Desolate, dark, and brooding, the Scottish moors in this 2011 Met production of Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor by Mary Zimmerman (a revival whose previous outing at the Met had been two years earlier) mirror the personality and fate of the opera's tragic title character. The bleak, grey-and-blue landscape with which the opera opens, with bare trees silhouetted against the backdrop and a detailed rocky terrain, creates plenty of atmosphere, and T.J. Gerckens’s lighting design suitably and subtly adds to the effect. The backdrop for Act II, when preparations are being made for the wedding, sets the scene with the interior of an old house, of faded grandeur, its curtains shredded and furniture covered in dust. It’s certainly ominous.
But for all its subtlety and muted palette, this production is unassumingly sumptuous, most notably in Mara Blumenfeld's costume design: witness the patterned taffeta and exquisite tailoring of Lucia's bustled, full-length skirt and matching jacket, or the silk tie beneath the swathes of Edgardo's heavy woollen cape, not to mention the vast number of equally detailed, mostly silver-grey finery worn by the chorus.
Following on from Anna Netrebko in the 2009 Met production, here we have Natalie Dessay in the title role once again (she sang Lucia at this production's first outing in 2007). For Ms. Dessay, Lucia is something of a signature role, and her excellent acting ability makes her a good fit for it. Lucia's histrionic character, her desperation and her ultimate madness are all brought out here, and with a superb voice, too. Dessay has a gift for capturing the fragility of her character, even in Lucia's more confident moments (as in “Ardon gli incensi”, in which she boldly takes and commands centre stage). By the end, we are so drawn into the character that there is a bizarre and chilling sense of normality about her madness and that incident with Arturo, her bridegroom.