Home » today » News » “The Hours”, Virginia Woolf’s mise en abyme in New York

“The Hours”, Virginia Woolf’s mise en abyme in New York

Renée Fleming is back: the American soprano star returns to the stage of the Metropolitan Opera in New York on Tuesday evening, for an unprecedented adaptation of The hoursmise en abyme of the life of the writer Virginia Woolf.

Novel by Michael Cunningham released in 1999 and crowned with a Pulitzer Prize, then film (2002) nominated nine times for an Oscar, Hours (The hours in the original version) tells the story of three women of different generations, but all linked by the same work by the British author: Mrs Dalloway.

In film, Nicole Kidman won the Academy Award for Best Actress in 2003 for her portrayal of the writer, afflicted with depression and mental frailty when she worked on this novel in the early 1920s. Her fate paralleled that of a mother a Californian in the 1950s trying to escape a conventional life (Julianne Moore), and a New York literary editor (Meryl Streep), confronted with the illness of his AIDS-stricken partner.

Three prestigious actresses are succeeded by a trio of celebrated singers: mezzo-soprano Joyce DiDonato – winner of three Grammy Awards in her career – to play Virginia Woolf, Broadway and opera star Kelli O’Hara, and Renée Fleming as the New York Publisher.

With this creation, Renée Fleming, great American opera star, returns to the prestigious stage of the Met Opera, where five years ago she said goodbye to one of her greatest roles, in Rosenkavalier by Richard Strauss. In his eyes, opera is the “perfect” genre to adapt The hours “for the complexity of having to deal with three different periods”.

In an interview he compares music to “a kind of river on which we can all float, together or separately”. It was she who came up with the idea for this adaptation and whispered it in the ear of composer Kevin Puts.

“What you can do in music that you really can’t do in a film or a book is that you can, at some point, present all three stories…simultaneously,” the composer abounds.

Prior to this project, Renée Fleming was already working with the composer, for whom she played the great 20th century painter Georgia O’Keeffe.

With a common thread, it tells the stories of powerful women.


“Too often in opera, historically, women have been sort of pawns,” she explains. “They were victims, they were at the center of power struggles when they didn’t have any (…) now I want to tell stories of extraordinary women”.

In addition to the power of voices, The hoursincorporates modern dance in a way not often found in traditional works, with dozens of performers physically manifesting the characters’ emotions.

For Renée Fleming, productions such as The hoursit can play a vital role in rejuvenating opera and attracting new audiences. A long-term goal that the Metropolitan is committed to achieving.

The institution opened its 2021 season showing, for the first time in 138 years, the first work composed by a black musician,Fire closed in my bonesby Terence Blanchard, a modern and flamboyant work, with jazz and blues accents.

“All of our art forms must truly represent our people,” Renée Fleming insists.The hoursis presented at the Metropolitan Opera in Manhattan from November 22 to December 15.

AFP extension


Sign up to our newsletter

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.