Tag: San Francisco Opera

  • TURANDOT @ San Francisco Opera ~ 1968

    Shuard turandot 2

    Above: Amy Shuard as Turandot

    A performance of Puccini’s TURANDOT from San Francisco Opera given in 1968. Audio only.

    Listen here.

    CAST:

    Turandot: Amy Shuard; Calaf: Ludovic Spiess; Liu: Jane Marsh; Timur: Ara Berberian; Ping: Ingvar Wixell; Pang: Raymond Manton; Pong: Alan Crofoot; Mandarin: Clifford Grant

    Conductor: Giuseppe Patanè

  • Lucine Amara Has Passed Away

    Lucine

    Above: Lucine Amara as Aida; she signed the photo for me after a Met performance of PAGLIACCI

    The death of soprano Lucine Amara at the age of 99 has been announced. A native of Hartford, Connecticut, Ms. Amara was raised in San Francisco and sang with the San Francisco Opera chorus from 1944-1946; she made her professional concert debut in 1946.

    She made her Metropolitan Opera debut on November 6, 1950, as the Celestial Voice in Verdi’s DON CARLO, a performance that marked the start of Sir Rudolf Bing’s tenure as General Manager of The Met. From that date thru 1991, Ms. Amara sang 750 performances with The Met in New York City and on tour.

    The soprano’s vast repertoire included Wellgunde in the RING Cycle, Pamina, Liu, Nedda, Antonia in TALES OF HOFFMAN, both the Verdi Leonoras, Aida, Micaela, Contessa Almaviva, Eva in MEISTERSINGER, Alice Ford, Maddalena (and later, Madelon) in ANDREA CHENIER, Cio-Cio-San, Elsa in LOHENGRIN, Mimi, Donna Elvira, Amelia in BALLO IN MASCHERA, Tchaikovsky’s Tatyana, Ellen Orford, Tosca, Marguerite in FAUST, Fiordiligi, Luisa Miller, Mother Marie in DIALOGUES OF THE CARMELITES, Gertrude in HANSEL AND GRETEL, and Mascagni’s Santuzza.

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    My first experience of hearing Lucine Amara live was at the Old Met as Liu in TURANDOT in 1965. She sang gorgeously, with a lovely sense of lyricism and some finely-spun pianissimi. I met her after the performance (my only backstage visit at the Old House), and she was very happy to meet a young – but already very keen – opera enthusiast. (I was 16 at the time…)

    In the ensuing seasons at the New Met, I enjoyed Lucine’s Aida, Nedda, TROVATORE Leonora, and Cio-Cio-San. On April 22nd, 1972, she returned to her Met debut role as the Celestial Voice in DON CARLO to mark the final matinee broadcast of the Bing Era, which I attended. That evening, she sang the LOMBARDI trio at the Bing farewell gala. Her final Met appearance was as Madelon in 1991.

    The soprano left us some very fine recordings: the Verdi REQUIEM conducted by Eugene Ormandy, Musetta in the classic Beecham BOHEME, Nedda in PAGLIIACCI with Franco Corelli, and Elsa in LOHENGRIN under the baton of Erich Leinsdorf.  

    Here some samplings of Lucine Amara’s singing:

    As the TROVATORE Leonora:

    Lucine Amara – TROVATORE aria – Met 6~3~71

    Tatyana’s Letter Scene (in English) from EUGENE ONEGIN:

    Lucine Amara – Tatyana’s Letter Scene ~ ONEGIN – in English – Met 1957

    Duet from LA GIOCONDA from The Met’s 100th anniversary gala in 1983, with Bianca Berini:

    Lucine Amara & Bianca Berini – GIOCONDA ~ duet – Met Gala 1983

    And from her commercial recording of the Verdi REQUIEM:

    Lucine Amara – Requiem aeternam ~ Verdi REQUIEM

    Watch a video of the final scene of PAGLIACCI with Lucine and Richard Tucker from the Bell Telephone Hour, with Donald Voorhees conducting, here.

    One afternoon, while working in the opera room at Tower Records, I was playing the Leinsdorf LOHENGRIN on the overhead speakers. Four rather boisterous opera fans from Munich, who were in town for some Met performances, came in and were browsing the shelves while chatting away. As Lucine’s voice commenced Elsa’s ‘dream’ aria, the four fell silent. They stood listening as if under a spell. Then one of them came over to me and asked: “Who is this soprano?” They’d never heard of Lucine Amara. I told them of her Met career and her extensive repertoire. “This is a perfect Elsa voice! If we had had this singer in Europe, she would have been highly esteemed. It’s a heavenly sound.” 

    In the months that followed, I kept hoping Lucine might come in the store so I could tell her this story. But I never got the chance. 

  • Golden Gate Gala ~ 1997

    Fvs

    Frederica von Stade (above) and a host of other stars gathered to celebrate the 75th anniversary of San Francisco Opera with a televised gala in 1997.

    Watch and listen to highlights from the concert here.

  • Soňa Červená

    Cervena

    Soňa Červená (above) sings the aria “Connais-tu le pays ?” from Ambrose Thomas’ MIGNON, recorded under the baton of Heinz Fricke. Listen here.

    Ms. Červená, a Czech mezzo-soprano who recently passed away at the age of 97, was a mainstay at the Frankfurt Opera, and was on the roster of singers at the National Theatre in Prague. She also appeared with the San Francisco Opera.

    After reading of her passing, I listened to more of her recordings and was quite taken with her rather unusual rendering of Mahler’s Kindertotenlieder. Listen here.

    Sona cervena

    Following her retirement from singing, Ms. Cervena continued her stage career, appearing as Emilia Marty (above) in a Robert Wilson production of Karel Čapek’s drama The Makropulos Case at the National Theatre in Prague. She debuted in this staging in November 2010, and returned to the role many times, performing well into her 80s.

  • TURANDOT @ San Francisco Opera ~ 1982

    Kelm (2)

    Scenes from a 1982 San Francisco Opera performance of TURANDOT with Linda Kelm (above), Nicola Martinucci, Barbara Daniels, and Kevin Langan, conducted by Myung-Whun Chung.

    Listen here.

    CAST:

    A mandarin: Gregory Stapp;  Liù: Barbara Daniels; Calaf: Nicola Martinucci; Timur: Kevin Langan; Ping: Thomas Woodman; Pang: David Gordon; Pong: Jonathan Green; Emperor Altoum: Eddie Albert;  Turandot: Linda Kelm

  • Evelyn Mandac

    Mandac

    Evelyn Mandac (above), a soprano from The Philippines, sang several performances as Lauretta in Gianni Schicchi plus a single Gretel at The Met in 1976.

    She appeared with San Francisco Opera as Susanna in Le nozze di Figaro, Despina in Cosi fan Tutte (with Frederica von Stade and Evelyn Lear), and as Ines in L’Africaine (with Shirley Verrett and Plácido Domingo). The Meyerbeer is preserved on the Gala label.

    Ms. Mandac sang in the American premieres of works by Henze, Berio, and Pasatieri, and she made a commercial recording of Orff’s Carmina Burana with The Boston Symphony, conducted by Seiji Ozawa.

    Evelyn Mandac – O mio babbino caro – GIANNI SCHICCHI – Met 1976