Rodrigue in Massenet’s Le Cid with
Boston’s Odyssey Opera, Veasey in Higdon’s Cold Mountain with Opera Philadelphia, and
Eumolpus in Stravinsky’s Perséphone in Lyon.
met appearances Twenty-two roles and nearly 175 performances, including Pylade in
Iphigénie en Tauride, Gao Jianli in the world premiere of Tan Dun’s The First Emperor,
Ferrando in Così fan tutte, Don Ottavio in Don Giovanni, Tamino in Die Zauberflöte,
Camille de Rosillon in The Merry Widow, Belmonte in Die Entführung aus dem Serail, Tom
Rakewell in The Rake’s Progress, Arturo in Lucia di Lammermoor, and the Steersman in
Der Fliegende Holländer (debut, 1992).
career highlights He has recently sung the title role of Lohengrin with the Norwegian National
Opera, Eumolpus at the Aix-en-Provence Featival, Florestan in Fidelio at the Vienna State
Opera, the title role of Parsifal with Lyric Opera of Chicago, and Admète in Gluck’s Alceste in
Madrid. Additional performances include Nicias in Massenet’s Thaïs with Los Angeles Opera,
Plyade with Theater an der Wien, and Don Ottavio in Madrid and Aix-en-Provence. He is a
graduate of the Met’s Lindemann Young Artist Development Program.
Franz Grundheber
baritone (trier , germany)
this season Schigolch in Lulu at the Met and Wesener in Zimmermann’s Die Soldaten in
Wiesbaden.
met appearances The title roles of Rigoletto (debut, 1999) and Wozzeck.
career highlights Among the many roles he has sung at the Vienna State Opera are
Wozzeck, Rigoletto, Orest in Elektra, the title role of Hindemith’s Cardillac, Borromeo
in Pfitzner’s Palestrina, Dr. Schön, Guglielmo in Puccini’s Le Villi, Moses in Moses und
Aron, Iago in Otello, and Jochanaan in Salome. He has also sung Jochanaan, Jupiter in
Strauss’s Die Liebe der Danae, Olivier in Capriccio, Orest, Amfortas in Parsifal, Faninal in
Der Rosenkavalier, and the Speaker in Die Zauberflöte at the Salzburg Festival, Wozzeck
at La Scala, Amonasro in Aida at the Arena di Verona, Schigolch in Amsterdam, Riedinger
in Hindemith’s Mathis der Maler at the Theater an der Wien, and Barak in Die Frau ohne
Schatten, Rigoletto, and the title role of Simon Boccanegra at Covent Garden.
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The Cast and Creative Team CONTINUED
Johan Reuter
bass - baritone (copenhagen, denmark )
this season Dr. Schön/Jack the Ripper in Lulu at the Met, the title role of Enescu’s Oedipe
at Covent Garden, the title role of Der Fliegende Holländer at the Munich Opera Festival,
and Barak in Die Frau ohne Schatten, Michele in Il Tabarro, and the title roles of Gianni
Schicchi and Falstaff at the Royal Danish Opera.
met appearances Barak in Die Frau ohne Schatten and Jaroslav Prus in The Makropulos
Case (debut, 2012).
career highlights He has been a soloist with Copenhagen’s Royal Danish Opera since
1996 and has sung a number of roles there including Dr. Schön, Escamillo in Carmen,
and the title roles of Macbeth and Simon Boccanegra. He has also sung the title role of
Nabucco at the Deutsche Oper Berlin, Wotan in Das Rheingold at the Bayreuth Festival
and with Munich’s Bavarian State Opera, Leporello in Don Giovanni and Guglielmo in
Così fan tutte in Hamburg, Figaro in Le Nozze di Figaro in Berlin and Madrid, Shishkov
in Janá ček’s From the House of the Dead at Paris’s Bastille Opera, Nick Shadow in The
Rake’s Progress in Madrid, Jaroslav Prus at the Salzburg Festival, Mandryka in Arabella at
the Vienna State Opera, and the title role of Wozzeck, Jochanaan in Salome, and Theseus
in the world premiere of Harrison Birtwistle’s The Minotaur at Covent Garden.
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