Did anyone listen to L'Elisir d'Amore from the Met this evening? Anna Netrebko used to be notorious for cancelling, & anyone booking for a performance where she was scheduled to appear would worry if she would turn up. After hearing her this evening I think they'd be hoping that she wouldn't.
A fright at the opera?
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Originally posted by DracoM View Post... his singing of the big tune was poor and it got a standing ovation!! That Met audience, I just do not understand it.
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amateur51
Originally posted by verismissimo View PostI think that New Yorkers (and Americans more generally) think it's rude not to give standing ovations on all possible occasions. Indeed it seems to have become the norm at musicals even in more reserved Britain.
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Well it's not so much they themselves, but rather the conventions of US society, that they happen to be very given to overstatement. And anybody living there or partaking in business with them, would have to adopt the same expressive style. It also happens to be the ascendent style (for the past 100 years since they became the world's most powerful nation.
However, that's a huge disgression right there, the problem really is, what expression can show more approval than a standing ovation? I suppose the length of it might decide the difference. As in, 3minutes=disapproval 6min: respectable approval 10mins: genuine approval.
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Originally posted by DracoM View PostAnd the tenor - can't recall his name - but his singing of the big tune was poor and it got a standing ovation!! That Met audience, I just do not understand it.
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