Sexy Salome

The Metropolitan Opera’s increasingly popular HD Live Series kicks off Saturday with Richard Strauss’ Salome. The live event on Saturday is about $22/ticket, and the encore performance is about $15. If the cost is keeping you from attending, consider the encore performance. Also, you might find it interesting to know that half of the ticket price goes directly to the Metropolitan Opera. These events are very expensive to produce. I’m very pleased to know that a substantial portion of the proceeds goes back to them. I always buy my tickets ahead of time on Fandango.com to avoid the lines at the theater and also to make sure I get a ticket, in case of a sell-out.

LIVE on Saturday, October 11, 2008 (1:00 pm ET)
ENCORE on Wednesday, October 22, 2008 (7pm in all time zones)

Karita Mattila caused a sensation when she sang Salome at the Met for the first time in 2004. She reprises her stunning interpretation of the part, including her unforgettable Dance of the Seven Veils. Read a Q & A with Karita Mattila about her role in Salome.

Conductor: Patrick Summers; Production: Jürgen Flimm; Karita Mattila, Ildikó Komlósi, Juha Uusitalo, Kim Begley, Joseph Kaiser. Download the cast sheet and synopsis.

Learn more:

Bypass theater ticket lines. Buy opera tickets in advance at Fandango.com. Read reviews and find showtimes for any movie in the U.S.

Bookmark and Share

Posted by Ann Adair on October 7th, 2008

Filed under event | No Comments »

Met Player Preview

Peter Gelb and the Metropolitan Opera keep ramping up the operasphere and the entire cultural community with groundbreaking initiatives. The latest of these is the new Met Player. On October 22, the Met will offer 170 full-length opera performances via this new online streaming service. The new player claims to be the best viewing experience online with “sharp video with stunning full-screen viewing, no stalling, and no buffering.” Offerings will include recent HD broadcasts, and dozens of historic performances captured live from the Met stage.

This single initiative has incredible potential to touch the lives of millions of people by offering Met performances to everyone. This breaks down access barriers that have been in place since the dawn of opera. Now, anyone with access to a computer with internet access and a pair of headphones has access to this unmatched digital opera library. How will this change things? Students will have unprecedented access to study many operas that are probably not available for viewing anywhere else, not to mention specific performances of many opera superstars. Potential audience members will be able to get a taste of the opera before committing to the expense of going to one in person.

From Broadway World:

The Met is the first performing arts organization in the world to present such a wide variety of performances in such high quality resolution, available whenever its users wish to see or hear them. The service will be available for a monthly charge of $14.99 or on a per view price ranging from $3.99 to $4.99.  The Met has been developing the new service over the past year, working with a consortium of new technology companies -Move Networks, mPoint, PermissionTV, and POP – adapting recently developed technologies to ensure superior picture and sound quality for the Met’s long-form programming.

Utilizing the technology of Met Player, users have the option of hooking up their computers to new HD TV sets and home-stereo sound systems, delivering the Met’s catalog in high quality. The cleanly-designed, simple, easy-to-navigate interface on the Met’s website will allow users to find their favorite performances quickly.

Subscription fees are priced at $14.99 per month or $149.99 for a yearly plan. As a special benefit for Met members who contribute at the $125 level or above, a six-month introductory package will be available for $49.99. Individual purchases will cost $4.99 for HD videos and $3.99 for an audio performance or non-HD video; these individual purchases may be played in a six-hour period within 30 days. Met Player will provide a free downloadable audio and video website player with any rental or subscription order.

In order to purchase video or audio streaming, users must register at the Metropolitan Opera’s website for Met Player, directly accessible at www.metplayer.org, and a one week free trial subscription will be available to anyone after registration.  For those who want to preview Met Player for free, there will be three select video clips to choose from for viewing at any time.

Get the word out about the October 22nd launch of the Met Player and while you’re at it, drop a thank you note to Peter Gelb at the Met. Read the rest of this entry »

Posted by Ann Adair on September 27th, 2008

Filed under event, general, news | No Comments »

Review – Met Opening Night Gala HD Live transmission

I attended the Metropolitan Opera’s Opening Night Gala transmission locally and was not disappointed! From the red carpet to the orchestra pit, everything was magical!

This gala evening, hosted by mezzo-soprano Susan Graham in the opera house, included interviews with Met General Manager Peter Gelb, Met Music Director James Levine, Renée Fleming, Ramón Vargas, Thomas Hampson, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Martha Stewart, novelist Ann Patchett, and painter Francesco Clemente. Diva Deborah Voigt interviewed audience members at Times Square. I really enjoy these interviews as it adds another dimension to the whole experience.

