'The Biggest Thing I鈥檝e Ever Done': Inside Michael Mayer's Aida at the Met | 半岛体育

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Classic Arts Features 'The Biggest Thing I鈥檝e Ever Done': Inside Michael Mayer's Aida at the Met

The Metropolitan Opera unveils its first new production of Verdi鈥檚 Aida in almost 40 years.

Angel Blue in Aida Paola Kudacki / Met Opera

For his state-of-the-art take on Verdi鈥檚 monumental drama, Aida, at the Metropolitan Opera, director Michael Mayer embraces the work鈥檚 grand scale and opportunity for spectacle, filling the stage with towering scenery, lavish costumes, and animated projections to present ancient Egypt as it was in the full blush of its youth. Taking on the touchstone title role for her first time with the company is soprano Angel Blue, with Music Director Yannick N茅zet-S茅guin on the podium.

A team of archeologists unearths a tomb not seen by human eyes for millennia. As they sweep away the cobwebs and cast lantern light onto rows of crumbling hieroglyphs, the faded images begin to glow and leap from the walls, the room takes on color and light, and the audience is transported back through the sands of time to witness a story of passion, treachery, and empires at war. So begins Michael Mayer鈥檚 new production of Verdi鈥檚 Aida, running December 31鈥揓anuary 25.

鈥淓ver since I was a kid, I was obsessed with ancient Egypt. I loved the visuals and the symbolism. I loved the pomp, the pyramids, the mummies, the hieroglyphics,鈥� says the Tony Award鈥搘inning director, who previously created Met stagings of Verdi鈥檚 Rigoletto and La Traviata and also piloted the company-premiere production of Jeanine Tesori鈥檚 Grounded that opened this season. He's also represented on Broadway with Swept Away. 鈥淚 even managed to get a sarcophagus and a Cleopatra dancer into my Rigoletto. So right away, I was excited about getting to work on a new Aida.鈥�

The epitome of grand opera, Aida was the fulfillment of a longtime dream of Isma鈥檌l Pasha, Khedive of Egypt, who had spent years trying to convince Giuseppe Verdi to compose a work for the Khedivial Opera House鈥攚hich opened with a performance of Rigoletto in 1869 to coincide with the completion of the Suez Canal. But it took the intervention of Auguste Mariette, the French archaeologist whom the Khedive had tasked with overseeing excavations throughout Egypt, to propose the subject that ultimately captured the composer鈥檚 interest. 

Having discovered a number of significant tombs and established the famed Egyptian Museum, Mariette combined his knowledge of the ancient world with a bit of theatrical license to fashion a story that contained all the hallmarks of a great operatic tragedy: two kingdoms locked in an endless cycle of bloodshed; a fraught love triangle comprising an Ethiopian princess enslaved in the pharaoh鈥檚 court, the valiant soldier she desires, and the Egyptian princess who is her rival for his affections; a sinister priestly class pulling all the strings; and even the occasional elephant or two. Verdi saw the potential for 鈥渁 work of vast proportions,鈥� and after enduring delays due to the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, the opera eventually premiered in Cairo on Christmas Eve 1871鈥攚ith Mariette himself supervising the scenery and costumes.

Michael Mayer Heather Gershonowitz

Mariette and Verdi鈥檚 vision of ancient Egypt is not without its fair share of anachronisms and inventions鈥攆or one thing, the Egyptians would have had no business worshipping in a temple to the Roman god Vulcan, as they do in Act I鈥攂ut for Mayer, these are all part of Aida鈥檚 charm. And the more he researched Mariette鈥檚 hand in the opera鈥檚 genesis, the more it seemed appropriate to frame the opera as seen through the imaginations of a group of 19th-century Egyptologists exploring a long-forgotten tomb: As they wander from room to room, the story of Aida would unfold before their鈥攁nd the audience鈥檚鈥攅yes. It all amounts to what the director calls 鈥渢he biggest thing I鈥檝e ever done.鈥�

Also taking on one of the biggest assignments of her career is the production鈥檚 star, Angel Blue, who has already conquered many of the summits of the lyric-soprano repertoire at the Met鈥擵ioletta in La Traviata, Mim矛 in Puccini鈥檚 La Boh猫me, and Mica毛la in Bizet鈥檚 Carmen, to name just a few. For her, tackling Aida鈥檚 more dramatic vocal demands represents a natural progression in her development as an artist on and off the stage. 鈥淓verything that has happened in my life has only made my voice grow and change. I don鈥檛 know how to separate life from singing,鈥� she says. 鈥淚鈥檓 still getting to know Aida, but already I see her a lot like I see myself. And I can really understand her relationship with her father. I had a very close relationship with my dad before he passed away, and even now, I still care deeply about what he would think of me.鈥�

