ST. PETERSBURG, Russia â" At the gala concert on Thursday evening that formally opened Mariinsky II, the $700 million companion to the opulent 19th-century Mariinsky Theater here, the theme was the union of old and new. The point was to show off the technical capabilities of the limestone-and-glass house while assuring the well-heeled, well-furred audience, which included President Vladimir V. Putin, that the Mariinskyâs traditions would be upheld.
During the two-and-a-half-hour performance led by Valery Gergiev, the Mariinskyâs tireless artistic director, the present and future were arranged so they faced â" and followed â" the past. The virtuosic stage moved up, down, left and right, but the set was dominated by a replica of part of the old Mariinskyâs glamorous horseshoe auditorium. An enormous video screen offered a shifting display of lush backdrops from the theaterâs glorious history.
There was a smooth passage from Millicent Hodsonâs reconstruction of Nijinskyâs still-startling âRite of Spring,â about to celebrate its centenary, to a coolly ferocious excerpt from âSacre,â Sasha Waltzâs new take on the âRite.â (Why were fresh and recent ballets represented, but not contemporary operas?) Both were danced beautifully by the Mariinskyâs storied ballet company, which may end up dominating the old theater while opera takes primary residence in the new, the same division that exists between the Paris Operaâs halls.
Time also traveled during the vocal performances in the cool, blond-wood theater, more than amply accented with Swarovski crystals. Plácido Domingo, who has lately ventured into the baritone repertory, returned (at 72) to one of his favorite tenor parts, Wagnerâs Siegmund, singing the love ode âWinterstürmeâ with ardency and just a bit of strain.
Soon after, Anna Netrebko showed why she is the biggest of the stars Mr. Gergiev has nurtured at the Mariinsky, giving a thrilling preview of Verdiâs Lady Macbeth, which she will perform complete for the first time next year. She stalked her way through the snarling âVieni, tâaffrettaâ in a blazing, generous performance that bodes well for her gradual move into the great Verdi roles.
The violinist Leonidas Kavakos and the violist Yuri Bashmet each had honey-toned solos accompanying dance selections. Sections from ballets including Petipaâs âBayadèreâ and Balanchineâs âJewelsâ alternated with an array of opera arias, including the coronation scene, featuring the bass-baritone Evgeny Nikitin, from Mussorgskyâs âBoris Godunov,â and a selection from Gounodâs âFaust,â with René Pape a gruffly powerful Méphistophélès.
Ekaterina Semenchukâs lively rendition of the âChanson Bohémienneâ from âCarmenâ was followed by the eminent ballerina Diana Vishnevaâs sparkling performance of Alberto Alonsoâs choreography for Carmenâs âHabanera.â (Ms. Vishneva will perform Béjartâs classic âBoléroâ at a performance in her honor on Saturday.)
The intermission-less evening sometimes lagged. A group of the companyâs young artists gave a meandering performance of an ensemble from Rossiniâs âViaggio a Reims,â and the ballets included Roland Petitâs lame pas de deux âLeda and the Swan.â
But a tag-team take on âLà ci darem la manoâ from âDon Giovanni,â with Ms. Netrebkoâs Zerlina being squired by five different Dons, was charming. And the mezzo-soprano Olga Borodina gave a melting, genuinely seductive performance of âMon coeur sâouvre à ta voixâ from Saint-Saënsâs âSamson et Dalila.â At the end the entire company joined onstage in the soaring finale of Tchaikovskyâs âIolanta,â which Ms. Netrebko is to perform Friday afternoon.
It wasnât Mr. Gergievâs finest evening musically: the orchestra often felt staid and much of the conducting was sluggish, far from the galvanic effect he can have at his best. But the houseâs acoustics are lucid and clean; the orchestra came together in a rich blend but individual voices â" a harp, a piano â" emerged clearly. And celebrating his 60th birthday on Thursday, Mr. Gergiev must have been simply relieved that the seemingly endless headache of building the gleaming new theater was finally over.