Adieu, Virginia Zeani! And thank you!
Zeani as Cleopatra, Teatro alla Scala, 1956.

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Adieu, Virginia Zeani! And thank you!
Zeani as Cleopatra, Teatro alla Scala, 1956.
Félia Litvinne (1860-1936) Operatic Soprano in Art Nouveau Theatrical Costume with Headdress Antique French Photo Postcard
Lina Cavalieri, Postcard, 1900.
Lina Cavalieri was an Italian operatic soprano known for her great beauty, and one of the most frequently photographed personalities of her time.
On December 5th 1906, Lina Cavalieri gave tenor Enrico Caruso a passionate kiss in front of an astounded audience, caught completely by surprise by the opera singer’s intense gesture.
After that, “the most beautiful woman in the world”, as fans called her, also became “the kissing primadonna”: that “coup de théâtre” on the stage of New York’s Metropolitan Opera House made Umberto Giordano’s “Fedora” simply unforgettable, and brought Cavalieri great luck in her career. (x)
Martina Arrroyo (b. 2/2/1936) is a distinguished soprano who is a pioneer in the American opera community as an African-American woman of Puerto Rican descent. Born and raised in Harlem, Arroyo attended Hunter College High School and received a BA in Romance Languages from Hunter College in 1956. As an undergraduate student, she participated in an opera workshop for fun, but was told that she had great potential. Arroyo decided to begin operatic training while simultaneously pursuing jobs as a teacher of English and Italian at Bronx high schools, as well as a social worker at Manhattan's East End Welfare Center.
Only a couple of years after college graduation, Arroyo was busy studying for a master's degree in comparative literature at NYU, as well as taking classes at the Kathryn Long School for singing, English diction, drama, German and fencing. She got the call, however, to make her first major onstage appearance in a concert performance of Ildebrando Pizzetti's Murder in the Cathedral at Carnegie Hall in 1958. Following that, in February 1959 Arroyo took on the title role in Gluck's Iphigénie en Tauride, accompanied by the Little Orchestra Society at Town Hall. On March 14 that year, she made her Metropolitan Opera debut as the Celestial Voice in Verdi's Don Carlo. This era marked the beginning of the Met opening its doors to African-American women singers, including Marian Anderson, Mattiwilda Dobbs, Leontyne Price, Grace Bumbry, Reri Grist and Shirley Verrett.
Martina Arroyo sang under contract at the Met from 1965 to 1978, and her presence has graced the stages at La Scala, Covent Garden, the Vienna State Opera, the Teatro Colón, the Lyric Opera of Chicago and many other esteemed venues. Although Arroyo retired from performance in 1991, she has spent the last three decades teaching at UCLA, Louisiana State University, University of Delaware, Indiana University, Wilberforce University and the International Sommerakademie-Mozarteum in Salzburg. She created the Martina Arroyo Foundation to support the careers of up-and-coming opera singers, and two of her accolades include an Opera Honors Award from the National Endowment for the Arts (2010) and a Kennedy Center Honor (2013).
Celebrate Martina Arroyo with these transcendent moments in opera:
"Qui Radamès verrà!... O patria mia" (Verdi's Aida) for a Metropolitan Opera audition broadcast on the radio (1958)
"Summertime," "My Man's Gone Now," "I Loves You Porgy" and "Oh Lawd, I'm on My Way" (Gershwin's Porgy and Bess) - part 1 and part 2 - performed alongside baritone Ingvar Wixell and tenor Sven-Erik Vikström; accompanied by the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra, Swedish Radio Choir and Boys Choir with conductor Sixten Ehrling for Swedish National Television (c. mid-1960s)
"Libera me" (Verdi's Requiem) - part 1 and part 2 - accompanied by the London Symphony Orchestra with conductor Leonard Bernstein (1970)
"Un bel dì vedremo" (Puccini's Madama Butterfly), live at the Met (1970)
"Teco io sto" (Verdi's Un ballo in maschera), duet with tenor Luciano Pavarotti live at the Met (1971)
Receiving the Kennedy Center Honor (2013)
“Diana Damrau sings Mozart's "Queen of the Night" aria, from her album "Arie Di Bravura" (Mozart, Salieri and Righini Arias)...” From Youtube channel Warner Classics: Diana Damrau sings Mozart's "Queen of the Night" aria Magnificent...
