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OT: Così fan tutte

The original playbill for “Così fan tutte.”

The original playbill for “Così fan tutte.”

My darlings, your lovely hostess has been on an opera-going binge. I saw four operas last week, including three in the space of four days. I am knackered and feeling deeply and humbly grateful.

I recused myself from a paid review of Macbeth because I know a member of the company, but I did review it on my Verdi blog. While it is an uneven show, the best parts—the singing of Dimitri Pittas and Günther Groissböck and, above all, the incandescent conducting of Gianandrea Noseda—are very fine indeed. I believe it will be broadcast on 24 March; do tune in if you can.

For The Classical Review, I reviewed New York City Opera’s new production of Mozart and Da Ponte’s Così fan tutte. While I had reservations about specific aspects of the staging (Don Alfonso in a bear costume at the beginning of Act II? WTF?!?), they were unimportant given the go-for-broke singing and acting and the show’s overall theatrical brilliance. It was far and away the most gripping and truly erotic Così I have seen.

Finally, I went twice to Mussorgsky’s Kovanshchina at the Met. The sets are old and shabby, the staging rather static, but Kirill Petrenko’s remarkable conducting, the staggeringly beautiful singing of the Met Chorus (led by Donald Palumbo), and the uniformly superb cast made it one of the greatest musical events I have ever had the good fortune to attend. I would gladly have gone another ten times, and I may write something up about it later this week.

Maria Callas sings Mozart

Today’s selection is one of Callas’s lesser-known commercial recordings: Donna Anna’s “Or sai chi l’onore” from Mozart’s Don Giovanni. She recorded it in Paris in December 1963 and January 1964 with the Orchestre de la Société des Concerts du Conservatoire under the direction of Nicola Rescigno.

As John Ardoin observes, Callas was in uneven voice at these sessions (the oscillation of her highest notes indeed tries my patience), but she sang “with great strength of purpose.” Indeed, listening to this recording for the first time in a long while, I was struck by its grandeur and fury, and by how tame the aria can sound sung by other sopranos. Also of interest: the rather deliberate tempo adopted by Callas and Rescigno. (Ardoin: “[I]t is paced as an andante rather than the rushed allegro often heard.”)

Hear Callas in other music by Mozart here and in the blog archives.

P.S. My new non-Callas, non-Verdi blog is live: http://www.mondo-marion.com/blog.

Buon Sant’Ambroeus!

A question to my amici milanesi: Does “Sant’Ambroeus” need the apostrophe?

Maria Callas never sang Mozart’s Don Giovanni on stage at La Scala or anywhere else. But let’s listen to her 1953 test recording of Donna Anna’s “Non mi dir” (one of two that she made) and reflect on what might have been… and on what passes for excellence in Mozart singing today.

In bocca al lupo to everyone at La Scala, and buon compleanno to S, who was born on an auspicious day! Update: S’s big day is 9 and not 7 December. Gah. Well, happy birthday anyway!

Χρόνια Πολλά!

Callas on the beach.

Callas on the beach.

Happy birthday to Maria Callas, who was born on 2 December 1923.

To celebrate, I offer her and you the online equivalent of a dozen red roses: a dozen favorite blog posts about Callas!

If you are looking for words, try my essay, my 2007 tribute to Callas, or the chock-full-of-Rossini birthday post.

Maria Callas, thirty-four years on

Note: I first published this tribute to Callas in September 2007 at my old blog, vilaine fille, to mark the thirtieth anniversary of Callas’s death. Many bloggers kindly linked to it, and ionarts at the time wrote: “Best Maria Callas tribute. Anywhere.” It is slightly revised here.

Maria Callas as Anna Bolena

Maria Callas as Anna Bolena.

The densely encrusted tiaras and parures threw off icy flashes of color—acid yellow, violet, snowy white. Spectral women hovered silently in front of the jewels. There was a will-o’-the-wisp ballerina wearing a crown of dainty white flowers; a somber queen whose huge eyes were dark with encroaching madness; a pagan priestess lost in thought, swept up in the riptide of her doom.

The gems were fakes: Swarovski crystals, the same kind that sparkle on the Metropolitan Opera’s chandeliers. And the ghostly ladies were holograms of soprano Maria Callas, on display earlier this year along with her stage jewelry and other memorabilia in the Met’s Founders Hall.

At New York’s P.S. 189 in 1937.

At New York’s P.S. 189 in 1937.

The installation of Callas relics blotted out the portraits of Met stalwarts that line the space. That was not the least of the exhibit’s ironies, given that the New York-born soprano’s appearances with her hometown company were infrequent (twenty-one in all), mediocre (Callas was never on top form in New York and also groused of “lousy” productions and mix-and-match casts), and abruptly interrupted when Met intendant Rudolf Bing dismissed her in 1958. Callas lived in New York from her birth in 1923 until 1937, and again from 1945 to 1947. All her life, when she let slip her grand airs, she spoke English with a decided New York snap.

