Intimate Apparel
Closed 2h 30m
Intimate Apparel
80

Intimate Apparel NYC Reviews and Tickets

80%
(101 Ratings)
Positive
82%
Mixed
16%
Negative
2%
Members say
Great singing, Absorbing, Ambitious, Great writing, Great acting

About the Show

Lincoln Center Theater's first opera is based on Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage’s play of the same name. 

Read more Show less

Show-Score Member Reviews (101)

Sort by:
  • Default
  • Standing in our community
  • Highest first
  • Lowest first
  • Newest first
  • Oldest first
  • Only positive
  • Only negative
  • Only mixed
115 Reviews | 19 Followers
100
Profound, Great singing, Great acting

See it if Great opera, saw the opera yesterday at Lincoln Center and it was excellent. A must see if you are a opera fan. A little pricey.

Don't see it if If you are not an opera fan, skip this production and if ticket costs are involved, the tickets start at $92.00.

193 Reviews | 29 Followers
100
Resonant, Must see, Great singing, Absorbing

See it if You love Black American history, especially the struggles of women. The expectations thrust upon them. Lush score and singing.

Don't see it if If you need dialogue. This is a proper opera.

148 Reviews | 12 Followers
99
Riveting, Refreshing, Great writing, Great singing, Exquisite

See it if You don't like a "Chamber Opera" based on a past show. Great performanes and singing all around. Riviting and beautiul. An amazing show.

Don't see it if If you don't like Opera. Watch it when it airs on PBS.

137 Reviews | 23 Followers
95
Must see, Exquisite, Masterful, Great singing

See it if you like Opera, want to hear/see a great story, want to hear some beautiful music, and want to experience a new theatrical experience.

Don't see it if You don't like opera, don't like new age music, don't like dramas, don't like newer productions. Read more

470 Reviews | 191 Followers
94
Holds your attention & immersive, Well-performed, Predictable in some places, but still stirring, Heartfelt & moving, Stunning

See it if a transporting tale of early-20th-century New York City, an African American seamstress seeking love post-age 35, and opera appeals.

Don't see it if you’re not a fan of opera and/or will be so distracted reading the projected words (on the back of the set) that you won’t enjoy the show. Read more

414 Reviews | 70 Followers
92
Moving, Great writing, Great staging, Great singing, Absorbing

See it if moving story told by way of an opera, with an entire cast of amazing voices; easy to understand the story thru the lyrics and the excellent*

Don't see it if you need dialogue, a fancy set, and a happy story Read more

812 Reviews | 132 Followers
92
A very important new opera, Clever staging, Great libretto, Great singing, Great acting

See it if you love opera and want to see a very fine new one.Great libretto with real characters played by good singers who can also act.

Don't see it if you don't like opera or modern operas or don't like to read titles on walls. No hummable songs but 4 or 5 future concert arias in the opera. Read more

137 Reviews | 34 Followers
91
Deeply moving, Resonant, Profound, Great writing, Great singing

See it if You appreciate an opera about soulmates from divergent cultures who share a deep connection and love of the beauty of fabrics.

Don't see it if You don't like a social message about the restrictions of the worlds of a Black Woman (who is illiterate) and an Orthodox Jewish Man.

Critic Reviews (10)

The New York Times
January 31st, 2022

"CRITIC’S PICK...In that sense “Intimate Apparel” — even more as an opera than as a play — is an act of rescue. When Esther tells Mrs. Van Buren, as they write the first letter to George, “My life ain’t really worthy of words,” she means that she isn’t special enough to be made permanent on paper. That isn’t true; as Nottage and now Gordon have shown, she is worthy of even more. She is worthy of music that is finally worthy of her."
Read more

New York Magazine / Vulture
January 31st, 2022

"Yet despite this busy-bee fussiness, Intimate Apparel lets us come close to its characters, close enough to see the details — the loose button, the hesitant touch — that turn and shape the story...Did Intimate Apparel actually need to become an opera? Most of my pleasures in the show came from elements that are purely Nottage’s: Without Gordon’s music, it was already an exquisitely woven play, dense with threads about self-reliance, true seeing, and the necessity of touch. Some plays blossom when adapted (Sarah Ruhl’s Eurydice, for example) but Intimate Apparel stays almost unaffected by this particular conversion. As a proof of concept for an operatic co-production model, though, it was an inspired choice. Who doesn’t want to see this play again? In any form? And the concept works."
Read more

Variety
January 31st, 2022

"The tight construction of the play, with its spare two-hander scenes and focus on the lives of ordinary and overlooked people, makes it a natural as a stripped-down chamber opera. It also suggests a future life among those musical companies looking for a small-scale, relatable work filled with emotional grandeur for specialized voices. Here in its Lincoln Center premiere, rich vocal talents fill Ricky Ian Gordon’s sung-through music not just with soaring notes but with heartfelt expression."
Read more

Theatermania
January 31st, 2022

"Of course, just because a story feels operatic does not mean it can instantly and effortlessly assume the form of an opera — making Intimate Apparel's transfiguration at Lincoln Center's Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater all the more impressive. Directed by Bartlett Sher as more a chamber piece than anything Wagnerian (the performers are accompanied by only a pair of pianos, conducted by Steven Osgood), Intimate Apparel in its new musical form is allowed to keep its delicacy while also cutting enough seams to let its content soar to the rafters."
Read more

New York Stage Review
January 31st, 2022

"Illuminated by Jennifer Tipton, it’s a set of various beds, a desk, a gambling table, an all-purpose door, and sewing-machine, Director Bartlett Sher, a prized Met-LCT veteran toiling away here, keeps the set spinning carousel-like on the much-worked (overworked?) Mitzi Newhouse turntable. The costumes are thanks to designer Catherine Zuber, who also made Esther’s clothes look so good off-Broadway. So, what about Intimate Apparel play and opera? As an opportunity to show off voices, the opera version could have a future. But a bet on the play remaining in greater production demand would probably not go awry."
Read more

New York Stage Review
January 31st, 2022

"What is most remarkable about the new production, which is presented at Lincoln Center Theater’s Mitzi E. Newhouse Theater, is that it continues to function as a play. There is no flattening of nuance or emotion, as can often happen when properties are given the operatic treatment...What could have been an unwieldy feast of technical wonder has coalesced into a challenge to the world: Opera demands true storytelling, and when wedded with wonderful acting and directorial vision as it is here, the results are equal to and possibly greater than any play."
Read more

TheaterScene.net
February 11th, 2022

The new opera, Intimate Apparel is a very impressive, accessible work. If it has a fault, it is completely humorless but then the original play did not include comic relief either. Unlike Ricky Ian Gordon’s last opera, the recent Garden of the Finzi-Continis, the music here is not only beautiful but suitable and appropriate as the singers and the music are one. Lynn Nottage’s libretto is a masterpiece of economy, though her play was too. Will the opera supersede the play? Probably not, but it should certainly do well in other intimate opera houses where its charms can be fully appreciated.
Read more

Front Row Center
January 31st, 2022

"Intimate Apparel reveals and documents everyday working-class people’s plights, trials, and tribulations. What happens to the heroine Esther in this production is realistic and poignant. My wife, a product of a culturally diverse family, saw firsthand her mother’s life savings taken by her father to buy a beauty parlor for his paramour – leaving her mother and two daughters in severe financial peril. Shame is often why these incidents remain undocumented, and spouses are sometimes removed from photos. The intimacy of the theater with its excellent acoustics, sensitive lighting, multi-media projections, and Dianne McIntyre’s splendid choreography and staging provides a particularly accessible venue for opera."
Read more