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Paul Groves was outstanding with a bright, lively tenor as Pylade, the other prisoner brought in with Oreste. Gordon Hawkins displayed a deep baritone as Thoas, though he seemed to tire near the end. Perky mezzo Julie Boulianne made her Met debut as Diane, descending from the rafters in a punky look of shiny black cap, black wrist cuffs and long, black strappy sandals. Patrick Summers, music director of the Houston Grand Opera, led a flowing performance from the Met orchestra, far more used to Verdi and Puccini than Gluck. The Feb. 26 matinee of this year's revival will be telecast in high definition to movie theaters around the world. Last June, three months after surgery, Domingo was quoted in England's The Independent as saying, "I don't want to be 70 and still singing opera. I don't think I will still be singing on 21 January 2011, which is my 70th birthday." Clearly, that didn't happen. He is scheduled for "The Enchanted Island," a staging of Baroque arias from different composers, which opens at the Met this New Year's Eve. At this rate, could a performance be ruled out on Sept. 28, 2018, the 50th anniversary of his Met debut? ___ Online:
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