
Weeks before the 1932 opening of the War Memorial Opera House (at left, 13), Gaetano Merola guided journalist Redfern Mason on a hard-hat tour of the new building’s backstage facilities. “When we put on Parsifal, and we shall, you know,” Merola said, “that heavenly chorus in the first act will be sung up here.” Merola’s next few seasons included revivals of the Company’s Wagner repertoire (Lohengrin, Tristan, Meistersinger, Tannhäuser) until the sudden emergence in early 1935 of Norwegian soprano Kirsten Flagstad precipitated a commitment to showcase her in The Ring of the Nibelung. While the Company geared up for 

Wagner’s epic (above, 14), Merola led the “Good Friday spell” from Parsifal on the Standard Hour radio program (at left, 15) on April 18, 1935. 

Following the 1936 Season, Merola traveled abroad to recruit artists for the coming season with the goal of producing Parsifal. With his chorus still not ready and the breakout success of Lauritz Melchior and Kirsten Flagstad in Tristan und Isolde (at right, 16), Merola’s Parsifal dream was shelved once more; he conducted the “Good Friday spell” on the radio in September 1938.
Credits:
San Francisco Opera Archives (13); Lawrence B. Morton Photography (14 - Ring set models, 15, 16)