
J. Strauss Jr.: Die Fledermaus / Armstrong, Allen [Blu-ray]
J. STRAUSS II Die Fledermaus âą Vladimir Jurowski, cond; Pamela Armstrong ( Rosalinde ); Thomas Allen ( Eisenstein ); HĂ„kan HagegĂ„rd ( Dr. Falke ); PĂ€r Lindskog ( Alfred ); Malena Ernman ( Prince Orlovsky ); Lyubov Petrova ( Adele ); Ragnar Ulfung ( Dr. Blind ); Artur Korn ( Frank ); Udo Samel ( Frosch ); ReneĂ© SchĂŒttengruber ( Ida ); Glyndebourne Ch; London PO âą BBC/OPUS ARTE 7004 (Blu-ray Disc: 198:00) Live: Glyndebourne 8/17/2003
& Cast & costume galleries. The Genesis of the Waltz. The Architect Returns. Interviews. Frosch interlude
This pretty-much-perfect production of Straussâs pretty-much-perfect operetta is an ideal specimen to demonstrate the visual and sonic virtues of the Blu-ray medium. The Glyndebourne staging is a feast to watch: the sets and costumes are lavish, the dancing accomplished. Opus Arteâs 24-bit PCM sound is way better than anything youâve ever heard on a traditional DVD, both the stereo version and the spacious multichannel that puts the listener in the middle of the appreciative audience who experienced the real thing in Sussex back in August of 2003.
Director Stephen Lawless has moved the setting of Die Fledermaus ahead a few decades to around 1910, the Vienna of Sigmund Freud and Gustav Klimt. (Eisensteinâs dressing gown, in fact, is a facsimile of Klimtâs The Kiss .) This Fledermaus is clearly viewed as a play that happens to have awfully good music, and Lawless and Daniel Dooner have created new dialogue for the production. In the hands of an ensemble of terrific singing actors, the texts never impede the headlong momentum of this comic masterpiece.
What a cast! Pamela Armstrong, as Rosalinde, handles the part vocally quite well but is equally concerned with her characterâs development: when she dresses up as someone else, Eisensteinâs wife discovers her âreal selfâ (as the soprano puts it in one of the discâs âextrasâ). Thomas Allen notes that the high tessitura of his role was a bit of a challengeâit sure doesnât sound itâbut his comic timing is impeccable and the man can actually dance. As Dr. Falke, HĂ„kan HagegĂ„rd gives his character an edge: the practical joke that Eisenstein played on him months before the curtain rises for act I has deeply wounded him, and Falke is serious about getting revenge. Singing Alfred in an appropriately seductive manner is Swedish tenor PĂ€r Lindskog who, like Allen, is obviously quite a versatile artist. Youâd never know from this performance that the guy also sings Siegfried and Parsifal.
The kudos go on. Lyubov Petrovaâs rendition of Adeleâs big second-act aria is a showstopper and Malena Ernman is utterly convincing as the terminally bored and sexually ambiguous Orlovsky. Itâs a surprise every time Ernman starts to sing and her voice jumps up an octave or two. The smaller partsâDr. Blind, Frank, Ida, Froschâare all covered quite well.
Vladimir Jurowski takes the music very seriously (as, the notes remind us, did Gustav Mahler) and his leadership of the LPO is spirited and knowingly inflected. To accompany the curtain calls, Jurowski conducts a rousing âRadetzky March.â Opus Arte provides subtitles in English, French, German, Spanish, and Dutch. Thereâs a generous supply of extras, including cast and costume âgalleriesâ and brief featurettes on the history of the waltz and the new (in 1994) opera house at Glyndebourne, as revisited by the architect who designed it. We also get observations on Fledermaus from Armstrong, Allen, HagegĂ„rd, Jurowski, and director Lawless and, to close, some shtick, mostly about champagne, by Udo Samel, the actor who has the speaking role of the jailer Frosch.
Yes, this oneâs on my Want List.
