Met Live In HD 25/26 -- La Bohème

3hr 29min - 2 Intermissions

Showings

Lark Theater Sat, Nov 8 10:00 AM
Live Screening
Lark Theater Sun, Nov 9 12:00 PM
Encore Showing
Lark Theater Wed, Nov 12 12:00 PM
Encore Showing
Lark Theater Wed, Nov 12 6:30 PM
Encore Showing

Description

La Bohème

Puccini


Conductor: Keri-Lynn WIlson

Mimi: Juliana Grigoryan

Musetta: Heidi Stober

Rodolfo: Freddie De Tommaso

Marcello: Lucas Meachem

Shaunard: Sean Michael Plumb

Colline: Jongmin Park

Benoit/Alcindoro: Donald Maxwell


World premiere: Teatro Regio, Turin, 1896. La Bohème, the passionate, timeless, and indelible story of love among young artists in Paris, can stake its claim as the world’s most popular opera. It has a marvelous ability to make a powerful first impression and to reveal unsuspected treasures after dozens of hearings. At first glance, La Bohème is the definitive depiction of the joys and sorrows of love and loss; on closer inspection, it reveals the deep emotional significance hidden in the trivial things—a bonnet, an old overcoat, a chance meeting with a neighbor—that make up our everyday lives.


Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924) was immensely popular in his own lifetime, and his mature works remain staples in the repertory of most of the world’s opera companies. His librettists for La Bohème, Giuseppe Giacosa (1847–1906) and Luigi Illica (1857–1919), also collaborated with him on his next two operas, Tosca and Madama Butterfly. Giacosa, a dramatist, was responsible for the stories and Illica, a poet, worked primarily on the words themselves.


The libretto sets the action in Paris, circa 1830. This is not a random setting, but rather reflects the issues and concerns of a particular time when, following the upheavals of revolution and war, French artists had lost their traditional support base of aristocracy and church. The story centers on self-conscious youth at odds with mainstream society—a bohemian ambience that is clearly recognizable in any modern urban center. La Bohème captures this ethos in its earliest days.


Lyrical and touchingly beautiful, the score of La Bohème exerts an immediate emotional pull. Many of its most memorable melodies are built incrementally, with small intervals between the notes that carry the listener with them on their lyrical path. This is a distinct contrast to the grand leaps and dives that earlier operas often depended on for emotional effect. La Bohème’s melodic structure perfectly captures the “small people” (as Puccini called them) of the drama and the details of everyday life.