Strauss’s elegant romance brings the glamour and enchantment of nineteenth-century Vienna to the Met stage in a sumptuous production by legendary director Otto Schenk that “is as beautiful as one could hope” (The New York Times). Soprano Rachel Willis-Sørensen makes her role debut as the title heroine, a young noblewoman in search of love on her own terms. Radiant soprano Louise Alder makes her Met debut as her sister, Zdenka, and bass-baritone Tomasz Konieczny is the dashing count who sweeps Arabella off her feet.
Please note: The Clark is showing a prerecorded broadcast of this production.
The Met: Live in HD is the Metropolitan Opera’s award-winning series of live high-definition cinema simulcasts. Simulcasts feature the full performance along with backstage interviews and commentary.
Tickets $25 ($22 members, $18 college students, $5 children 17 and under).
Image: A scene from Strauss's Arabella. Photo: Marty Sohl / Met Opera
Strauss’s elegant romance brings the glamour and enchantment of nineteenth-century Vienna to the Met stage in a sumptuous production by legendary director Otto Schenk that “is as beautiful as one could hope” (The New York Times). Soprano Rachel Willis-Sørensen makes her role debut as the title heroine, a young noblewoman in search of love on her own terms. Radiant soprano Louise Alder makes her Met debut as her sister, Zdenka, and bass-baritone Tomasz Konieczny is the dashing count who sweeps Arabella off her feet.
Please note: The Clark is showing a prerecorded broadcast of this production.
The Met: Live in HD is the Metropolitan Opera’s award-winning series of live high-definition cinema simulcasts. Simulcasts feature the full performance along with backstage interviews and commentary.
Tickets $25 ($22 members, $18 college students, $5 children 17 and under).
Image: A scene from Strauss's Arabella. Photo: Marty Sohl / Met Opera