Met Opera’s Tristan und Isolde Reimagined: A Bold Birth-Death-Rebirth Vision

Met Opera’s Tristan und Isolde, staged by Yuval Sharon, presents a bold birth-death-rebirth concept that visually stacks an eye-like stage with a dual representation–will world, delivering a mostly immersive though uneven experience. Act I is visually striking but muddled; Act II offers a deeply romantic core that slows pacing; Act III finally pays off with a piercing Liebestod framed by the pregnancy twist. Davidsen’s Isolde and Spyres’s Tristan are standout anchors, lifting the production even as projections and some directorial choices—plus fluctuating conducting—divide opinion. Overall, it’s a memorable, ambitious interpretation that heightens Wagner’s philosophy while inviting debate over its execution.
- Metropolitan Opera 2025-26 Review: Tristan und Isolde OperaWire
- Review: A New ‘Tristan und Isolde’ at the Metropolitan Opera The New York Times
- Double trouble: Singers reach the heights in Met’s “Tristan”; staging, conducting not so much New York Classical Review
- Tristan und Isolde review — the Met has a pair who stand with the greats The Times
- Behind the Curtain: The Met's Magical Premiere Raises $600K Town & Country Magazine
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