metropolitan-opera

Alex Trebek Makes a Surprisingly Good Drag Queen

Maureen O'Connor · 11/10/11 02:19PM

Last night on Jeopardy!'s Tournament of Champions, a giddy Alex Trebek dressed up in Metropolitan Opera costumes for a trippy category on "Operatic Costumes." Now that we have seen America's most robotic game show host vamping in a Le Comte Ory nun costume, are we ready for the gender-bending Rapture? [Jeopardy, Esquire, @ZWoolfe]

Rough Night at the Met

cityfile · 09/22/09 07:23AM

The Metropolitan Opera's gala opening night performance of Puccini's "Tosca" last night was met with "the loudest and most sustained booing in memory." [NYT, AP]

Met Opera Stunner

cityfile · 02/27/09 08:26PM

It appears the situation at the Metropolitan Opera is far more dire than anyone imagined: New York reports that the Met has been forced to borrow against the value of the gigantic Chagall paintings in its lobby, a move that a board member described as "a decision of last resort." [NYM]

A New Season at the Met

cityfile · 09/23/08 12:22PM

Just in case your invite got lost in the mail, photos from the Metropolitan Opera's opening night gala last night. [Paper]

The Fat Lady Sings For Luciano Pavarotti

abalk · 09/06/07 01:30PM

Luciano Pavarotti, the outsized Italian tenor generally regarded as the finest operatic voice of his generation, has passed away at the age of 71. Best known by the general audience as the fattest guy in the Three Tenors, Pavarotti had a storied career which saw him achieve almost every measure of operatic success. He also starred in one the most unintentionally funny movies we've ever seen, 1982's Yes, Giorgio, and performed with Bono, Sting, and Elton John, which must have sucked. Pavarotti had a special relationship with audiences at the Metropolitan Opera.

Metropolitan Opera Whoring Itself Out Like It's Webster Hall Or Something

abalk2 · 08/29/06 11:50AM


The post-Volpe era at the Metropolitan Opera begins with a populist bang: They're slapping ads on any surface to which they'll stick. The Times reports that with opera's natural audience now noisily unwrapping its sour candies in that great hall in the sky, a new generation of people willing to spend $300 to watch carb-fuelled grotesques belt out "Ernani involami - all'abborrito amplesso" must be found, and soon. Will the strategy work? The Times trots out high-culture expert Leon Wieseltier, who seems skeptical: