Showing posts with label Aprile Millo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aprile Millo. Show all posts

Saturday, September 3, 2011

Aprile Millo Plans For October Master Class in Canada

La Millo (Photo: Johannes Ifkovits)
"A master class by the iconic Verdi spinto soprano of the world’s greatest opera houses. Aprile Millo holds the distinction of being considered today's true Verdi soprano. Critics worldwide have confirmed this unique position comparing her to such legendary artists as Renata Tebaldi, Claudia Muzio, Zinka Milanov, and Maria Callas for her seamless legato, Italianate color and beauty of voice wed to dramatic commitment." [Source

Details are after the jump.


University of Toronto
Tuesday, October 11, 2011
12:10 – 2:00 pm.
Walter Hall
Free admission

Friday, August 19, 2011

Zachary Woolfe Explores "Charisma" in Opera Singers




Mirror, mirror on the wall, who is the most
charismatic of them all?
Maria Callas photographed by Angus McBean.
"Charismatic performers are those whom you simply can’t look away from. Their charisma is an almost physical presence, a spark that powers even the most unassuming musical passage. To experience a charismatic performance is to feel elevated, simultaneously dazed and focused, galvanized and enlarged. It is to surrender to something raw and elemental, to feel happy but also unsatisfied. Charisma calls forth a melancholy, a vaguely unrequited feeling. I’ve caught myself, after certain performances of an aria or a movement, leaning forward, as if drawn against my will. Charisma requires that you acknowledge a new, larger set of possibilities. It is demanding. We are told of Callas’s overwhelming use of her body and voice onstage. As Schonberg added, of that 1965 Tosca, 'the stage presence shown by Callas in her performance would have raised the hackles on a deaf man.' The question is whether people want to be swept up. Charisma can be exhilarating but also frightening. Our surrender to it demands a trust that is not easily conceded. If our desire from performance is only for comfort and reassurance, charisma will repel us. It is about revealing scope, and it raises the stakes dangerously high....Recently I was in the Met Opera Shop, and a video clip came on the screen above the CD racks. The longtime Met soprano Aprile Millo was singing 'La mamma morta,' the ecstatic aria from Giordano’s Andrea Chenier, with burning intensity. The sales clerk and I both watched raptly. Later I e-mailed Ms. Millo to ask her what charisma is. 'Hemingway gave us a haunting clue to it,' she replied. 'In his obsession with the Spanish bullfights, he spoke of the lust of the crowd and its desire to feel something special, a raw authenticity, even in so brutal a setting. What he mentions is the hush that would come over the crowd at the entrance of the toreadors. The people could sense the difference between those who did it for the fame, the paycheck, and those who had the old spirit: the nobility, bravery, heart, ‘duende.’ I believe this also happens in the theater. The crowd can sense the one with the authentic message, the connection to the truth.'" [Source]

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Happy Birthday: Aprile Millo


"Mi parea... Piangera cantando... Ave Maria" Otello

"Ah Perfido!" Op. 65
"Aprile Millo (born April 14, 1958) is an American operatic soprano of Italian and Irish ancestry who is particularly admired for her interpretations of the works of Giuseppe Verdi. Possessing a spinto voice of power, warmth and temperament, Millo became one of the most celebrated opera singers of the late twentieth century. Although she has performed at many of the world's leading opera houses and with many orchestras and ensembles internationally, Millo has spent much of her career appearing in productions at the Metropolitan Opera. Aprile Millo was born in New York City, the daughter of two opera singers, tenor Giovanni Millo (John Hamill) and soprano Margherita Girosi. Millo became interested in music at an early age and received her musical education primarily
from her parents. After graduating from Hollywood High School in 1976 she was

"Einsam in truben tagen" Lohengrin
invited to join the San Diego Opera Center as an apprentice, were she took part in the inaugural program and where as a member she sang the High Priestess in Aida. In several European trips she was to win several important singing competitions including first prize in the Concorso Internazionale di Voci Verdiane in Bussetto, Italy (1978), the Montserrat Caballé Bernabe Merti Special Verdi Prize Award in Barcelona (1979), and the Geraldine Farrar Award (1980). After leaving the San Diego Opera, Millo sang her first major role, the title role of Verdi's Aida, with Utah Opera in the Fall of 1980. She returned to Utah Opera in early 1981 to perform the role of Santuzza in Mascagni's Cavalleria Rusticana. Millo moved to New York City and auditioned for the New York City Opera where her Father had sung from 1942–1946 and was offered a contract with several roles. The Metropolitan Opera also offered the young singer at 22 years old, to become a member