FANFARE: Andrew Quint
Picture Format: 1080i High Definition, NTSC 16:9
Sound Format: 2.0 / 5.0 PCM Audio
Region Code: 0 (All Regions)
Menu Languages: English
Subtitles: English, French, German, Spanish, Dutch
Running Time: 198 min
J. STRAUSS II Die Fledermaus âą Vladimir Jurowski, cond; Pamela Armstrong ( Rosalinde ); Thomas Allen ( Eisenstein ); HĂ„kan HagegĂ„rd ( Dr. Falke ); PĂ€r Lindskog ( Alfred ); Malena Ernman ( Prince Orlovsky ); Lyubov Petrova ( Adele ); Ragnar Ulfung ( Dr. Blind ); Artur Korn ( Frank ); Udo Samel ( Frosch ); ReneĂ© SchĂŒttengruber ( Ida ); Glyndebourne Ch; London PO âą BBC/OPUS ARTE 7004 (Blu-ray Disc: 198:00) Live: Glyndebourne 8/17/2003
& Cast & costume galleries. The Genesis of the Waltz. The Architect Returns. Interviews. Frosch interlude
This pretty-much-perfect production of Straussâs pretty-much-perfect operetta is an ideal specimen to demonstrate the visual and sonic virtues of the Blu-ray medium. The Glyndebourne staging is a feast to watch: the sets and costumes are lavish, the dancing accomplished. Opus Arteâs 24-bit PCM sound is way better than anything youâve ever heard on a traditional DVD, both the stereo version and the spacious multichannel that puts the listener in the middle of the appreciative audience who experienced the real thing in Sussex back in August of 2003.
Director Stephen Lawless has moved the setting of Die Fledermaus ahead a few decades to around 1910, the Vienna of Sigmund Freud and Gustav Klimt. (Eisensteinâs dressing gown, in fact, is a facsimile of Klimtâs The Kiss .) This Fledermaus is clearly viewed as a play that happens to have awfully good music, and Lawless and Daniel Dooner have created new dialogue for the production. In the hands of an ensemble of terrific singing actors, the texts never impede the headlong momentum of this comic masterpiece.
What a cast! Pamela Armstrong, as Rosalinde, handles the part vocally quite well but is equally concerned with her characterâs development: when she dresses up as someone else, Eisensteinâs wife discovers her âreal selfâ (as the soprano puts it in one of the discâs âextrasâ). Thomas Allen notes that the high tessitura of his role was a bit of a challengeâit sure doesnât sound itâbut his comic timing is impeccable and the man can actually dance. As Dr. Falke, HĂ„kan HagegĂ„rd gives his character an edge: the practical joke that Eisenstein played on him months before the curtain rises for act I has deeply wounded him, and Falke is serious about getting revenge. Singing Alfred in an appropriately seductive manner is Swedish tenor PĂ€r Lindskog who, like Allen, is obviously quite a versatile artist. Youâd never know from this performance that the guy also sings Siegfried and Parsifal.
The kudos go on. Lyubov Petrovaâs rendition of Adeleâs big second-act aria is a showstopper and Malena Ernman is utterly convincing as the terminally bored and sexually ambiguous Orlovsky. Itâs a surprise every time Ernman starts to sing and her voice jumps up an octave or two. The smaller partsâDr. Blind, Frank, Ida, Froschâare all covered quite well.
Vladimir Jurowski takes the music very seriously (as, the notes remind us, did Gustav Mahler) and his leadership of the LPO is spirited and knowingly inflected. To accompany the curtain calls, Jurowski conducts a rousing âRadetzky March.â Opus Arte provides subtitles in English, French, German, Spanish, and Dutch. Thereâs a generous supply of extras, including cast and costume âgalleriesâ and brief featurettes on the history of the waltz and the new (in 1994) opera house at Glyndebourne, as revisited by the architect who designed it. We also get observations on Fledermaus from Armstrong, Allen, HagegĂ„rd, Jurowski, and director Lawless and, to close, some shtick, mostly about champagne, by Udo Samel, the actor who has the speaking role of the jailer Frosch.
Yes, this oneâs on my Want List.
