Showing posts with label Roberto Alagna Angela Gheorghiu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roberto Alagna Angela Gheorghiu. Show all posts

Sunday, September 27, 2009

Angela. Again.


Hurricane-Angela is talking about everything you wanted to know and well, some of the things we were all trying to forget in an interview to Michael Church for The Independent.

The interview carries the title "My husband is jealous of my new leading man" but if you thought that this is the juiciest part of the interview...

"I just trusted my instinct, as I always have. In 20 years I have never made one mistake in following my instinct." Forty-year-old memories of Maria Callas in the role have been erased: "Now everybody accepts me as Tosca."

"First I cried, then I said, I'll call my lawyer. But then I thought – the press have a lot of imagination. So I say, thank you for the ideas! They call me 'Draculette' because I am from Romania. And they talk of Roberto and me as Bonnie and Clyde – OK! Those names are now the subject of operas. Draculette is already written, by an American composer, so I say to the press, thank you very much. Another composer is now writing Bonnie and Clyde – so, thank you again!" What about that oft-repeated tale of her demanding a make-up artist for a Radio 3 interview? "Lies!"

"In the beginning it was easier to sing with Roberto, when our repertoire was mostly the same, but then I began to sing with others, and in Roberto's mind there is jealousy," she says. "I'm a good colleague, I try to support him. But at the same time I am an opera singer, and I want a good result with everybody – if others want to sing with me, I try to give them the same. I need to feel free, to sing where I want, with who I want. I didn't marry Roberto to sing only with him. I must go ahead with my projects. And he is very upset."

~.~

Let's all thank Angela (Praise the Lord, Allelujah!) coz due to her
"
Forty-year-old memories of Maria Callas in the role have been erased"

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Never before: Angela cancels tonight's Tosca


At the beginning it was Deborah Voigt.

Then Debbie already knew -a month in advance- that her acute colitis wouldn't let her sing and so she stepped out.

Then Angela and Nelly, the two romanian girls stepped in for Debbie.

As a matter of fact, both singers received some great reviews.

And now Angela, in her most usual fashion, cancels once again the tonight performance of Tosca at the ROH -due to illness- and Amanda Echalaz steps in, just a few days before her premiere at Holland Park as Amelia in Un ballo in maschera on July the 21st.


You go gal!

Friday, April 17, 2009

Singing in the shower


Wednesday, March 18, 2009

125+40= A night to remember ***UpdateD***


Here are a few highlights of the lavish Gala
celebrating the 125 years of the Met and
Plácido's 40 years at the house.

Angela Gheorghiu singing Marguerite



Juan Diego Flórez in a splendid rendition of "La Donna é mobile"
(click to listen)

Dimitri Hvorostovsky singing "Ya vas lyublyu"
(Pikovaya Dama)


Plácido Domingo and Angela Gheorghiu in "Figlia, a tal nome io palpito"
from Simon Boccanegra



Natalie Dessay singing "Sempre Libera"


Plácido Domingo IS Otello ("Niun mi tema")



Renée Fleming, ecstatic in Marietta´s lied
("Glück, das mir verblieb")


Curtain calls

Marcelo Giordani & JDF at the post-Gala Dinner


Willem Dafoe, Robertino and Angela's bewbs

The NY Times have posted a couple of videos too!

Watch here La Fleming in Marietta's lied

and Plácido Domingo as Dick Johnson
(first appearance of Placi on stage, listen how the audience goes wild)



Photos (C) Ken Howard for the Met

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Fritz+Suzel=LFE

It's been so long since the last time I wrote anything regarding the operatic Brangelina, our Rubertu and Angela... Where have u guys been???


Last night our wonderful (duh!) operatic duo, gave a concert performance of Mascagni's L'Amico Fritz at the Deutsche Oper of Berlin. Suzel, the girl that won't wait for the guy to take the first step and Fritz, the rich landowner met on stage once more to live their romance, in this beautiful, somewhat dull opera that as we learn by the DO website has been described by George Bernard Shaw as a work that
combines all the properties of a beautiful general holiday.