The world’s most celebrated soprano died in Paris, rich, silent, and young, thirty years ago, on September 16, 1977. A frenzy of memorializing is now under way. By the company’s estimate, more than three million people have viewed the Swarovski-sponsored jewels show, most recently seen in Japan—where, as it happens, Callas last sang in public: November 1974, Sapporo, the terminus of her dismal “comeback” tour. A thirtieth anniversary exhibit opens this week at La Scala, with film screenings and displays of costumes and photos. 2007 has been the official Year of Maria Callas in Greece, her ancestral land, where an admirer stole one of her dresses from the Italian Cultural Institute in Athens, then mailed it back. In 2000, Callas-worship took perhaps its most morbid turn, as some 500 lots of her personal effects—including foundation garments and Pyrex measuring cups—were auctioned off amidst mayhem in Paris. Items from her ex-husband’s estate are to be sold in Milan later this year.

Catalogue from Milan auction and lot.

Poster and lot from 2007 Milan auction.

Half a century after her greatest triumphs, Callas continues to define popular conceptions of opera. Her image has been used to hawk Apple computers, and her voice has been sampled in pop music—Enigma’s “Callas Went Away,” for example, through which flutter mournful samples of Callas in an aria from Massenet’s Werther. She has been the subject of defamation on Broadway (Terrence McNally’s Master Class) and hagiography at the movies (Franco Zeffirelli’s Callas Forever). Rufus Wainwright’s opera Prima Donna is based in part on Callas’s words and life.

As former Callas bootlegs have been rehabilitated, joining her official EMI catalogue, and as her EMI recordings have begun entering the public domain in Europe, she remains (by some estimates—EMI was unable to confirm this) the best-selling classical singer of all time. Nearly all she set down sounds dim and agèd compared with current-day marvels, but she is a heavyweight even on iTunes, where most, perhaps all, of her EMI recordings can be downloaded, including such ephemera as two test recordings she made in 1953 of “Non mi dir” from Mozart’s Don Giovanni.

Onassis and Callas in 1959.

Onassis and Callas in 1959.

As the decades separating us from Callas stack up, the obsession with the most intimate aspects of her life, material and artistic, grows ever more intense. In Greek Fire, his account of the soprano’s affair with the shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis, Nicholas Gage alleged that, in 1960, Callas insisted that a “secret son” she was carrying be delivered by an elective caesarean in her eighth month of pregnancy, so that Onassis would not see her “swollen and nine months pregnant.” As Gage tells it, the premature infant died as a result of Callas’s vanity. Whether or not his claims hold up (and the evidence against them is overwhelming), they speak to the moralistic fervor to see Callas get her comeuppance that burns even today.

In death as in life, Callas vexes and unnerves. Her voice could be wiry and sour, and her cancellations disruptive, but in hindsight, it seems that where Callas roused the greatest controversy was in testing the limits of tolerance for conspicuous female power. She was the girl who started with nothing and became the most celebrated musician on the planet—the heavy woman who willed herself into an Audrey Hepburn-like sylph—the artist who seemed to be able to sing any music written for the female voice. Fans and biographers claim that Callas wracked her voice when she (a) lost the weight and/or (b) dumped her dull but devoted husband for the rakish Onassis. How dare she? The Milanese public that crowned Callas queen of La Scala also, at the pinnacle of her greatness, smeared the outside of her home with fæces. The chances she took and the heights she reached were simply too much to bear.

Maria Callas in “Poliuto” and Barbie

Maria Callas in “Poliuto” and Barbie.

Callas remains the standard by which other singers are judged. Today, some call the starlet Anna Netrebko “the Russian Callas,” inspired by the dark beauty and hyperkinetic stage manner the two purportedly share. But despite her reputation as a scenery-chewer, Callas was always spare and restrained in her movements. Instead, she burned with music’s inner fire—as shown in video from her 1958 Paris concert, where she is often still and always mesmerizing. And while Netrebko has copped to showing up for engagements with her music unlearned, Callas was ever the diligent schoolgirl. As a teen, she was the first to arrive and the last to depart at her teachers’ studios. As an established star, she sometimes rehearsed for twenty hours at a stretch, studying scores and honing her slow, graceful gestures deep into the night.

Callas at the piano, at home in Milan.

Callas at the piano, at home in Milan.

Of all the Callas treasures from which one can choose—the La Scala Traviata from 1955, the Dallas rehearsal and Cologne Sonnambula from 1957, the EMI Verdi and mad scenes recitals, and the studio sets of Norma—I think that those 1953 test recordings from Don Giovanni may best represent what she was about. Callas sight-read the music (she had not prepared it in advance), so the interpretations lack her customary fire. But listen to the wonders that she was able to summon on the fly: poised, exquisitely tapered phrases, whistle-clean passagework, pinpoint-perfect staccatos, and a trill of instrumental neatness. They were fruits less of “genius” than of self-abnegating devotion to craft.

The performances remind us that, behind the glitter and the ever-shifting guises, there was a woman who served art with humility and love. The awe that Callas inspires today, thirty years after her death, is an echo of the awe that she herself brought to music.