SACKS?CO. lat fork &tuts March 21, 2012 Arts Jaw, egaua Isa. halm Dan Rom left, the. ingers David Pershali, Corey Rix and Lori Guitheou with OwAnwrioan Symphony Orchestra or CO/7legli Hall. From a Forgotten Composer, A Familiar Romantic Story It Is often clear why works that arts organizations might de- scribe as forgotten gems have gathered dust. But Franz Schmidt's two-act opera "Na re Dame proved a VIVIEN worthy find during a vibrantcancers SCHWEIlltE performance by the Amencan Wade Symphony Or- n vi(w chestra, conduct- ed by Leon Botstein. on Sunday afternoon at Carnegie Halt The music of Schmidt. who was born in H74 in what Is now Brati- slava, Slovakia, was overshad- owed in his bfeume by that of late-Romantic composers, includ- ing Mahler Schmidt W lush khan, Like Zemlinsky's, was deemed dowdy in early-20th-century Vi- enna. and Schmidt's reputation was later tainted by his support for the Nazis. Schmidt's music has recently been championed by conductors including Franz Welser-Atelst and Fables Luigi, but has rarely teen performed outside Austria or Germany. The composer was a fine pianist and cellist vthostesel- led composition with Bruckner In Vienna and was pnnetpal cellist in the Vienna Court Opera under Mahler's baton. His Hungarian heritage can be discerned in his scow for 'None Dame." which had its premiere in Vienna in 1914. Based on the Victor Hugo nov- el, with a libretto by Leopold Wilk, the work certainly has plen- ty of op ewatk ingredients: a beautiful Gypsy. a hunchback, a scorned spouse, love-struck ad- 427 west fourteenth street new york, sty 10014 I I miters, suicide and attempted murder. Grandly symphonic. the lush Romantic %Olt. which at times echoes &aims. Strauss and Wagner, features surmise orches- tral interludes, swirling strings. vivid melodiesand hefty Snick- nenan choruses, sung with pa- nache here by the Collegiate Cho- rale. Valium:leitmotifs appear throughout. Includin