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On the surface the season looks slightly lackluster, with three warhorses on the schedule (La Traviata, L'Elisir d'Amore, and Mozart again with Don Giovanni). Read the details, however, and you learn that the Traviata will bring the Laurent Pelly team (Cendrillon, Platée) back to Santa Fe, with Natalie Dessay taking on her first Violetta (we heard her first Pamina at Santa Fe in 2006). Rounding out the French connection is Laurent Naouri as Germont, which will be somewhat strange to see -- husband and wife in that father-"daughter" duet (Naouri will be replaced again by Anthony Michaels-Moore later in the season).
The other two warhorses are less exciting, in terms of the productions and the casting, which focuses mostly on former apprentice singers (although they are all strong). Elisir will star Jennifer Black as Adina and the remarkable Patrick Carfizzi as Belcore, in a Broadway production directed by Jerry Zaks. Don Giovanni, disappointingly, was last heard at Santa Fe only in 2004, but its cast will have Susanna Phillips as Donna Elvira and Kate Lindsey, from Roanoke, Virginia, as Zerlina. The production is a revival of Chas Rader-Shieber's 2004 staging -- did this fill a slot left absent by something else more interesting that fell through?
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The piano-vocal score is finished, and the vocal parts have been fine-tuned in many cases in close consultation with the singers who are engaged for the world premiere next summer. Ionarts favorite Patricia Racette will star as Leslie Crosbie, with Anthony Michaels-Moore as Robert Crosbie, and James Maddalena as Howard Joyce. Moravec will begin the orchestration later this year. In terms of world premieres of new opera, the creative team is light years ahead of schedule -- Osvaldo Golijov was still making changes to Ainadamar at the final rehearsals. Terry's posts about his libretto clearly rubbed La Cieca the wrong way, but we will reserve judgment until we hear the whole work next summer. To judge from how Moravec described his musical approach to the story, it sounds like it will be a 90-minute roller coaster ride, without intermission.
Last is what may turn out to be the high point of the season, a new production of Gluck's Alceste, an important work entering the Santa Fe repertory for the first time. It will also be the debut of Christine Brewer in the title role. Kenneth Montgomery will conduct, perhaps not an inspiring choice, and Francisco Negrin will direct. It is wonderful to see 18th-century opera other than Mozart (Rameau, Handel, now Gluck) at Santa Fe, but this critic is secretly hoping that Mr. MacKay, somewhere in the back of his mind, has a plan to bring Lully's Alceste to the Santa Fe stage, or bring back some Monteverdi or Cavalli, neither heard there since the 1980s. There is an entire century, opera's first, from which to choose.
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