FANFARE: Andrew Quint
Picture Format: 1080i High Definition, NTSC 16:9
Sound Format: 2.0 / 5.0 PCM Audio
Region Code: 0 (All Regions)
Menu Languages: English
Subtitles: English, French, German, Spanish, Dutch
Running Time: 198 min
Description
J. STRAUSS II Die Fledermaus âą Vladimir Jurowski, cond; Pamela Armstrong ( Rosalinde ); Thomas Allen ( Eisenstein ); HĂ„kan HagegĂ„rd ( Dr. Falke ); PĂ€r Lindskog ( Alfred ); Malena Ernman ( Prince Orlovsky ); Lyubov Petrova ( Adele ); Ragnar Ulfung ( Dr. Blind ); Artur Korn ( Frank ); Udo Samel ( Frosch ); ReneĂ© SchĂŒttengruber ( Ida ); Glyndebourne Ch; London PO âą BBC/OPUS ARTE 7004 (Blu-ray Disc: 198:00) Live: Glyndebourne 8/17/2003
& Cast & costume galleries. The Genesis of the Waltz. The Architect Returns. Interviews. Frosch interlude
This pretty-much-perfect production of Straussâs pretty-much-perfect operetta is an ideal specimen to demonstrate the visual and sonic virtues of the Blu-ray medium. The Glyndebourne staging is a feast to watch: the sets and costumes are lavish, the dancing accomplished. Opus Arteâs 24-bit PCM sound is way better than anything youâve ever heard on a traditional DVD, both the stereo version and the spacious multichannel that puts the listener in the middle of the appreciative audience who experienced the real thing in Sussex back in August of 2003.
Director Stephen Lawless has moved the setting of Die Fledermaus ahead a few decades to around 1910, the Vienna of Sigmund Freud and Gustav Klimt. (Eisensteinâs dressing gown, in fact, is a facsimile of Klimtâs The Kiss .) This Fledermaus is clearly viewed as a play that happens to have awfully good music, and Lawless and Daniel Dooner have created new dialogue for the production. In the hands of an ensemble of terrific singing actors, the texts never impede the headlong momentum of this comic masterpiece.
What a cast! Pamela Armstrong, as Rosalinde, handles the part vocally quite well but is equally concerned with her characterâs development: when she dresses up as someone else, Eisensteinâs wife discovers her âreal selfâ (as the soprano puts it in one of the discâs âextrasâ). Thomas Allen notes that the high tessitura of his role was a bit of a challengeâit sure doesnât sound itâbut his comic timing is impeccable and the man can actually dance. As Dr. Falke, HĂ„kan HagegĂ„rd gives his character an edge: the practical joke that Eisenstein played on him months before the curtain rises for act I has deeply wounded him, and Falke is serious about getting revenge. Singing Alfred in an appropriately seductive manner is Swedish tenor PĂ€r Lindskog who, like Allen, is obviously quite a versatile artist. Youâd never know from this performance that the guy also sings Siegfried and Parsifal.
The kudos go on. Lyubov Petrovaâs rendition of Adeleâs big second-act aria is a showstopper and Malena Ernman is utterly convincing as the terminally bored and sexually ambiguous Orlovsky. Itâs a surprise every time Ernman starts to sing and her voice jumps up an octave or two. The smaller partsâDr. Blind, Frank, Ida, Froschâare all covered quite well.
Vladimir Jurowski takes the music very seriously (as, the notes remind us, did Gustav Mahler) and his leadership of the LPO is spirited and knowingly inflected. To accompany the curtain calls, Jurowski conducts a rousing âRadetzky March.â Opus Arte provides subtitles in English, French, German, Spanish, and Dutch. Thereâs a generous supply of extras, including cast and costume âgalleriesâ and brief featurettes on the history of the waltz and the new (in 1994) opera house at Glyndebourne, as revisited by the architect who designed it. We also get observations on Fledermaus from Armstrong, Allen, HagegĂ„rd, Jurowski, and director Lawless and, to close, some shtick, mostly about champagne, by Udo Samel, the actor who has the speaking role of the jailer Frosch.
Yes, this oneâs on my Want List.
FANFARE: Andrew Quint
Picture Format: 1080i High Definition, NTSC 16:9
Sound Format: 2.0 / 5.0 PCM Audio
Region Code: 0 (All Regions)
Menu Languages: English
Subtitles: English, French, German, Spanish, Dutch
Running Time: 198 min



















