Above: Helena Dix, costumed as Norma, in her Met dressing room; I borrowed this image from the soprano's Facebook page
Author: Oberon
Saturday March 25th, 2023 matinee - The three great peaks of the bel canto repertoire are - for me - Donizetti's LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR, Rossini's SEMIRAMIDE, and Bellini's NORMA. This afternoon I was at The Met to see the season's final performance of the Bellini. The casting of Sonya Yoncheva in the title-role turned out to be pretty controversial, and the soprano took to social media to complain that people were comparing her Norma to recordings and remembered performances from decades ago.
I guess she is unaware that this has always been a favorite pastime of serious opera-lovers...something that I learned early on in my opera-going career. Examples: during the enormous ovation after the Mad Scene of Beverly Sllls' first New York Lucia, Maria Grimaldi waltzed up behind me and growled in my ear: "Not as good as Lily Pons!". And while I was yelling "brava" at the Met for Birgit Nilsson's 1971 Isolde triumph, the fellow next to me, who was applauding feebly, said: "I guess you are too young to have heard Flagstad!"
Anyway, the problem became moot when Ms. Yoncheva (who was wonderful as Giordano's Fedora earlier this season) took ill and withdrew from the final three NORMAs, one by one. Angela Meade was called in for the first Yoncheva cancellation, and the cover - Helena Dix - stepped in for the second. Everyone was waiting to see if Yoncheva would come back with a vengeance for today's final NORMA, which was being broadcast.
In truth, I was hoping for a cast change, and that Ms. Dix would be singing today. I'd started following the plucky Aussie soprano on Facebook a few weeks ago when I began to see her postings about what it's like to cover a major role at The Met. She had covered Norma here in 2017, and had also covered Alice Ford in FALSTAFF in 2019, going on at one performance for her Met debut.
This year, as it happened, she ended up singing quite a few of the NORMA rehearsals. But Ms. Yoncheva sang the prima, and the next two performances. When she became ill, Peter Gelb applied his frequent tactic: he located a "star" to step in rather than relying on the cover. Thus, Ms. Meade returned to a production in which she has previously appeared.
This morning, as I was getting ready to leave for the noontime matinee, an e-mail from a soprano/friend of mine popped up: "Helena Dix is singing Norma today!" This elevated my mood considerably.
The house was nearly full as Maurizio Benini took his place on the podium. Benini has frustrated me in the past with his eccentric tempi in operas like LUCIA DI LAMMERMOOR, MARIA STUARDA, and MANON. As the afternoon progressed, he upheld his reputation as a routinier.
Christian van Horn as Oroveso was simply superb in the opera's opening scene, and he remained so throughout the afternoon: a potent vocal force and an imposing stage figure. His "Ah, del Tebro" later in the evening was gorgeously sung, and his shock at Norma's revelation of her motherhood was a lightning bolt. Together with Ms. Dix and Mr. Spyres, Mr. van Horn made the opera's poignantly dramatic finale, "Deh! Non volerli vittime..." heart-rendingly moving.
Meanwhile, back in Act I, as the Druids withdraw from the forest clearing, the Romans appear: Michael Spyres as Pollione and Yongzhao Yu as Flavio. The latter showed a fine voice and was an alert actor, whilst Mr. Spyres - a marvelous Met Idomeneo earlier this season - was sounding more baritonal today. The Spyres voice has great immediacy and, despite a hoarse high-C in "Meco all' altar di Venere" his singing and dramatic engagement (all afternoon, really) was a potent experience. The tenor was having a rousing go at the cabaletta "Me protegge, me difende", reaching the final phrase with a penultimate A-flat which he then elevated to the more customary B-flat, at which moment Benini decided to amp up the orchestra, ruining the effect.
When Ekaterina Gubanova was announced as Adalgisa, I admit I had misgivings; her Act II Brangaene at Geffen Hall at 2019 showed some unease in the music's upper reaches, and Adalgisa is quite demanding in that regard. But Ms. Gubanova seemed today to have solved (for the most part) that problem. She was wonderfully expressive in her opening monologue, and she matched Mr. Spyres in passion and tonal appeal in their long duet where Adalgisa finally succumbs to Pollione's pleadings.
The opera's sixth character, Norma's confidante Clothilde, was the excellent Brittany Olivia Logan, who we need to hear in larger roles.
Ms. Dix appeared onstage as the chorus hailed the coming of their high priestess. The soprano carefully mounted the pointless platform from which she must sing opera's most demanding entrance aria, the immortal "Casta diva". The Dix voice is not large, but it's well-projected. Her opening address was authoritatively declaimed, ending with a shimmering softness at "Il sacro vischio io mieto..."
Benini set a slow pace for the "Casta diva..." which Ms. Dix sang as a spellbound invocation. As her soft tones flowed thru the vocal line, a hush fell over the house; in the second verse, a tiny embellishment on the phrase "Che regnar tu fai nel ciel" sent a frisson thru me...a delightful feeling that would be experienced several times as the opera progressed. For this is Ms. Dix's signature vocal attribute: these delicate pianissimi that are woven into phrases at just the right moment, putting an individual stamp on the music. I came to anticipate them, and she never let me down.
But we were jarred out of reverie when Benini set up a tempo for the cabaletta, "Ah! bello a me ritorna" that only a Sills or a Bartoli could have coped with. Ms. Dix went at it gamely, but to little avail.
Things settled in after that, and the soprano's confidence increased - though through no help from the conductor. Mlles. Dix and Gubanova formed a sisterly duetting society, and Mr. Spyres' bristling anger at finding that his secret love had unwittingly betrayed him stirred up a fiery finish to the first act, polished off with a Dix top-D.
Ms. Dix's contemplating the murder of her children was effectively done, and then Ms. Gubanova appeared and the two women got to the heart of the matter with a finely-matched "Mira O Norma" filled with lovely, expressive singing from both. Benini then luckily set a perfect tempo for "Sì, fino all'ore estreme" wherein the singers indulged in a bit of rubato, harmonized the scale passages to fine effect, and Adalgisa took her leave in a fit of optimism, unaware that they will never see each other again.
The final scene of NORMA is a masterpiece all on its own: Norma's hopes are dashed, but when she has Pollione in her power, she cannot kill him. Ms. Dix and Mr. Spyres excelled in a super-charged "In mia man alfin tu sei" but despite his defiance, she still cannot bring herself to slit his throat. About to reveal Adalgisa's crime of breaking her sacred vows, Norma is overcome with guilt and names herself instead. Ms. Dix spins out more delicate suspended tones at "Io son la rea!", and, later, at "O padre!" as she prepares to beg her father to spare her children. The tragedy moves towards its end with the devastating "Deh! Non volerli vittime" and a last haunting piano plea from Ms. Dix: "Ah! Padre, abbi di lor pietà!". Norma and Pollione go to their deaths, scorned and spat upon by the Druids.
I went to the stage door to greet Mr. van Horn, and to meet Ms. Dix, who is a delightful person. A sizeable crowd had gathered; people, intrigued by her "cover" story, wanted to meet her. She gave me a special autograph before joining the young boys who had portrayed her sons, Axel and Magnus Newville, to pose for photos.
You can get an idea of what makes Helena Dix an intriguing singer in this brief clip from the Verdi REQUIEM.
~ Oberon