Soprano Pauline Lucca by Henry Rocher of Chicago, Ill.
Ester Mazzoleni (1883 - 1982) dramatic soprano.
She wanted to become a painter. Her voice was discovered during a stay in Italy and educated in Trieste and Pisa. Debut in 1906 at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome as Leonora in “Il Trovatore”, after which there was as Rachel in “La Juive” by Halévy. Rapid career of the great Italian theaters. In 1906 she sang at the Teatro Petruzzelli Bari Amelia in Verdi’s “Masked Ball”. In 1907 she came to La Scala, where she made her debut as Isabella in “Cristoforo Colombo” by Franchetti and until 1917 had huge successes. In 1907 she sang at the Teatro Regio in Parma, the title character in Catalani’s “Lorelei”. 1908 celebrated it at La Scala as Giulia in the classic opera “La Vestale” Spontini, as Selika in Meyerbeer’s “Africaine” and as Lucrezia Borgia by Donizetti, 1909 in the title role of Cherubini’s “Medea”, these operas after long oblivion were discovered practically new. In 1908 she worked there with the premiere of the opera “Paolo e Francesca” by Mancinelli. 1915-1916 she appeared at the Teatro Costanzi in Rome on as Leonora in “La forza del destino” in 1917 as Leonora in “Il Trovatore” and as Lucrezia Borgia. At the Teatro San Carlo in Naples, she joined in 1911 as Isolde in “Tristan und Isolde,” as Selika, as Gioconda and as Aida. At the first festival in the Arena of Verona in 1913, she sang Aida as a partner of Giovanni Zenatello. She was very successful at the Teatro Regio in Turin: Valentine in 1915 as the “Huguenots” by Meyerbeer, 1919 as Lucrezia Borgia, 1920 as La Traviata and the title role of Catalani’s “Dejanice” in 1922 as Aida and 1924 as Norma, on 18/03/1922 she sang on there in the world premiere of the opera “La Figlia del Re” by Adriano Lualdi. In 1923, she appeared again in Verona as Norma. Huge successes they had in Spain and South America, but she appeared in Western Europe. 1910 glamorous appearance at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires in the title role in “La Vestale”, 1915 at the Teatro Dal Verme in Milan, as Amelia in Verdi’s “Ballo in Maschera”. Further guest performances at the Teatro Fenice in Venice (1912 as Elisabetta in “Don Carlos”), the Teatro Comunale of Bologna (1918 Traviata and as Aida) at the Cairo Opera House (1924 Dejanice), Teatro Grande Brescia (1923 Dejanice) , at the Teatro Massimo in Palermo (1925), the Teatro Real Madrid (1918 as Mimi in 1919 as Alice Ford in Verdi’s “Falstaff”), in 1919 in Buenos Aires. Highly valued as a Verdi singer. After the end of her career she lived since 1926 as a teacher in Palermo. There she is shortly after her 100th Birthday 1982 died.
Here a portrait of Florence Austral, from 1929.
One of the world’s great Wagnerian sopranos was born Florence Mary Wilson in the humble Melbourne suburb of Richmond on 16 April 1892. From 1903, when her mother remarried, she took the name Florence Fawaz. After some basic voice training she won several prizes in the 1913 Ballarat South Street competitions and was accepted as a pupil of the respected Elise Wiedermann, first at Fritz Hart’s Albert Street Conservatorium, and later at the University of Melbourne Conservatorium. By 1919 she was ready to undertake further studies in New York, but not before she had been engaged by J.C. Williamson Filmsto sing between silent movie presentations at the Paramount Theatre in Bourke Street. Her associate artist was New Zealand born flautist John Amadio.
New York proved professionally disappointing, so the young soprano tried her luck among the many Australian singers in London. There, in September 1920, she made her professional debut singing at a fashionable restaurant. Adopting the stage name ‘Florence Austral’ in tribute to her homeland, she made her operatic debut as Brünnhilde in Wagner’s Die Walküre with the British National Opera Company at Covent Garden on 16 May 1922. Later in the season she also sang Brünnhilde in Siegfried and Götterdämmerung. She made the first of her many recordings in September, and then toured Britain with the BNOC, singing the Wagner repertoire and the title role in Aida. She sang in concerts and continued her studies at the London School of Opera.