From the perspective of someone who has been to more operas sitting in the orchestra pit, than on stage or in the audience, I truly enjoy seeing the magnitude of effort it requires to change the sets at the Met. The HD Live transmissions are the perfect medium for this sort of bonus feature.

I could give you a running account of the whole transmission, but you can get the full story on the Met’s website and see the opening night photos, instead, I will tell you a little bit about the movie theater experience.

I always purchase my ticket online from Fandango long before the day of the performance. In my neck of the woods, these shows have sold out and, luckily, they’ve added theaters as each show sells out. I believe last season’s La Boheme had three theaters at our cinema, and seating was fairly full.

We had a couple of local organizations set up with tables in the lobby immediately outside the theater for a local opera company, Opera Tampa, and our local public radio station WUSF. This is a great targeted marketing opportunity for these cultural outlets. They distributed program notes, their own program guides and schedules and also had personnel on hand to chat with audience members during the intermissions.

I saw a few familiar faces in the audience, too, as you might at any local opera performance. You will see the same people over and over in attendance.

As I was telling a colleague last night, these performances are so spectacular that I feel as if it’s my personal mission to tell as many people as I can about them. I am constantly inviting friends to these operas. Last year, I brought someone to her first opera, and she came back a few weeks later to enjoy her second! This was not someone I expected to like opera, but I keep inviting everyone!

How much did this wonderful evening cost? $22 for the ticket, $2 convenience fee for ticket purchase, and $11.75 for a medium drink and popcorn, for a total of $34.75. I frequently skip the concessions to cut down my expense, but it was the opening night gala, so I splurged a little. I had no wardrobe expense as I wore the clothes I had on all day and brought a sweatshirt in case it was cold. This was a long event, too, so you have to prepare for that.

The pre-show started at 6pm, and the credits were rolling around 10:30pm. You will get hungry and thirsty, so be prepared to spend a bundle at the concession, or bring a bottle of water with you and refill it at the water fountain in the lobby. I am not suggesting that you bring in a cooler full of snacks and drinks. Please be considerate of your fellow audience members and also be respectful of the theaters you frequent. I would hate for “those opera people” to be a negative connotation at the theater. Last season, I had the displeasure of sitting in close proximity to someone who brought a 1/2 gallon drink thermos in with her along with what must’ve been an enormous bag of pistachios IN THE SHELL! For the love of Donizetti, people! Please don’t do this! She was completely oblivious to all of the picking and popping of her own peeving pistachio habit. I have photos!! I’ve got my plan-to-avoid in place for this season.

The experience was one not to miss. If you missed any last season or the season before, you can pick up DVDs from the Popcorn Opera store here.

Enjoy!

Posted by Ann Adair on September 23rd, 2008

Filed under event, review, simulcast | No Comments »

Metropolitan Opera Opening Night Gala

Monday, September 22, 2008, the new season opens with an exciting gala featuring Metropolitan Opera icon Renée Fleming in fully staged excerpts from Verdi’s La Traviata, Massenet’s Manon, and Strauss’s Capriccio.

Although the New York City event is sold out, you can still get tickets for your local movie theater’s simulcast. Unlike the rest of the HD Live season, the gala will be broadcast to North and South America only.

If you’re short on cash, there are a few free options!

  • In Times Square, there will be free seating for 2,000 people at 5pm. Before the seating opens, an audience queue will be located on Broadway, between 42nd and 43rd Streets. Get there early!
  • Fordham University’s North Meadow, one block south of Lincoln Center, will host the plazacast. This event is free, but tickets are required. You can pick up a maximum of 2 tickets/person this Sunday at noon, at the Met’s box office.
  • On the web, you can listen free on Sirius Radio Channel 78, or streaming live from the Met’s website.

Posted by Ann Adair on September 19th, 2008

Filed under broadcast, event, simulcast | No Comments »

What is Popcorn Opera?

Welcome to my blog about enjoying opera outside the traditional opera house, in other words, opportunities to watch opera AND eat popcorn! I will focus primarily on the Metropolitan Opera’s Live in HD series that plays live broadcasts to movie theaters all over the world. The San Francisco Opera Cinemacast schedule isn’t out yet,  and I haven’t yet seen their broadcasts. In addition, I will periodically discuss opera in the park, DVDs, and any other non-traditional opera performance.

“Popcorn Opera” is my favorite way to introduce people to opera! If you’re still not too sure about the whole thing, the Met Opera has released all previous seasons of Live in HD on DVD! For less than the price of the movie ticket to see one of these live simulcasts, you can buy the DVD of one of last year’s operas! I think this is absolutely fantastic and I can’t wait to build my collection of DVDs of these memorable performances. Not only will the DVD be a memory of the actual performance, but it also will remind me of the wonderful times with friends that I’ve introduced to opera.

Posted by Ann Adair on August 19th, 2008

Filed under general | No Comments »