"The Metropolitan Opera HD Live" Richard Strauss: Salome (TV Episode 2008) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
Mattila is superb in a good production of Salome....
TheLittleSongbird13 October 2011
The Metropolitan Opera: Live in HD series has always been like a pleasure to me. While the odd production has been disappointing(ie. 2007/8's Hansel and Gretel or 2009's Tosca), the High Definition always looks fantastic and coming from someone who loves opera especially when presented well that's a joy to me.

This production is good if somewhat uneven. So far my favourite Salome is the 1975 film, Stratas mayn't be the ideal Salome being a lyric soprano in alternative to a dramatic soprano but she does do a terrific job with the role, Dance of the Seven Veils even with the slow tempo is wonderfully erotic, Bohm's Strauss expertise comes through loud and clear and there are brilliant performances from Varnay and Weikl. The Caballe and Milnes recording is also excellent.

I will say that I personally loved the look of the production. True, the settings are not exactly biblical, but the production are suitably sumptuous. And as you would expect the HD is wonderful, with clear picture quality and mostly clever video directing though some of close ups of Mattila are rather cruel. I don't really have to say how good the music is, perhaps not as lush as Rosenkavalier or as brutal as Elektra, but I cannot deny that it is a powerful score, and no it is not only Dance of the Seven Veils, which is appropriately sensual here.

When it comes to the orchestra and conducting, they aren't terrible as such, I just wasn't bowled over. The orchestral playing is solid though the trumpets could have a little more dynamic shading. The conducting has some much needed bombast, however in other scenes some subtlety and sensuality wouldn't have gone amiss. The sound is very good.

As for the cast mostly they're fine. The chorus are good enough. Kim Begley vocally is rather wobbly as Herod and has a tendency to bark, however at least his acting is more than stand-and-deliver quality. Ildiko Kimlosi gives a very well characterised Herodias, that said she is rather shrill on her high notes. The best of the support cast is the performance of Jochannan Juha Uusutalo, his voice mayn't be the most powerful of all the bass-baritones in the role but it does have presence and he is charismatic.

But this production will always be worth watching for Karita Mattila. Vocally she is not perfect, it has power but has lost some of its beauty. However, as a very intelligent singer she really throws herself into the punishing role of Salome and the result is a hugely compelling performance throughout. She sings, she acts, she dances, all three of which she excels at. I'd also like to say this, while it is a little obvious in the scene where Salome is cradling and kissing Jochannan's chopped off head is rather doll-like really, because of the intelligent approach that Mattila brings and the impact of the music at this particular moment, it is actually rather shocking.

All in all, a good Salome, Mattila is the best thing about it. 7.5/10 Bethany Cox
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
An interesting production of Salome
AngelofMusic199823 May 2022
Salome is not among my favorite operas,butit is very interesting and I like its music(Dance of the Seven Veils especially) and the plot is interesting,which a dramatic final scene. Sets and costumes are not exactly Biblical in nature,but they look lovely and the production does not look ugly .Karita Mattila may not look the part of a young woman Salome is ,but her singing,acting and dancing is decent and she is a good artist. The rest of the cast support her very well. I wish though that the head of John the Baptist in the final scene looked more realistic. Overall,very good production of Salome.7,5/10.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Magnificent! Wonderful
Gyran8 September 2009
Stage director Jürgen Flimm gives us an art deco Salome set, maybe, in 1930s Germany about 30 years after Richard Strauss's opera was composed. Both sets and costumes are heavily influenced by the paintings of Gustav Klimt. To this sumptuous setting is added, rather incongruously, a cistern or well at one side of the stage topped by a construction of planks and scaffolding.

Salome is sung by Karita Mattila who is perhaps the wrong side of 40 to be singing the role of a teenage girl. Mattila throws everything into this role to convince us that she is a maddeningly irritating, naughty little girl. But her voice is something else in a huge role that demands an almost unbearable intensity of singing throughout the opera's 100 minute length. In particular, the final scene as she rolls around the stage deliriously kissing the head of John the Babtist is one of unbridled savagery and a tour de force for the Finnish soprano. I am not generally in favour of standing ovations but, at the end, as Mattila appears alone in front of the curtain, it seems entirely natural that an astounded audience rise to their feet in one movement.

Mattila is ably supported by Kim Begley's lecherous Herod, Ildiko Komlosi's well-characterised Heroditas and Juha Uusitalo's sonorous Jochanaan. Uusitalo has to be sonorous because much of his role is sung from the bottom of a cistern.

Strauss's music for the dance of the seven veils is sumptuously erotic but Mattila performs the dance as a modern transvestite strip routine. She grinds her buttocks into the crotch of one of the spectators. Two other spectators remove her trousers with their teeth. At the end she apparently flashes her breasts at Herod but we only see Herod's reaction shot as he exclaims: "Magnificent! Wonderful!" Now, I've no particular desire to see Ms Mattila naked but I think that we at home should see the performance as it was viewed by the audience at the Met. If it is good enough for the sophisticates of New York, it is good enough for the citizens of Birmingham Alabama and Birmingham England
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
No wonder opera is dying
boblinds1 February 2009
When one of the world's greatest opera houses can mount a production of Salome so devoid of acting talent, directorial insight, and theatrical skill, it makes it much easier to understand why opera is held in such ridicule by most of the population.

Mattila sings the role well enough; but it hardly makes any difference when her dramatic performance is at the level of hambone hijinx on the family camcorder. She lurches from one faux emotion to another with no character and less physical control. I've rarely seen such clumsiness onstage, much less in a world-class theater. Her dance (lauded elsewhere for tubby nudity that wasn't shown in the HD broadcast--THANK GOD!!!) wouldn't play at a 1927 Minsky's matinée. Arousal? I was fighting back the nausea.

Elsewhere, performances and direction were slipshod and generalized with little to none of the subtext and atmosphere of Strauss and Wilde's genius. Did anyone CARE about this material? Did they even rehearse? The evidence says no.

A shameful and shocking exhibition of amateurism from the stage of The Metropolitan Opera. Low rent theater in high def video.
1 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed