Disc 2 1.Eugene Onegin: Backstage 2.(Scene 1) Entr'acte and Waltz with Chorus. "Vot tak syurpriz!" 3. Scene and Couplets. "Uzhel ya zasluzhil ot nasmyeshku etu?" 4. Mazurka and Scene. "Messieurs, mesdames, mesta zanyat izvolte" - "Ti ne tantsuyesh, Lenski?" 5. Finale. "V vashem dome! V vashem dome!" 6. (Scene 2) Introduction, Scene and Aria. "Nu, shto zhe?" 7.Duel Scene. "A, vot oni!" 8. (Scene 1) Polonaise 9. Scene and Aria. "I zdyes mnye skuchno!" 10. Scene and Arioso. "Itak, poidyom, tebya predstavlyu ya" - "Uzhel ta samaya Tatyana" 11.(Scene 2) Closing Scene. "O! Kak mnye tyazhelo!" 12. Eugene Onegin - Closing Credits
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Editorial
DVD Description
Tracklisting Disc 1 1. Mikhail Baryshnikov introduces "Eugene Onegin" 2. (Scene 1) Introduction 3. Duet and Quartet. "Slikhali l vi za roschei glas nochnoi" 4.Peasants' Chorus and Dance. "Bolyat moyi skori nozhenki so pokhodushki" - "Uzh kak po mostu, mostochku" 5. Scene and Aria. "Kak ya lyublyu pod zvuki pesen etikh" - "Uzh kak po mostu, mostochku" 6. Scene. "Nu ti, moya vostrushka" 7. Scene and Quartet. "Mesdames! Ya na sebya vzyal smyelost" 8. Scene and Arioso. "Kak shchastliv, kak shchastliv ya!" - "Ya lyublyu vas" 9. Closing scene. "A, vot i vi!" 10. (Scene 2) Introduction and Scene. "Nu, zaboltalas ya!" 11. Letter scene. "Puskai pogilabnu ya, no pryezhde" 12. Scene and Duet. "Akh, noch minula" 13. (Scene 3) Servant Girls' Chorus. "Dyevitsi, krasavitsi" 14. Scene and Aria. "Zdyes on, zdyes on, Yevgeni!" 15. Eugene Onegin - In Rehearsal At The MET 16. Beverly Sills Interviews Renée Fleming & Dmitri Hvorostovsky
Editorial
Synopsis
Tchaikovsky's opera tells the tale of Eugene Onegin and his relationship with Tatyana, a bookish daydreamer who longs to win his heart.
A glorious, intense Onegin - Fleming & Hvorostovsky triumph
Review date: 2008-03-31 Rating: 10 out of 10
This is a quite lovely DVD that rightly places Onegin at the heart of the opera, when frequently the whole focus is on Tatiana. While the latter is understandable given the importance of the Letter Scene to the drama of the work - and it was the musical kernel around which the recurring motifs of the opera are based - by focussing so centrally on Onegin himself the final scenes pack a real punch.
The staging is minimalist, the action taking place within the huge white cube of the bare Metropolitan stage, with no scenery. The different scenes are picked out by the simple use of a few judicious pieces of stage furniture - a single table for the opening scene in the Larin's garden, a bed and bureau for Tatiana's room and so on - and the use of sometimes quite sumptuous costumes. This gives the whole production a powerful simplicity and directness, and focuses attention on the musical performance of the orchestra and singers. The whole meaning of the opera has to be carried by the main characters' acting ability - which is hugely impressive.
The focus on Onegin begins with the overture. In one of those exquisite images that occur throughout this production, Onegin appears alone and somehow quite small in a spot lit chair, on an empty stage covered with autumnal leaves, wistfully reading an old letter. The air is suddenly filled with a shower of dead leaves: a beautiful and evocative start brilliantly setting out the nostalgic regret that so powerfully drives Onegin's actions in the final scenes. The leaves will cover the stage throughout the first act.
Renée Fleming is hardly the adolescent of the libretto, but from the start has the distant air of a girl infatuated with the heroic world of the romantic novel and detached from the mundane realities of the life she actually leads. Her Letter Scene captures exceptionally well the impulsive ardour and mad impetuosity brought on by the encounter with Onegin. It's joyful to behold. And she embodies completely her transformed persona as a woman of substance and high social status at the end of the opera.
