Jerry Hadley

Most Popular Jerry Hadley Trailers

Total trailers found: 12

Leonard Bernstein - Bernstein - Candide Trailer (1989)

13 December 1989

This is the historic concert performance of the final operatic version of Bernstein's Candide. It was recorded on December 13, 1989 at the Barbican Centre, with Leonard Bernstein conducting the London Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, with a stellar cast of operatic stars gracing the solo parts.

Sondheim: A Celebration at Carnegie Hall Trailer (1992)

10 June 1992

This program features the music of Broadway composer Stephen Sondheim in a 1992 performance at Carnegie Hall.

The Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny Trailer (1998)

01 January 1998

Depicts the consumerism of the mythical city of Mahagonny, conveying all its ripe decadence. A Hollywood Babylon full of pyramidal towers, carved elephants, commodified sex and licensed gluttony.

Candide Trailer (1991)

15 October 1991

Handel: Messiah the 250th Anniversary Performance Trailer (1992)

01 July 1992

Sir Neville Marriner conducts this 250th Anniversary performance. Soloists include Sylvia McNair, Anne Sofie Van Otter.

Mozart - Idomeneo Trailer (2004)

06 September 2004

Recorded live at The Glyndebourne Festival Opera. Idomeneo, King of Crete, has been away from home during the long years of the Trojan War.

Così fan tutte Trailer (1996)

27 February 1996

Live performance from the Metropolitan Opera, 27 February, 1996.

Idomeneo Trailer (1983)

20 August 1983

Live from Glyndebourne 1983

Mozart: Requiem Trailer (2007)

09 January 2007

Stravinsky: The Rake’s Progress Trailer (1992)

01 January 1992

The Rake's Progress is an English-language opera from 1951 in three acts and an epilogue by Igor Stravinsky.

The Rake’s Progress Trailer (1996)

01 January 1996

Don Giovanni Trailer (1990)

05 April 1990

Every woman wants him, every man wants to be him: Mozart’s version of the irresistible rogue who brings excitement with him and leaves destruction it his wake has always attracted top singing actors, as in this performance brilliantly led by James Levine.