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The Metropolitan Opera commissioned and premiered an ambitious new
opera, An American Tragedy, by composer Tobias
Picker with a libretto by Gene Scheer. The two act opera is based on Theodore Dreisers best-selling novel
that deals with the sordid side of the American dream. How does a young man overcome his
poverty and achieve financial success and social standing? Drawn from a true story, the
protagonist fares badly he causes the death of his pregnant girlfriend when she
gets in the way of his success. Because the 1925 novel runs to nearly a thousand pages,
the opera libretto is considerably pared down, as one would expect. Despite the able
direction of Francesca Zambello who has selected the best possible cast, the music and the
text fail to produce characters that are sympathetic or a message that informs
todays situation in the world.
The story of the opera establishes the anti-hero Clyde Griffiths as a
young boy (played by the boy soprano Graham Phillips) growing up in a family of street
missionaries. Act I quickly moves to Clyde as a young man (baritone Nathan Gunn) working
first in a seedy hotel and then progressing to management in his uncle Samuels
(tenor Kim Begley) factory. There he is told by Samuels high-roller son, Gilbert (tenor William Burden), to keep his hands off the
ladies. By the end of act I, Roberta (soprano Patricia Racette), one of the factory
workers, is pregnant and demands that Clyde marry her while Clyde has already moved on to
his cousin Bellas friend Sondra Finchely (mezzo-soprano Susan Graham) who is a
sophisticated society debutante.
Neither the selected story details nor the music of Picker and
Scheers collaboration create a sympathetic emotional base for
In his first job as a bellhop,
Act I offers a number of memorable arias and duets including
Sondras declaration that
Adrianne
Lobel's design presents a two-tiered stage as one might see a dolls house. Thus
while
Act I ends with Roberta saying she is past her time and
that
Visually the most striking scene of the opera occurs in Act II Scene 3
with
Because letters to him are found in her pockets, he is arrested, tried
and sentenced to die in the electric chair. His mother tries to save him, but he
eventually confesses to her that he did nothing to rescue Roberta. The last scene brings
back a reprise of the song Tis so sweet to trust in Jesus and sees him walking
hand in hand with his boyhood self as he approaches the electric chair. Except for an
overly long full-cast church scene used to allow Roberta to confront
Although issues of materialism, morality, and faith are timeless, what
Picker and Scheers audience will glean from their interpretation of this early 20th
Century novel is questionable. Are women and the church the source of all problems that
men experience? Does confessing and trusting in Jesus exonerate a man from his moral
failings? Has
New York, December 5, 2005 - Karren L. Alenier