The China Mail - 'Dead Man Walking,' an emotional look at death row, opens Met Opera season

USD -
AED 3.672498
AFN 66.379449
ALL 81.856268
AMD 381.470074
ANG 1.790403
AOA 916.999958
ARS 1453.337197
AUD 1.489092
AWG 1.80025
AZN 1.696424
BAM 1.658674
BBD 2.014358
BDT 122.21671
BGN 1.660401
BHD 0.377024
BIF 2957.76141
BMD 1
BND 1.284077
BOB 6.926234
BRL 5.558101
BSD 1.00014
BTN 89.856547
BWP 13.14687
BYN 2.919259
BYR 19600
BZD 2.011466
CAD 1.36734
CDF 2199.999976
CHF 0.789925
CLF 0.023092
CLP 905.898206
CNY 7.028501
CNH 7.00552
COP 3697
CRC 499.518715
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 93.513465
CZK 20.600399
DJF 177.720516
DKK 6.35245
DOP 62.690023
DZD 129.599301
EGP 47.655979
ERN 15
ETB 155.604932
EUR 0.8507
FJD 2.269197
FKP 0.740887
GBP 0.741275
GEL 2.685028
GGP 0.740887
GHS 11.126753
GIP 0.740887
GMD 74.496433
GNF 8741.153473
GTQ 7.662397
GYD 209.237241
HKD 7.774005
HNL 26.362545
HRK 6.408201
HTG 130.951927
HUF 329.245972
IDR 16781.6
ILS 3.19442
IMP 0.740887
INR 89.917031
IQD 1310.19773
IRR 42125.000003
ISK 125.879875
JEP 0.740887
JMD 159.532199
JOD 0.709007
JPY 156.29097
KES 128.899774
KGS 87.425032
KHR 4008.85391
KMF 417.999722
KPW 900.007297
KRW 1433.910202
KWD 0.30716
KYD 0.833489
KZT 514.029352
LAK 21644.588429
LBP 89561.205624
LKR 309.599834
LRD 177.018844
LSL 16.645168
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.412442
MAD 9.124909
MDL 16.777482
MGA 4573.672337
MKD 52.23431
MMK 2099.762774
MNT 3557.834851
MOP 8.011093
MRU 39.604456
MUR 46.079787
MVR 15.449937
MWK 1734.230032
MXN 17.90603
MYR 4.057501
MZN 63.910009
NAD 16.645168
NGN 1450.53037
NIO 36.806642
NOK 10.02469
NPR 143.770645
NZD 1.71826
OMR 0.384322
PAB 1.000136
PEN 3.365433
PGK 4.319268
PHP 58.805978
PKR 280.16122
PLN 3.58521
PYG 6777.849865
QAR 3.645469
RON 4.3272
RSD 99.612199
RUB 79.136463
RWF 1456.65485
SAR 3.750703
SBD 8.153391
SCR 14.451309
SDG 601.502436
SEK 9.17433
SGD 1.28526
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.07502
SLL 20969.503664
SOS 570.585342
SRD 38.335499
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.777943
SVC 8.75133
SYP 11056.849201
SZL 16.631683
THB 31.229956
TJS 9.19119
TMT 3.51
TND 2.909675
TOP 2.40776
TRY 42.93225
TTD 6.803263
TWD 31.398504
TZS 2467.499969
UAH 42.191946
UGX 3610.273633
UYU 39.087976
UZS 12053.751267
VES 288.088835
VND 26290
VUV 120.294541
WST 2.770875
XAF 556.301203
XAG 0.012628
XAU 0.000222
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.802508
XDR 0.692271
XOF 556.303562
XPF 101.141939
YER 238.449931
ZAR 16.67504
ZMK 9001.260893
ZMW 22.577472
ZWL 321.999592
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    23.09

    +0.3%

  • NGG

    0.1500

    77.64

    +0.19%

  • GSK

    0.1200

    49.08

    +0.24%

  • BCC

    0.4200

    75.13

    +0.56%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13.47

    0%

  • BCE

    0.0400

    23.05

    +0.17%

  • RIO

    1.3500

    82.24

    +1.64%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    23.11

    -0.13%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5500

    80.71

    -0.68%

  • BTI

    0.0300

    57.27

    +0.05%

  • AZN

    0.4500

    92.9

    +0.48%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    15.56

    +0.19%

  • VOD

    0.0200

    13.12

    +0.15%

  • RELX

    0.0200

    41.11

    +0.05%

  • BP

    -0.0400

    34.27

    -0.12%

'Dead Man Walking,' an emotional look at death row, opens Met Opera season
'Dead Man Walking,' an emotional look at death row, opens Met Opera season / Photo: © AFP

'Dead Man Walking,' an emotional look at death row, opens Met Opera season

It's been three decades since Sister Helen Prejean entered the public eye for her memoir "Dead Man Walking," a recounting of her relationship with a death row inmate whose execution she witnessed.

