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Puccini: Madama Butterfly DVD (Glyndebourne)

When an innocent young Geisha [Olga Busoic] meets and American naval officer, she falls instantly and deeply in love. Giving up her family and her faith, she risks all in marriage to the dashing Lieutenant Pinkerton [Joshua Guerrero] - but her fragile happiness cannot last. Soon love turns to abandonment and betrayal, and Butterfly is forced to make one final, agonising sacrifice.
Bursting with exotic colour and memorable melodies, Puccini’s seductive score conceals a dramatic blade that cuts to the heart. Compressing ‘great grief into small souls’, as the composer himself described it, Madama Butterfly is a classic love story that never fails to move, a tragic romance that sweeps you along in the intensity of its action. Blending authentic Japanese music with luscious European harmonies and orchestration, the opera is an irresistible fusion of East and West.
Puccini’s opera makes its Festival debut in Annilese Miskimmon’s thought-provoking production that updates the original turn-of-the-century setting to the 1950s, confronting the darker political and emotional currents of a work that acknowledges that there are some barriers too great for even love to conquer.

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Composer: Giacomo Puccini
Pinkerton: Joshua Guerrero
Goro: Carlo Bosi
Sharpless: Michael Sumuel
Cio-Cio-San: Olga Busuioc
Suzuki: Elizabeth DeShong

The Glyndebourne Chorus
London Philharmonic Orchestra
Conductor: Omer Meir Wellber
Director: Annilese Miskimmon
Designer: Nicky Shaw

Plus: Madama Butterfly: Metamorphosis

Picture: 16:9
Sound: PCM 2.0 & DTS Digital Surround 5.1
Format:NTSC
Region code: 0 (worldwide)
Running time: 140 mins  
Subtitles: EN/FR/DE/JA/KO
Year: 2018

Customer Reviews

Based on 1 review
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J
John Webber
Out of time

Not the best introduction to Butterfly. Updating to 1950s, with intrusive news reels, created an atmosphere at odds with the essential delicacy of the music. We both found Elizabeth Deshong's performance the best and truest to the role.

Customer Reviews

Based on 1 review
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
100%
(1)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
J
John Webber
Out of time

Not the best introduction to Butterfly. Updating to 1950s, with intrusive news reels, created an atmosphere at odds with the essential delicacy of the music. We both found Elizabeth Deshong's performance the best and truest to the role.