No Horses on Mars 2024 - Movies (Dec 19th)
Bird 2024 - Movies (Dec 19th)
Wolf Hollow 2023 - Movies (Dec 19th)
Life After Fighting 2024 - Movies (Dec 19th)
Black Girls Play The Story of Hand Games 2023 - Movies (Dec 19th)
Nine Divine 2023 - Movies (Dec 19th)
Purgatory Station 2024 - Movies (Dec 19th)
Heightened 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Sebastian 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Hounds of War 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Knox Goes Away 2023 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
A Quiet Place Day One 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Cabrini 2024 - Movies (Oct 2nd)
Rose Matafeo On and On and On 2024 - Movies (Dec 19th)
Audrey 2024 - Movies (Dec 19th)
The Order 2024 - Movies (Dec 18th)
Dressing Up Halloween The Story of Ben Cooper Inc. 2024 - Movies (Dec 18th)
Journey to the End of the Night 2023 - Movies (Dec 18th)
Julias Stepping Stones 2024 - Movies (Dec 18th)
We Live in Time 2024 - Movies (Dec 18th)
This Is Me…Now 2024 - Movies (Dec 18th)
Deal or No Deal France - (Dec 19th)
Dan Da Dan - (Dec 19th)
Andrea Mitchell Reports - (Dec 19th)
Chateau DIY - (Dec 19th)
Live from the Other Side with Tyler Henry - (Dec 19th)
Beast Games - (Dec 19th)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Dec 19th)
Grand Designs Australia - (Dec 19th)
The Good Ship Murder - (Dec 19th)
Zombies- The Re-Animated Series - (Dec 19th)
All the Queens Men - (Dec 19th)
The Chase Australia - (Dec 19th)
Return to Las Sabinas - (Dec 19th)
The Head - (Dec 19th)
Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen - (Dec 19th)
Bangers and Cash- Restoring Classics - (Dec 19th)
Here Come the Irish - (Dec 19th)
Gangland Chronicles - (Oct 1st)
Ruby Wax- Cast Away - (Oct 1st)
Deadliest Catch - (Oct 2nd)
During a time of robber barons, child labor, and rising industry, two orphan girls get a little help from their unexpected guardian angels who turn the tide of events and change their lives forever.
The season kicks off with Boitos resplendent retelling of Goethes Faust, a monumental work of 'choral grandeur and melodic richness' (The New York Times) in one of the most impressive productions ever seen at the War Memorial Opera House. The cast includes Ramón Vargas, a tenor 'in ravishing voice' (Financial Times), as the philosopher who sells his soul to the Devil; the 'luminous, compelling' Patricia Racette (Washington Post) as the woman he desires; and, in the vividly menacing title role, the 'seductively malevolent' bass-baritone Ildar Abdrazakov, a 'fullbodied bass-baritone' renowned for his 'wonderfully evil portrayals' (The New York Times).
This beautiful production by renowned opera director Michael Hampe was recorded at the exquisite Rococo Theatre in Schwetzingen Palace in May 1990. La scala di seta is one of the five one-act operas - farsa giocosa - in which the young Rossini first demonstrated his operatic genius. This sparkling production continues the Rossini one-act opera series emerging from the Schwetzingen Festival. The staging is perfectly suited to the screen and the cast of principals, led by David Griffith and Luciana Serra provide musical excellence together with the flexible Stuttgart Radio Symphony Orchestra.
Falstaff Gabriel Bacquier · Karan Armstrong Richard Stilwell · Max-René Cosotti · John Lanigan Wiener Philharmoniker Georg Solti Directed by Götz Friedrich
The documentary draws a portrait of an opera director who is staging Richard Wagner’s Die Walküre. He is torn between the tragicomic routine of an opera house and his own perception of Wagner and the Ring cycle. The film witnesses the director’s drama in maintaining the fragile link between a well-constructed performance and his own vision that lies within the music and the narrative, and is seen as German expressionism-like nightmares.
Ghiaurov, Freni, and Bumbry were great voices in their time, and they are still effective here - good enough musicians to put over the quite heavy vocal and expressive demands of their roles. Louis Quilico was never quite in that league, and he sounds a bit spread and woofy in places here, but he works hard and effectively to bring Rodrigo to life. Placido Domingo recorded his first Don Carlo, for EMI with Giulini, about 15 years before this production, but he looks and sounds fine here - in the early 1980's he was doing very good Otellos and Lohengrins too, and Furlanetto, still in his 30's, brings a rich, young voice to an old part and succeeds in making the Grand Inquisitor vocally as well as expressively formidable. Levine brings both weight and energy to the score, and that reading fits well with the overall "traditional" design and production - the Met's wardrobe budget must have been severely taxed, but everybody looks splendid.
It truly is an historic performance. Domingo looking and singing like a god pouring out golden tones; Renato Bruson sounds, like the sublime Verdian Baritone that he was at that time; Nicolai Ghiaurov proves again that he was one of the greatest "Verdi Basses"; Mirella Freni shows that there was more to her than just being Mimi and Susannah-in fact I can remember reading that at the time of the premiere of this production that there were fist fights (not unusual in La Scala's gallery) between Mirella's many fans-between those fans that just wanting her to continue singing the light lyric repertoire that they were use to her singing and those that felt she should and could sing the lyric-spinto repertoire which, of course, she proved that,indeed, she could (She's still singing more than twenty years later). This performance captures some of the best Verdi singers of the time doing dear ole wonderful Giuseppi proud.
A group of merchants and vikings navigate dramatic events both within and without in this epic musical based on the Icelandic Vinland sagas. As secrets are exposed, two women (Freydís and Gudrid) have a reckoning.