Current:Home > ScamsFinancially struggling Met Opera to present 18 productions next season, the fewest since 1980-81 -Secure Growth Academy
Financially struggling Met Opera to present 18 productions next season, the fewest since 1980-81
View
Date:2025-04-18 06:10:41
The financially struggling Metropolitan Opera will present 18 productions in 2024-25, matching the current season and pandemic-curtailed 2019-20 for the fewest since 14 in strike-shortened 1980-81.
Met general manager Peter Gelb kept up his pivot to contemporary works, starting the season with Jeanine Tesori’s “Grounded” on Sept. 23, then presenting Osvaldo Golijov’s “Ainadamar” opening Oct. 15 and John Adams’ “Antony and Cleopatra” beginning May 12, 2025.
“Aida” is the sole totally new production plus five new-to-the-Met stagings. There will be 194 performances under the schedule announced Wednesday, matching the current season and down from 215 in 2022-23.
Gelb has withdrawn $40 million from the company’s endowment, reducing it to about $255 million. The Met had a recent high of 28 productions in 2007-08.
“We need to make the season compelling and interesting and vital and appealing to both the older audiences as well as the increasing number of new audiences who are attending,” Gelb said. ”We also have the financial constraints that the post-pandemic world has left us in.”
Contemporary works had varying box office success in this season’s first half. Anthony Davis’ “X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X” sold 78% of available seats, Daniel Catán’s “Florencia en el Amazonas” 68% and Heggie’s “Dead Man Walking” 62%.
“Not everything we do is going to be a home run at the box office even if they are artistically home runs,” Gelb said.
Overall ticket sales in the first half were 73%, up from 62.7% in the first part of the 2022-23 season. A new staging of Bizet’s “Carmen” sold 84% and Mozart’s “The Magic Flute” topped revivals at 87%, followed by Puccini’s “La Bohème” (74%), Verdi’s “Nabucco” (71%), Wagner’s “Tannhäuser” (64%) and Verdi’s “Un Ballo in Maschera (A Masked Ball)” (56%).
“Grounded,” about a female fighter pilot with a libretto by George Brant, had its world premiere at the Washington National Opera last fall. Emily D’Angelo and Ben Bliss star in Michael Mayer’s staging, and Met music director Yannick Nézet-Séguin conducts.
“Act 1 has been restructured. It’s shorter. And new music has been written by Jeanine,” Gelb said.
Mayer’s version of “Aida” that opens on New Year’s Eve was announced in 2017 as a co-production with Moscow’s Bolshoi Theatre and was to have opened the Met’s 2020-21 season. It was pushed back by the pandemic and the Bolshoi’s participation was dropped after Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. It replaces a lavish Sonja Frisell production that appeared 262 times from 1988 through last year. Angel Blue and Piotr Beczała star.
Mayer frames the story as being discovered by an archaeologist reading hieroglyphics in a tomb.
“The world has changed so much since we started the project. The concept came out of a very different time and place,” Mayer said.
Claus Guth’s staging of Strauss’ “Salome” opening April 29, 2025, originally was a co-production that appeared at the Bolshoi in 2021 before the Met severed ties. Elza van den Heever stars and Nézet-Séguin conducts.
“Ainadamar” is seen in Deborah Colker’s staging that was first at the Scottish Opera in 2022; “Moby-Dick” (March 3) in the Leonard Foglia production from its Dallas Opera premiere in 2010; and “Antony and Cleopatra” with Adams conducting in Elkhanah Pulitzer’s staging from the San Francisco Opera’s world premiere in 2022.
Rising star soprano Lise Davidsen appears in revivals of Puccini’s “Tosca” and Beethoven’s “Fidelio.”
Guth’s production of Handel’s “Semele” was pushed back to a later season. Gelb said previously delayed stagings on track for future seasons include Bellini’s “La Sonnambula” by Rolando Villazón and Weill’s “Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny” by Ivo van Hove.
Next season joins 2013-14 as the only seasons without Wagner since anti-German sentiment in 1918-19 caused by World War I.
High-definition simulcasts to movie theaters were cut to eight, down from nine this season and 10 in 2022-23. The winter break instituted in 2022 was increased to five weeks from four.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Jon Stewart to return as The Daily Show host — one day a week
- Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen talks inflation and Candy Crush
- NFL hires 4 coaches of color in one cycle for first time ever. And 'it's a big deal'
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- US approves F-16 fighter jet sale to Turkey, F-35s to Greece after Turkey OKs Sweden’s entry to NATO
- Proof Harry Styles and Rumored Girlfriend Taylor Russell Are Living While They’re Young
- Tuvalu’s prime minister reportedly loses his seat in crucial elections on the Pacific island nation
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Greyhound stations were once a big part of America. Now, many of them are being shut
Ranking
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso withdraw from West Africa’s regional bloc as tensions deepen
- 20 Secrets About She's All That Revealed
- 20 Secrets About She's All That Revealed
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- A COVID-era program is awash in fraud. Ending it could help Congress expand the child tax credit
- What women's college basketball games are on this weekend? The five best to watch
- A famed NYC museum is closing two Native American halls. Harvard and others have taken similar steps
Recommendation
DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
Australian Open men's singles final: How to watch Daniil Medvedev vs. Jannik Sinner
Rite Aid to close 10 additional stores: See full list of nearly 200 locations shutting their doors
Appeals court reinstates sales ban on Apple Watch models with blood oxygen monitor
Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
New Jersey firefighter dies, at least 3 others injured in a house fire in Plainfield
Crash involving multiple vehicles and injuries snarls traffic on Chesapeake Bay bridge in Maryland
The Shocking True Story Behind American Nightmare: What Really Happened to Denise Huskins