Alongside Blue, the cast reads like a who鈥檚 who of today鈥檚 most in-demand Verdi singers. As the warrior Radam猫s, Piotr Becza艂a adds another heroic tenor role to his already formidable Met career, following memorable recent turns as Don Jos茅 in Carmen and in the title role of Wagner鈥檚 Lohengrin. Fresh off her company debut in last season鈥檚 new production of Verdi鈥檚 La Forza del Destino, mezzo-soprano Judit Kutasi is Aida鈥檚 adversary, Amneris, while baritone Quinn Kelsey, after heralded portrayals of the title character of Rigoletto, returns for his third Met outing as Aida鈥檚 father, Amonasro. Subsequent performances in the spring will see soprano Christina Nilsson, mezzo-soprano El墨na Garan膷a, tenor Brian Jagde, and baritones Amartuvshin Enkhbat and Roman Burdenko take over in the principal roles.

Act I, Scene 2 of Verdi's Aida Ken Howard / Met Opera

On the podium to marshal the Egyptian multitudes is Music Director Yannick N茅zet-S茅guin. Having conducted more works by Verdi than by any other composer with the company, Maestro N茅zet-S茅guin has shown a particular penchant for Verdi鈥檚 later masterpieces鈥攊ntroducing the five-act French version of Don Carlos into the Met repertory in 2022 and leading last season鈥檚 revelatory reimagining of La Forza del Destino. The production also marks his second Verdi collaboration with Mayer, whose 2018 staging of La Traviata inaugurated N茅zet-S茅guin鈥檚 tenure as Music Director. 鈥淏eing in the rehearsal room with Yannick is so much fun, and I especially love when he鈥檚 conducting Verdi. It just feels so alive,鈥� the director says. 鈥淥f course, I have my ideas about this opera. I鈥檝e seen it so many times and listened to it over and over again, but I know that once I鈥檓 in the room with him, he鈥檚 going to reveal a multiplicity of dramaturgical layers.鈥�

N茅zet-S茅guin is likewise eager to dive into the score鈥攁nd is especially looking forward to the production鈥檚 New Year鈥檚 Eve premiere, which marks exactly 15 years since his Met debut. But for all the opera鈥檚 grandeur, he is equally attracted to its more delicate moments. 鈥淲ith all these famous tunes, these iconic arias and ensembles, it鈥檚 like a collection of greatest hits. And then you have the Triumphal March, which is this big, massive moment right in the center,鈥� he says. 鈥淏ut the great paradox鈥攁nd the great genius鈥攐f this piece is that aside from that particular scene, it鈥檚 probably the most intimate of all of Verdi鈥檚 operas. Verdi is the master of not using too much to say what he wants to say.鈥� It鈥檚 a balance that Blue also hopes to strike in her interpretation, explaining that 鈥渁ny soprano who wants to sing Aida has to be able to be forte and sing full throttle in the big moments, but she also has to understand the power in the pianissimo.鈥�

To help stage what he, too, sees as simultaneously 鈥済rand opera at its grandest鈥� and 鈥渁 chamber opera at its core,鈥� Mayer has assembled some of his most trusted collaborators. With set designer Christine Jones, he has devised a network of soaring chambers, columns, and statuary to surround the drama. But rather than blocks of weathered sandstone, this ancient Egypt will have lost none of its original vitality, painted in shades of deep lapis lazuli and gold and covered from top to bottom with intricate carvings. And onto this already ornate canvas, Mayer has enlisted Mark Grimmer and the wizards at 59鈥攚ith whom he鈥檇 previously worked on the Met premiere of Nico Muhly鈥檚 Marnie and the Broadway revival of Hedwig and the Angry Inch鈥攖o project dynamic imagery that will add further dimensions to the storytelling. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not going to totally animate the story for us because that鈥檚 what the singers will do,鈥� says Mayer, 鈥渂ut we want it to look as though the hieroglyphs are coming to life. And out of that will come the singers.鈥� Mayer鈥檚 creative team also includes costume designer Susan Hilferty鈥攚ho drew upon both Mariette鈥檚 original designs and historical garments from the period鈥攆our-time Tony Award鈥搘inning lighting designer Kevin Adams, and choreographer Oleg Glushkov.

鈥淭his is going to be grand. Don鈥檛 worry, we鈥檙e committed.鈥� That鈥檚 N茅zet-S茅guin鈥檚 message to audience members wary of the Met replacing its previous production of Aida by Sonja Frisell, a popular favorite since 1988. 鈥淚 loved that old production too,鈥� adds Mayer, 鈥渂ut I feel like we have a special opportunity to offer the same level of grandeur and spectacle, just with some new techniques that weren鈥檛 available 35 years ago. We鈥檙e not trying to reinvent the wheel. We just want to use new tools to celebrate what Aida is鈥攖his extraordinary epic on this giant scale, and also this beautiful, very personal story.鈥�

Photos: Verdi's Aida at The Metropolitan Opera

 
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