Parties

Christine Baranski! Susan Sarandon! Patricia Clarkson! The Stars Came Out for the Metropolitan Opera’s Season Opener

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Christine Baranski, Ann Ziff, Renée Fleming
Jason Crowley/BFA.com

Tesori, after accepting hearty congratulations from the actress Patricia Clarkson, was reflective on this moment, nearly a decade in the making. “You just don’t know until you know,” she said, koan-like, of how the work would be received by the discerning Met audience (they loved it).

The evening also held a special family significance for the Tony-winning composer of Fun Home and Kimberly Akimbo: her grandfather was also a composer who dreamed of having his work performed at the Met but died before it was realized. “Who would ever have thought that his granddaughter would fulfill his dream.”

As the last bubbles of champagne fizzed, happy partygoers descended the grand staircase out into the night. The actor Michael Cerveris escorted his Gilded Age co-star, Christine Baranski, in a sweeping, white Oscar de la Renta column gown (with opera-length gloves, of course) out to the Revson Fountain, where they happily signed autographs for a fan.

The big questions and heavy themes of the new piece—surveillance, endless wars, veteran mental health—did not dampen the celebratory spirit of the evening, though an air of politics was unavoidable. “With all of the political lies taking place in this election cycle,” Gelb said in his earlier remarks, “keep coming to the oasis of artistic truth known as the Metropolitan Opera.”