July 5, 2006

  • Entertainment
    from today's
    New York Times


    From the obituary of Lorraine Hunt Lieberson, who died at 52 on Monday, July 3, 2006, at her home in Santa Fe:

    "If she rarely spoke of her private life, few artists have brought
    such emotional vulnerability to their work, whether it was her sultry
    portrayal of Myrtle Wilson, the mistress of wealthy Tom Buchanan in
    John Harbison's 'Great Gatsby,' the role of her 1999 Metropolitan Opera
    debut, or her shattering performances several years ago in two Bach cantatas for solo voice and orchestra, staged by the director Peter
    Sellars, seen in Lincoln Center's New Visions series, with the Orchestra of Emmanuel Music, Craig Smith conducting.

    In
    Cantata No. 82, 'Ich Habe Genug' ('I Have Enough'), Ms. Hunt Lieberson,
    wearing a flimsy hospital gown and thick woolen socks, her face
    contorted with pain and yearning, portrayed a terminally ill patient
    who, no longer able to endure treatments, wants to let go and be
    comforted by Jesus. During one consoling aria, 'Schlummert ein, ihr
    matten Augen' ('Slumber now, weary eyes'), she yanked tubes from her
    arms and sang the spiraling melody with an uncanny blend of ennobling
    grace and unbearable sadness."


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