"Tu che le vanita" Don Carlo
of the Met's Young Artist Program, as well as to cover leading roles. Up until this point, Millo had studied voice exclusively with her parents. While in the Met's program she worked with Dick Marzollo and then only with David Stivender and Rita Patanè. She also had the opportunity to work with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf who took her to Herbert von Karajan, and with mentors Renata Tebaldi, Zinka Milanov and Licia Albanese. In November 1982, Millo made her European debut as Aida in Karlsruhe, Germany and in December at La Scala as Elvira in Ernani when she replaced soprano Mirella Freni who had taken ill. In January 1983 she had performances of Ernani at La Scala of her own. She made her New York debut the with Eve Queler and the Opera Orchestra of New York in November 1984, singing Matilde in Rossini's Guillaume Tell. On December 3, 1984, Millo made her Metropolitan Opera debut in dramatic fashion replacing an ailing soprano as Amelia in Verdi's Simon Boccanegra with James Levine on the podium. The critics praised Millo's performance with the New York Times proclaiming that her voice had 'a breadth and a shining ring that would have won her a midscene ovation in any Italian opera house.' Shortly thereafter Millo won two major award for classical singers: the coveted Richard Tucker Award (1985) and the Maria Callas Foundation Award (1986). In 1986 Aprile Millo made her Carnegie Hall

"O patria mia" Aida
debut with Verdi's I Lombardi alla prima crociata with tenor Carlo Bergonzi and Eve Queler and the Opera Orchestra of New York. In the intervening years, she has sung over 160 performances of 15 different roles at the Metropolitan Opera, including Leonora in Il trovatore, Aida, Tosca, Amelia in Simon Boccanegra, and Amelia in Un ballo in maschera. Millo's debut recording in 1986 was Presenting Aprile Millo, with the London Symphony and Giuseppe Patanè. She has recorded several Verdi operas with James Levine and the Metropolitan Opera for Sony Classical, including Aida, Il Trovatore, Luisa Miller, and Don Carlo. In 1989, she opened the Metropolitan Opera season starring as Aida opposite Plácido Domingo. The performance was recorded live for telecast and DVD release, which won an Emmy. (A CD studio recording was made, with mostly the same singers, the year after.) Her 1991 performance of Un ballo in maschera, with Luciano Pavarotti, was released on CD and DVD. Millo toured with the Metropolitan Opera to Japan in 1988 and 1993, returning in 1989, 1990 and 1991 for solo recitals. Millo debuted with the Lyric Opera of Chicago in 1991 as Margherita in Boito's Mefistofele. The following year she debuted with the Bavarian State Opera as Leonora in La forza del destino and with the San Francisco Opera as Maddalena de Coigny in Andrea Chénier. She appeared as Griselda for the Metropolitan Opera's first-ever performance of Verdi's I Lombardi, again with Pavarotti

"Se vano è il pregare" I Lombardi
and Levine, in late 1993. A car accident in Torino briefly sidelined Millo and forced her to cancel Caterina Cornaro in New York; she returned to the stage of the Metropolitan Opera in 1995 and 1996, playing Amelia (Simon Boccanegra) and Desdemona (Otello), opposite Plácido Domingo. That same year, she performed Maddalena in Andrea Chénier, with Luciano Pavarotti in his debut in the title role. She reprised the role of Maddalena in 2002, with Domingo; and in 2007, with Ben Heppner. In 1997, Millo sang her first Tosca at the Liceu, Barcelona, followed by performances of that opera at La Scala and at the Met. Other Metropolitan Opera performances include Mefistofele (1999–2000) and Gioconda in La Gioconda (2006). Millo has also performed several roles with the Opera Orchestra of New York: the title role of Adriana Lecouvreur (2004), Gioconda (2005), and Minnie in La Fanciulla del West (2005). In 2005, Millo also appeared for Teatro Grattacielo in the neglected verismo opera Zazá, which had not been performed in New York since 1927. Millo has performed in the world's opera houses, including Frankfurt, Barcelona, Parma, Rome, Bologna, Torino, the Arena of Verona, The Baths of Caracalla, Cincinnati Opera, Munich, Berlin, Vienna, Zurich, Paris, Orange, Moscow, Seville, Bilbao, Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Santiago, Colon - Buenos Aires and La Scala, Milan among others. Millo writes her own blog, called

