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An Extraordinary Night at the Met Opera with Viking Cruises

The Metropolitan Opera at Lincoln Center. Photo: Monte Mathews.
The Metropolitan Opera at Lincoln Center. Photo: Monte Mathews.

There are evenings at the Metropolitan Opera when everything aligns: the setting, the performance, and the company. And the result feels carefully composed. This was one of those nights.

La Traviata announces itself curbside. Photo: Monte Mathews.
A curbside billboard in Lincoln Center build our anticipation of Verdi’s La Traviata. Photo: Monte Mathews.

The evening began at The Grand Tier Restaurant, where dinner unfolded with its usual polish, before continuing downstairs with a small but telling detail on the menu: Viking, acknowledged among those supporting this revival of Verdi’s La Traviata.

The Grand Tier Restaurant—where dinner is as composed as the performance to follow. 
Photo: Monte Mathews.
The Grand Tier Restaurant, where dinner is as composed as the performance to follow.
Photo: Monte Mathews.

It was a subtle cue, but an important one, underscoring that Viking’s presence at the Met is not decorative but deliberate.

Proof, in black and white, Viking’s support of the evening’s La Traviata. Photo: Monte Mathews.
Proof, in black and white, Viking’s support of the evening’s La Traviata. Photo: Monte Mathews.

The production itself is visually stunning. The set is extraordinary; lush, cinematic, and meticulously composed, shifting seamlessly between intimacy and sweeping tableaux. The costumes are equally accomplished, richly detailed and as satisfying to take in as the meal that preceded them. Together, they create a staging that understands its audience expects beauty as much as drama and delivers both with confidence.

View from the Parterre of the Metropolitan Opera House. Photo: Monte Mathews.
View from the Parterre of the Metropolitan Opera House. Photo: Monte Mathews.

At the center of the performance, Lisette Oropesa brought precision and authority to Violetta, supported by Piotr Buszewski as Alfredo and Luca Salsi as Germont. The cast anchored the evening, while the visual world around them elevated it.

The full company takes the stage. Photo: Monte Mathews.
The full company takes the stage. Photo: Monte Mathews.

Extending the Experience Beyond the Ship

Viking’s role here is specific: supporting the revival of the production. In practical terms, that support helps sustain a staging that remains artistically vital, contributing to rehearsal, preservation, and the continued life of the work within the Met’s repertory. It is a refined form of patronage, and one that aligns closely with Viking’s broader identity.

On board, Viking has long differentiated itself through a focus on enrichment and cultural programming, notably excluding the more conventional distractions found elsewhere at sea. Its partnership with the Metropolitan Opera, established in 2016, extends that philosophy by bringing the Met’s Live in HD performances to its ships, allowing guests to experience world-class opera in an intimate onboard setting. Supporting a revival at the Met moves that relationship beyond presentation and into participation, reflecting an investment not only in offering cultural experiences to guests, but in sustaining the institutions that produce them.

There is also a natural alignment between the two organizations. Ann Ziff, Chairman of the Metropolitan Opera, also serves as godmother of Viking Ocean’s Saturn, a connection that reflects a shared commitment to cultural engagement at the highest level.

Experiencing La Traviata from the Parterre reinforces the impact of that commitment. The combination of exceptional staging, strong performances, and a privileged vantage point creates an evening that resonates well beyond the final curtain.

The first bow—where performance gives way to appreciation. Photo: Monte Mathews.
The final bow, where performance gives way to appreciation. Photo: Monte Mathews.

For Viking, that resonance is the point. The company’s approach to travel is built on the idea that experiences should be considered, immersive, and enduring. A night at the Met offers a clear expression of that philosophy—one that translates seamlessly from land to sea.

Viking doesn’t just take you to extraordinary places. It ensures what you experience there is worth the journey.

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