Parts of her performance in Siegfried at Covent Garden on 11 January 1923, conducted by Eugene Goossens, were broadcast ‘live’ by the BBC. On 20 January she shared the stage with Melba in a gala finale to the BNOC’s season and in June she sang Tristan and Isolde for the first time.
In 1925 Austral sang in the United States, but her auditions for the Metropolitan Opera were unsuccessful, probably because of her increasing weight. She returned to London, where she and John Amadio married. During their honeymoon in the USA, Austral made her New York debut at Carnegie Hall on 2 January 1926.
She visited America again in 1927, 1928 and 1929, singing in concert and in Aida, Die Walküre and Götterdämmerung with the Philadelphia Civic Opera Company. She joined tenor Richard Crooks in an all-Wagner concert at the Metropolitan Opera House on 27 January 1929. Back in London she sang another Walküre at Covent Garden. In 1930 she and Amadio made a triumphant ‘homecoming’ concert tour of Australia under the management of E.J. Carroll. That year she also toured South Africa, sang Wagner with the Städtische Opera in Berlin – an engagement that was curtailed because of her imperfect German – and commenced another American tour. In 1932 she sang in the Netherlands and returned to Covent Garden in Tristan and Isolde. In New York in January 1933 she was one of 1,800 performers in a bizarre presentation of Beethoven’s Choral Symphony in the vastness of Madison Square Garden.
In 1934 Austral and Amadio returned to Australia for a concert tour under the direction of a budding local entrepreneur, A.D.M. ‘Archy’ Longden. His advance manager, Madeleine Clarke, was said to be ‘the only female concert manager operating in the Commonwealth’. The beautifully designed and printed souvenir programmes were available with a range of coloured covers to harmonise with lady patrons’ gowns, and were bound with transparent glassine wrappers ‘to prevent any damage to white evening gloves.’
Austral, Amadio and their pianist, Raymond Lambert, attracted publicity wherever they went. Unfortunately their visit to Albury coincided with the grisly discovery of the mutilated corpse of a young woman. This was the start of the notorious ‘Pyjama Girl’ mystery, and flights of fancy tried to link the Austral party to the crime, even suggesting that Longden or Lambert may have been the murderer.
Austral then took her place as the star of Sir Benjamin Fuller’s noblest venture, his Royal Grand Opera Company, which was designed to complement the excitement generated by Melbourne’s centenary. The company debuted at the refurbished Apollo Theatre in Bourke Street on 29 September 1934 with Austral in the title role of Aida – her first appearance in opera in her homeland. Over the next months, in Sydney and Melbourne, she sang in Walküre, Tristan and Isolde and, for the first time, Tosca, The Flying Dutchman and The Pearl Fishers (its Australian premiere). Austral later undertook a series of recitals and opera broadcasts for the ABC. In 1936-37 she made her final United States tour.
Austral returned to Britain, but the musical landscape had altered: broadcasting had eroded concert audiences, and other dramatic sopranos had usurped her place at Covent Garden. Her voice had also lost much of its lustre and her technique had started to deteriorate. In 1938 she sang in Walküre and Cavalleria Rusticana for Sadler’s Wells and Il Trovatore and Der Freischutz for the Dublin Operatic Society at the Gaiety Theatre, Dublin. She sang Lohengrin there in 1939; it was her last appearance in opera. British concert engagements dwindled alarmingly; in 1945 she and Amadio returned to Australia.
When Austral sang at the 1946 Carols by Candlelight concert in Melbourne, her performance revealed the sorry state of her voice. She did not sing in public again. She taught at the University of Melbourne and helped with Gertrude Johnson’s 1948 National Theatre Opera seasons. In 1952 she accepted Eugene Goossens’ offer of a position at the new Newcastle Conservatorium. She resigned in 1959 and taught privately for a while, but by then she was in straightened circumstances and suffering from multiple sclerosis. Friends such as actor Max Oldaker rallied round and EMI reissued some of her greatest recordings. She died in virtual obscurity on 15 May 1968. Her husband, from whom she was estranged, had died in 1964 during rehearsals for a Melbourne concert.
The Newcastle Conservatorium has awarded an annual Florence Austral Memorial Scholarship since 1970.