"Morrò, ma prima in grazia" Un Ballo in Maschera
Operavision. Millo is noted for the beauty of her voice and her nuanced interpretation. On April 4, 1986, Donal Henahan wrote in the New York times of Millo's performance in Don Carlo: 'Miss Millo sounds more and more like the Verdi soprano we’ve been waiting for.' Later in 1986 (June 18), reviewing a Metropolitan Opera production of Aida in Central Park, Mr. Rockwell wrote, 'Miss Millo has a real Verdi sound...her darkly yet delicately colored lower voice, full of urgency in the phrasing, and her overall mastery of this role from a technical and interpretive standpoint, are already very moving. Her performance reached its high point just where it must, in the third act, when Aida grows from a supplicating ingenue into a woman torn by her conflicts. With singing like this, nothing could dull the intensity of Verdi's drama. The concert formality, the populist setting, the amplification, all fell away in the face of real operatic drama embodied in song. If Mr. Domingo and Mr. Pavarotti can match that in the next two parks openers, the Met and its fans will be fortunate indeed.'" [Source]

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Elizabeth Taylor, Friend of Opera, Dies at 79


"Ave Maria" (Mascagni)
performed by Kathleen Battle
According to her publicist, actress Dame Elizabeth Taylor has passed away at age 79 from congestive heart failure. It is said she died peacefully. In 1963, the actress was featured in the film Cleopatra. She used a signature eyeliner many defined as "cat eyes" that inspired opera singer Maria Callas to begin wearing a similar look to add more glamour to her appearance. The relationship between the two women, however, went beyond makeup. In fact, Ms. Taylor became an active member in the opera community. As part of the royal media scene, Ms. Taylor and Richard Burton were members of a social elite that included opera diva Maria Callas and oil tycoon Aristotle Onassis. It may very well have been Madame Callas that introduced
Maria Callas with the actress
Ms. Taylor to Franco Zeffirelli because he had previously directed the opera singer in La Traviata, Norma and Tosca, and the two were close friends. Ms. Taylor and Richard Burton soon appeared together in Franco Zeffirelli's film debut, The Taming of the Shrew, in 1967. Based on the William Shakespeare play, it was an over-the-top Hollywood budget buster with the lead actors sinking $1 million of their own fortunes into the project and waiving their fees for a percentage of the box-office revenues. The collaboration sparked a lifelong friendship between the actress and the director. Zeffirelli was to become one of the preeminent
opera directors of the last century. Ms. Taylor's lifelong friendship with Franco
Elizabeth at the Paris Opera 1963
Zeffirelli also spawned an introduction in the 1980's to singer Aprile Millo who appeared in the director's production of Puccini's Turandot at the Metropolitan Opera. The spinto soprano was chosen by the director to be the voice of Ms. Taylor (playing Nadina Bulichoff) for his film Young Toscanini in 1988. She even sang "Ave Maria" for the wedding of Ms. Taylor and Larry Fortensky in 1991. The life of Elizabeth Taylor could easily be confused for an opera plot with all its adventure, love and tragedy. She lived her life for all the world to be inspired by beauty and charm. She possessed a magnetism that made her one of the few select people in the world who could actually steal focus from an opera diva if the two were in the same room. For
At the Rome Opera 1966
all of the glitz of gowns and jewels, one cause that must be mentioned for which Elizabeth Taylor worked tirelessly, is her contributions to AIDS research and the development of potential cures. In addition to her legendary screen performances, Ms. Taylor was a staunch advocate in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Thanks to her friendship with co-star Rock Hudson, she began with an AIDS Project Los Angeles dinner in the early 80's and by 1985 she was working with amfAR's Dr. Mathilde Krim to use her celebrity in promoting the organization's cause. In 1991, she established the Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation to create "funding to AIDS service organizations throughout the world to assist those living with HIV and AIDS." By 1999 she had raised an estimated $50 million to fight the disease. Even as late as 2006, she had commissioned a 37-foot "Care Van" equipped with examination tables and X Ray equipment (in addition to a personal contribution of $40,000) for the New Orleans Aids task force.

Hers was an accomplished life worth singing about.


Maria Callas, Elizabeth and Aristotle Onassis in 1964.
Franco Zeffirelli (far left) and Elizabeth at the Teatro dell'Opera in 1966.
In London. Left to right: Maria Callas, Peter O'Toole, Elizabeth and Richard Burton.
Elizabeth with Noel Coward in the film "Boom!" in 1968.
Backstage after Turandot in 1987. Left to right: Birgit Nilsson, Franco Zeffirelli, James Levine, Eva Marton, Elizabeth and Plácido Domingo.
Eva Marton, Aprile Millo and Elizabeth backstage after Turandot at the Metropolitan Opera.
Aprile Millo (far left) sings at the wedding of Taylor and Fortensky in 1991.

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