Product Description Angela Gheorghiu and Ramon Vargas star in this Metropolitan Opera production of the Puccini opera conducted by Nicola Luisotti. .com Franco Zeffirellis production of La Bohème is a perennial favorite at New Yorks Metropolitan Opera and it retains its power in this 2008 performance. Its large-scale settings and especially an Act II set that looks as if half the 1890s Paris Latin Quarter has been beamed direct to the MET. Its been criticized as an over-the-top spectacle, but as well as bringing breath-taking realism to the stage, its bursting with energy and directorial flair. The individuals making up the large crowds milling in front of the Café Momus each have some little stage business to do, giving the audience the feeling of participating in the onstage street festival. Zeffirellis detailed directing even extends to the snow-filled Act III, where shadowy figures walk across the background hill in the distance while the principals are up front. While Zeffirellis conception tends to scant the operas intimate scenes in the theatre, on DVD those scenes make heightened impact. TV director Gary Halvorsons establishing shots show a cutaway of the bohemians little garret precariously poised atop a sharply raked house, but he soon cuts to closeups of the playing space and the singers, creating a sense of warm interplay of personalities unavailable to the theatre audience. The MET provides a luxurious cast to complement the sumptuous setting. Tenor Ramón Vargas is an excellent Rodolfo, singing with passion, imaginative phrasing, and coloring his beautiful lyric voice to fit the text. Mimi is Angela Gheorghiu, always a stellar singing actress. Here she sings with a sensitivity to match her Rodolfo, exquisitely coloring her voice, as in her Mi chiamano Mimi, where she thins her voice at the start and then opens it out to bloom when she sings of the approach of spring. As an actress, shes best after the first Act, when she abandons the coy, girlish tics that seem out of place. In the last Act, shes profoundly moving in the death scene, as is Vargas, who is touching in his portrayal of Rodolfos desperation and sense of loss. Baritone Ludovic Téziers Marcello is well sung, as is soprano Ainhoa Artetas Musetta, the latter delivering a sparkling Quando men vo in the Café Momus scene. Rodolfos pals, Oren Gradus as Colline and Quinn Kelsey as Schaunard, are excellent, and veteran bass Paul Plishka contributes some nice comic turns as Benoit and Alcindoro. --Dan DavisLa Bohème is an all-regions disc in 16:9 ratio. Sound options include PCM Stereo and DTS 5.1 Surround. Sung in Italian, subtitles include English, French, German, Italian and Spanish. Extras include backstage interviews by Renée Fleming and a short tribute, "Zeffirelli at the Met."
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