Rudolf Bing
Published: 1981
Total Pages: 320
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"'No matter how difficult their jobs are, the president of the United States and the mayor of New York don't have to deal with primma donnas.' So writes Sir Rudolf Bing, the renowned general manager of the Metropolitan Opera for twenty-two years. Every internationally famous diva of our time has crossed his spirited and autocratics path--among them, Birgit Nilsson, Beverly Sills, Joan Sutherland, Leontyne Price, and, most pyrotechnically, Maria Callas. 'What am I to do with the dame?' he cried in the midst of their epistolary duel. 'My fear is that she wants me on my knees begging her to come, make all the arrangements and then cancel. I am not keen. Life is difficult enough.' Their legendary clash produced more Sturm und Drang than the Ring cycle. For the first time, in these pages, Sir Rudolf reveals the entire tempestuous episode. And this is only one story from a witty treasury of anecdotes chronicled in this outspoken sequel to his bestselling memoirs, 5,000 Nights at the Opera. With the devilish wit and unyielding dedication to maintaining the 'grand' in grand opera which has made him great, Sir Rudolf reveals what running the country's greatest opera company entails. He generously shares his personal beliefs and opinions of the stars, designers, directors, managements, boards of directors and his priceless impressions of opera--both yesterday and today. Filled with often amusing, sometimes poignant, always passionate recollections, A Knight at the Opera is a book that no one but Rudolf Bing could have written. As Garson Kanin states in his introduction, 'The present work is a souvenir, a gift to us, on his eightieth birthday. The number has no significance. Mr. Bing, Rudolf Bing, Sir Rudolf, Rudi, is--like his vision, his aspiration, his achievements--ageless.'" --Dust jacket.