Dmitri Hvorostovsky is an unsurpassed Onegin. Vocally - like Fleming - he is on top form, and, like her, totally lives the full range of his character's development, from the suave, emotionally cold and patronisingly self-assured young land-owner (he will later refer self-critically to his self-righteous moralising of the innocent young Tatiana), to the anguished, semi-ostracised, troubled man on the edges of "society", aimless and depressed since killing his best friend. His acting in the role reversal in the last scenes of the opera, with his almost adolescent love-struck look as he is introduced to the new Tatiana, and the repeat of Tatiana's Letter Scene melody - with variations on many of the same words - is completely believable and, I found, deeply moving. And here was a revelation for me. I have always thought of "Eugene Onegin" as an opera with not much action that simply ends with the surviving characters just older, wiser and sadder. Whilst in some ways that's still true, the sheer passionate desperation of both Onegin and Tatiana, clinging to each other almost in ecstasy in the final scene, carries a dramatic weight and intense emotional but unfulfillable desire that is painful to watch, gut-wrenching, and leaves us bereft for Onegin, finally left alone on his spot lit chair, in the middle of the empty stage. The narrative has turned full circle.
Within the apparently simplest of stagings some nice touches and a sensitive use of lighting changes cleverly pick out resonant details. Minimalism at the Met is a new experience for me - and a welcome one. The sometimes obsessive attention to 'authenticity' and tradition at the Met can lead to productions that are fusty, dull and look more like museum pieces than a living operatic tradition. Producer Robert Carsen knows how to get the greatest meaning out of the simplest gesture or apposite stage image. The mismatched chairs penning the guests into a just-too-small dance floor at Tatiana's birthday ball, for instance, suggest a certain "genteel poverty" in the Larin household, and a certain provincialism in the women's dresses (Onegin later refers to Tatiana's "humble background which I scorned", in the back of beyond) and possibly the imprisoning constraints of a narrow "polite society". The duel is a masterpiece of economic stagecraft: on an entirely empty stage, all the protagonists dressed in sombre black, Onegin and Lenski reach out towards one another as though longing to re-connect and return to their earlier friendship, but unable to close the breach in their relationship. Perspective makes them appear physically close but emotionally and socially the breach is too wide because of the conventions of social "honour" that Lenski has invoked and that they are now obliged to follow inexorably, despite their wishes. The death of Lenski and Onegin's dismay at what he has done is enacted in silhouette. (I have little sympathy for the character of Lenski, but Ramón Vargas sings his great aria with real beauty and anxious emotion - drawing enthusiastic and extended applause from the Met audience. And the production does strongly suggest that Onegin *could have* defused the situation at the ball, but didn't.) The immediate transition to a St Petersburg ballroom, with Onegin centre stage being dressed in formal attire by six domestic servants during the Polonaise is a brilliant idea, emphasising the artifice behind "society" and the true status of Onegin within that world, and allowing for a seamless shift to Act III and Onegin's disaffected narrative.
This is a magnificent DVD. Gergiev gets sumptuous playing, emotional, nuanced and finely detailed from the Met Orchestra - particularly, for me, the woodwind which Tchaikovsky uses so tellingly to contribute so much to the beauty and emotion of this score. (The bonuses include a brief but fascinating piece on Gergiev rehearsing this production.) In addition to the leading roles, all the smaller parts are taken exceptionally well. Special praise must go to Svetlana Volkova as Madame Larina, who sets the tone of a woman's fate in this culture: "Heaven gave us habit in place of happinness", a moto that will apply to her daughter too; Elena Zaremba for an engaging Olga; Larissa Shevchenko, an especially touching Filippyevna, salt of the earth as Tatiana's old nurse; and Sergei Aleksashkin, who delivers a powerful, resonant and affecting aria as Prince Gremin. There are optional subtitles in English, French, German, Italian, Spanish and Chinese.
This is an exceptionally strong "Onegin" - my favourite on DVD by some way - in a deceptively "simple" staging, beautifully directed for film by the late, great Brian Large. This is near enough a definitive production of Onegin, one that will be difficult to improve on (except for those who need a more traditional staging) and I strongly recommend it.