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  Roberto Devereux, the last and probably the greatest opera  Gaetano Donizetti composed for the San Carlo Opera House in Naples, is based on  the intense, tangled relationship between Queen Elizabeth I and the Earl of  Essex, who was beheaded for treason in 1601. The role of the queen is one of the  strongest in the bel canto soprano repertoire. In this video (essentially a New  York City Opera production transplanted to the Filene Center at Wolf Trap  performing arts center outside Washington, D.C.), Beverly Sills gives one of the  great performances of her career. She had been singing the role in New York for  several years, to great critical acclaim, and had made it her own, though her  voice was beginning to lose some of its freshness when this performance was  filmed in 1974. In discussing the soprano stars of bel canto opera, we find a  180-degree polarity--at one extreme, the dramatic potency and vocal problems of  Maria Callas; at the other, the vocal agility and smoothness of the dramatically  unconvincing Joan Sutherland. Midway between these extremes is Sills, who acted  almost as well as Callas, sang almost as beautifully as Sutherland, and balanced  the two sides of her art more effectively than either.  John Alexander is solid in the title role. Susanne Marsee is relatively   problem-free once she gets warmed up, and the supporting cast performs capably.  Julius Rudel conducts with a good sense of style and proper balance between  voices and orchestra. --Joe McLellan
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