Text size:

The 1993 best-selling memoir was made into an Oscar-winning film starring Susan Sarandon and Sean Penn, as well as an opera examining love, pain and redemption that after twenty-some years on the stage is core to the contemporary canon, and this Tuesday gets its Met debut in New York.

The operatic version of "Dead Man Walking" was composed by Jake Heggie, with Terrence McNally penning the libretto. This year's haunting Met production features mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato as Sister Helen.

Bass-baritone Ryan McKinny plays the death-row inmate Joseph De Rocher, while soprano Latonia Moore takes on the role of Sister Rose, and mezzo-soprano Susan Graham -- who sang Helen Prejean in 2000 when it premiered in San Francisco -— plays De Rocher's mother.

The real Sister Helen is now 84 years old, and has spent the latter half of her life as a leading American advocate urging the abolition of capital punishment, which remains legal in many US states.

After witnessing the death by electric chair of Elmo Patrick Sonnier -- who the character of Joseph De Rocher is based on -- she has accompanied a number of prisoners to their executions and hopes her book, the film and the opera can "wake people up" to her belief that the death penalty is morally wrong.

"I'm just so glad the story, and the reality is getting out to people," she told AFP backstage during an intermission of the final dress rehearsal prior to Tuesday's opening.

Executions are "a secret ritual," she said, which few people bear witness to, recalling a Latin American expression she encountered while working in the region: "What the eye doesn't see the heart can't feel."

"So we need art to pull back the curtain and bring people into the reality of it."

- Forgiveness? -

The Met's stark staging of "Dead Man Walking" -- directed by Ivo van Hove -- begins with a short film depicting the murder and rape for which De Rocher was convicted.

In the next moment Sister Helen, who begins a correspondence with the convict as part of her Order's community outreach, is preparing to meet him at Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola.

Throughout the performance the two main characters are frequently onstage together, without the partitions or shackles that typically characterize the production -- letting the austere stage become an emotional prison of its own.

"It's an opera about the death penalty, but in my mind it's really not -- it's about, can you see the humanity in everyone? Particularly someone who's done terrible things?" McKinny, who plays De Rocher, told AFP.

"It's really about seeing everyone involved as human beings and asking, 'Is forgiveness possible?'"

For Sister Helen, it's also about helping people to comprehend suffering -- not only that carried out by individuals, but the kind perpetuated by society.

"There's the... thing of blaming individuals, we never look at the context of the culture in the society," she said, adding that beyond asking who did what, it's important to ask, "What did we do wrong?"

-'American pride' -

The Met's production of "Dead Man Walking" is part of the 143-year-old institution's shift towards more contemporary works, as it aims to diversify its audiences that traditionally skew elderly and white.

In recent years the company has found success at the box office with operas by living composers, including "The Hours" and "Fire Shut Up In My Bones."

Both are returning this season. The prestigious house will also stage "X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X" in November.

For Moore, the star American soprano who plays Sister Rose, the Met's move towards the contemporary is "necessary to show that we support American opera composers, and American artists here."

"For years it's been such an international art form simply because opera is not really in the forefront of the arts here in America," she told AFP in her dressing room.

But in recent years Moore said she's felt that change, giving her a sense of "American pride."

"Of course we want the classics, but if we don't do something to move forward, and we don't incorporate our own culture into this art form, then the art form will die in this country."

Moore added that it's also about broadening the appeal of opera to less-informed audiences.

"For those people that think operas are for fuddy-duddies, and its just the horns and 'Figaro, figaro,'" she said contemporary works like "Fire" or "Dead Man Walking" offer something "they can really touch and relate to."

"It's tangible to them emotionally."

K.Lam--ThChM