Special Events
The Metropolitan Opera announces its exciting 2022–23 season, featuring the world-premiere staging of The Hours, the company premieres of Champion and Medea, and four more brilliant new productions.
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Falstaff
Length: 3hrs with one intermission
Falstaff
Showtimes
Ticket Prices
Saturday Shows |
$30 |
Wednesday Encores |
$24 |
Student (18 and under) |
$12 |
Subscriptions. Click here. |
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Baritone Michael Volle stars as the caddish knight Falstaff, gleefully tormented by a trio of clever women who deliver his comeuppance, in Verdi’s glorious Shakespearean comedy. Maestro Daniele Rustioni takes the podium to oversee a brilliant ensemble cast that features sopranos Hera Hyesang Park Ailyn Pérez, mezzo-soprano Jennifer Johnson Cano, contralto Marie-Nicole Lemieux, tenor Bogdan Volkov, and baritone Christopher Maltman.
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Der Rosenkavalier
Length: 4hrs 42min with two intermissions
Der Rosenkavalier
Showtimes
Ticket Prices
Saturday Shows |
$30 |
Wednesday Encores |
$24 |
Student (18 and under) |
$12 |
Subscriptions. Click here. |
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A dream cast assembles for Strauss’s grand Viennese comedy. Soprano Lise Davidsen is the aristocratic Marschallin, opposite mezzo-soprano Samantha Hankey as her lover, Octavian, and soprano Erin Morley as Sophie, the beautiful younger woman who steals his heart. Bass Günther Groissböck returns as the churlish Baron Ochs, and Markus Brück is Sophie’s wealthy father, Faninal. Maestro Simone Young takes the Met podium to oversee Robert Carsen’s fin-de-siècle staging.
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Champion
Length: 3hrs 20min with one intermission
Champion
Showtimes
Ticket Prices
Saturday Shows |
$30 |
Wednesday Encores |
$24 |
Student (18 and under) |
$12 |
Subscriptions. Click here. |
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COMPANY PREMIERE
Six-time Grammy Award–winning composer Terence Blanchard brings his first opera to the Met after his Fire Shut Up in My Bones triumphantly premiered with the company to universal acclaim in 2021. Bass-baritone Ryan Speedo Green is the young boxer Emile Griffith, who rises from obscurity to become a world champion, and bass-baritone Eric Owens portrays Griffith’s older self, haunted by the ghosts of his past. Soprano Latonia Moore is Emelda Griffith, the boxer’s estranged mother, and mezzo-soprano Stephanie Blythe is the bar owner Kathy Hagan. Yannick Nézet-Séguin takes the podium for Blanchard’s second Met premiere, also reuniting the director-and-choreographer team of James Robinson and Camille A. Brown.
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Don Giovanni
Length: 3hrs 14min with one intermission
Don Giovanni
Showtimes
Ticket Prices
Saturday Shows |
$30 |
Wednesday Encores |
$24 |
Student (18 and under) |
$12 |
Subscriptions. Click here. |
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NEW PRODUCTION
Tony Award–winning director Ivo van Hove makes a major Met debut with a new take on Mozart’s tragicomedy, re-setting the familiar tale of deceit and damnation in an abstract architectural landscape and shining a light into the dark corners of the story and its characters. Maestro Nathalie Stutzmann makes her Met debut conducting a star-studded cast led by baritone Peter Mattei as a magnetic Don Giovanni, alongside the Leporello of bass-baritone Adam Plachetka. Sopranos Federica Lombardi, Ana María Martínez, and Ying Fang make a superlative trio as Giovanni’s conquests—Donna Anna, Donna Elvira, and Zerlina—and tenor Ben Bliss is Don Ottavio.
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Die Zauberflöte
Length: 3hrs 30min with one intermission
Die Zauberflöte
Showtimes
Ticket Prices
Saturday Shows |
$30 |
Wednesday Encores |
$24 |
Student (18 and under) |
$12 |
Subscriptions. Click here. |
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NEW PRODUCTION
One of opera’s most beloved works receives its first new Met staging in 19 years—a daring vision by renowned English director Simon McBurney that The Wall Street Journal declared “the best production I’ve ever witnessed of Mozart’s opera.” Nathalie Stutzmann conducts the Met Orchestra, with the pit raised to make the musicians visible to the audience and allow interaction with the cast. In his Met-debut staging, McBurney lets loose a volley of theatrical flourishes, incorporating projections, sound effects, and acrobatics to match the spectacle and drama of Mozart’s fable. The brilliant cast includes soprano Erin Morley as Pamina, tenor Lawrence Brownlee as Tamino, baritone Thomas Oliemans in his Met debut as Papageno, soprano Kathryn Lewek as the Queen of the Night, and bass Stephen Milling as Sarastro.