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Met Opera
Florencia en el Amazonas

By Daniel Catán

Libretto by Marcela Fuentes-Berain

 

Thursday, March 28, 2024

Estimated Run Time - 2 Hours and 15 Min.

Sung - Spanish

Met Titles - English

Live in HD Screening starts: 7:00pm

“MAGIC MADE REAL … A true grand opera ... One of the [Met’s] most VISUALLY STUNNING AND EMOTIONALLY AFFECTING outings of recent seasons … A perfect choice to bring Spanish-language opera into the mainstream … A FEAST FOR THE EYES.” —Observer 

Sung in Spanish and inspired by the magical realism of Gabriel García Márquez, Mexican composer Daniel Catán’s 1996 opera tells the enchanting story of an opera diva who returns to her native South America to perform at the legendary opera house of Manaus—and to search for her lost lover, who has vanished into the jungle.

 

The Met premiere stars soprano Ailyn Pérez as Florencia Grimaldi, with Yannick Nézet-Séguin on the podium to lead a spellbinding new production by Mary Zimmerman that brings the mysterious and magical realm of the Amazon to the Met stage.

 

A distinguished ensemble of artists portray the diva’s fellow travelers on the river boat to Manaus, including soprano Gabriella Reyes as the journalist Rosalba, bass-baritone Greer Grimsley as the ship’s captain, baritone Mattia Olivieri as his enigmatic first mate, tenor Mario Chang as the captain’s nephew Arcadio, and mezzo-soprano Nancy Fabiola Herrera and baritone Michael Chioldi as the feuding couple Paula and Alvaro.

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Ticket Pricing

Adults - $20    Teachers - $10    Students & Children - Free of charge

6:00pm - Courtyard open with small meals by Amalia Café & Live Music

7:00pm - Start of the concert

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Florencia en el Amazonas

World Premiere

Houston Grand Opera, 1996
Fluidity—of time, place, emotion, and even of identity—is at the core of Florencia en el Amazonas. It is ostensibly the tale of passengers traveling down the Amazon River aboard the steamship El Dorado; the real drama, though, lies in the psychological journeys that each character undertakes. The libretto, by Marcela Fuentes-Berain, is an original story rich in allusion to other tales that skirt the border between drama and fantasy. Fuentes-Berain was a student of Gabriel García Márquez, whose style of magical informs the plot. 

Creators

Hailing from Mexico City, Daniel Catán (1949–2011) was a celebrated composer of orchestral, instrumental, vocal, and film music. Among his other operas are La Hija de Rappaccini (1991) and Il Postino (2010). The libretto is by Marcela Fuentes-Berain (b. 1955), a noted Mexican screenwriter and educator. 

Setting

The opera is set in the first years of the 20th century aboard a riverboat sailing through the Amazon River Basin. The name “el Amazonas” refers to the southernmost department, or state, in Colombia, as well as to the neighboring state across the border in Brazil (“o Amazonas” in Portuguese), of which Manaus is the capital. 

Music

Catán’s score is clearly and unabashedly romantic, reveling in luxuriant beauty and lush evocations of the natural world. The orchestra provides the basis for the flexibility between stylistic boundaries: sharp-edged conversation morphs seamlessly into expansive dream-like music that paints a portrait of the river; the turbulent storm in Act I emerges from casual chatter and subsides back into it. The opera’s climax belongs to its leading lady, who is transformed into a butterfly as her spirit transcends the human realm—recalling Wagner’s Isolde and her soaring Liebestod. 

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