Alessandra Marc made her Metropolitan Opera debut on October 14th, 1989. My friend Paul and I were there. Soon after, another friend sent me a recording of parts of the performance.
AIDA ~ duet - Alessandra Marc & Stefania Toczyska ~ Met 10-14-89
Alessandra Marc - Met debut as Aida - excerpts - w Martinucci & Toczyska - 10~14~89
Here's my diary entry, written late on the evening of the date; despite the excitement of the Marc debut, Stefania Toczyska's Amneris was the afternoon's masterpiece:
"Overall, a good performance and better-than-good much of the time. Audience most distracting (candy wrappers at their worst!). The settings are grand and it's a Met-sized production, but very little happens dramatically - it falls to the individual singers to create theatrical sparks.
Christian Badea favored slow tempi in general - but his support of the singers, in allowing them time to breathe and to sustain the vocal line, was admirable. The orchestra played very well, though there were times when their volume threatened to swamp even this big-voiced cast. The ballet was rather silly, though well-danced.
While the Marc debut was the afternoon's focal point, it was the superb Amneris of Stefania Toczyska who topped the cast. She sang with tremendous authority and passion, and she alone of the principals had a grasp of the drama. Her upper range has grown more secure over time, whilst maintaining a strong chest voice; her lovely entries in the opening passages of the Boudoir Scene were especially fine. And Toczyska is ever alert to the situation in every scene, creating a wonderfully feminine portrait of the ultimately distraught princess.
The Judgement Scene was her crowning glory, a tremendously thrilling twenty minutes. After her beautifully sustained "Io stessa lo gettai..." the audience broke in with sustained applause. She concluded the scene with a fiery verbal assault in the priests, followed by a sustained final note before rushing off in a fury. Toczyska is a very attractive singer and her Amneris was deeply satisfying to experience. To top it off, she graciously pushed the debuting Aida, Alessandra Marc, forward during the group bow and started applauding her!
Marc made a highly successful Met debut. Her voice has a curiously stimulating throb; at times it lacks resonance in the lower range, but the top has a lovely, almost girlish quality (such as we sometimes hear on recordings of sopranos from the early days of audio documentation): Marc's voice blooms as it ascends.
Although lacking the ultimate cresting power in ensembles that some sopranos can muster, the soprano's singing abounded in gorgeousness: starting with "Ritorna vincitor", she won the audience with her opulent tone and marvelous turnings of phrase. The unaccompanied descending phrase in the Triumphal Scene was especially superb, and in the Nile Scene she proved herself with a splendid "O patria mia", rising to a sustained, glowing high-C, and phrasing magically.
Marc did not make the most of the dramatic phrases of the duet with Amonasro, as some Aidas do, but in the seductive passages of the duet with Radames ("La tra foreste virgini...") she sounded truly alluring. Likewise, the opera's final duet showed the Marc voice at its distinctive best. Applause for the soprano was enthusiastic throughout the evening, and at the end the audience showered her with enthusiastic bravas.
Nicola Martinucci was a far more than capable Radames: his bronze-tinged voice has a nice metallic edge when needed, with strong tops - one or two of which were almost imperceptibly a hair's breadth flat. Martinucci's "Celeste Aida" went very well, with a sustained conclusion that won a vociferous response from the crowd. His voice cut thru the ensembles of the Triumphal Scene, and he found his lyric side in the Nile Scene before ending with a prolonged, ringing "Io resto a te!" Together with Toczyska, Martinucci made vocal sparks fly in the Judgement Scene, and he finished the opera strongly. Throughout, his slender, masculine figure looked great onstage, and his authentic Italian sound was more than welcome.
Juan Pons really sang Amonasro - no barking or hectoring. His warm sound and exemplary phrasing gave his singing a wonderfully noble sense of humanity...really impressive.
Margaret Jane Wray sang beautifully as the Priestess, and Mark Baker strongly as the Messenger. Franco de Grandis sounded rough and effortful as the King, but even so he outshone the sadly out-of-voice Ramfis of Stephen Dupont.
Despite the audience distractions, Paul and I were glad to have been there, and we enjoyed talking over the performance on the drive home."
~ Oberon