With a remarkable cast featuring Patricia Schuman, Joyce Castle, Mari-Anne Häggander, and Geraldine Decker, Seattle Opera’s only production of this twentieth-century masterpiece was extremely moving. Belgian mezzo-soprano Rita Gorr, then almost 62, was a memorable, searing Madame de Croissy. The staging, by François Rochaix, beautiful sets and costumes by Robert Dahlstrom, and Jean Fournet’s lyrical conducting, contributed to the power of the show, which also featured a remarkable supernumerary debut: Sara Baird Jenkins, mother of General Director Speight Jenkins, joined the nuns in an antique wheelchair—at age 88. (A beloved figure among the company’s singers, who regularly sent her postcards from their overseas engagements, she was to appear again in
War and Peace as a dissipated aristocrat.)

Karol Hansen (Sister Constance) and Mari-Anne Häggander (Madame Lidoine) in Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmelites, 1989. © Ron Scherl

Patricia Schuman (Blanche) in Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmelites, 1989. © Matthew McVay

Mari-Anne Häggander (Madame Lidoine), Karol Hansen (Sister Constance) with the Carmelite nuns in Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmelites, 1989. © Matthew McVay

Joseph McKee (Marquis), Patricia Schuman (Blanche) and Kip Wilborn (Chevalier) in Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmelites, 1989. © Ron Scherl

Kip Wilborn (Chevalier) and Patricia Schuman (Blanche) in Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmelites, 1989. © Ron Scherl

Joyce Castle (Mother Marie) and Rita Gorr (Madame de Croissy) in Poulenc’s Dialogues des Carmelites, 1989. © Ron Scherl