The Met Opera’s new production of Bizet’s “Carmen” stars trucks. Or rather tractor trailers, ready to move goods. In the first act, which the libretto sets in a Seville cigarette factory, workers crowd around a loading dock, loading boxes into a trailer whose destination is unknown. In the second act, Carmen and her smuggler gang have absconded with one, whose contents are still mysterious. In the third, we have reached a crisis: the truck is now on its side, the supply chain disrupted. 


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