After a technical education Kuttner worked
first as a designer in Frankfurt am Main, but there he also trained as a
singer. In 1905 he made his debut at the Lortzing Theater in Berlin. After
training his voice, he began his stage career in 1904 at the Court Theater of
Weimar and sang since 1906 at the Lortzing Theater in Berlin. He specialized in
the tenor buffo roles in which he proved to be a superior actor. He sang
Jacquino in "Fidelio", Pedrillo in the "Entführung aus dem
Serail", Monostatos in the "Zauberflöte". His career took place
mainly at various Berlin theaters. He moved to the field of operetta in the
twenties and had great success as an operetta tenor in Berlin. He became known
as a radio and record singer. In 1933 he left Germany as a Jew and finally came
to China. There he appeared in operettas in Shanghai (1940-1941). After the
Second World War, he returned to Germany, where he died in 1953 in Straubing in
Bavaria. Married the opera singer Nelly Bondy, who sang in Weimar and at the
Komische Oper in Berlin.
HELLO AND WELCOME TO MY SITE. MY NAME IS ASHOT ARAKELYAN. I’M A RECORD COLLECTOR. GREATEST OPERA SINGERS IS THE MOST COMPREHENSIVE AND THE ONLY WEBSITE ENCYCLOPEDIA ON WORLD WIDE WEB. IT PROVIDES BIOGRAPHIES, CHRONOLOGICAL INFORMATION, PHOTOS, LABELS AND SOUND SAMPLES TO OVER 2500 OPERA SINGERS. ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS ARE WELCOME AND WILL BE ACKNOWLEDGED.
Monday, October 15, 2018
Georgy Nelepp (Tenor) (Bobruika, Ukraine, 20 April 1904 - Moscow, 18 June 1957)
He studied at the Leningrad Conservatory and made his debut, as
Lensky, with the Kirov in 1930, remaining with the company until 1944. In that
year he moved to the Bol'shoy, where he had his most significant success.
Nelepp possessed a lyric-dramatic tenor capable of an amazing range and
intensity of expression, making him an ideal exponent of such roles as
Florestan, Gustavus III, Manrico, Radames, Don José, Sobinin (‘’A Life for the
Tsar’’), Dmitry (‘’Boris Godunov’’), Golitsin (‘’Khovanshchina’’), Yury (‘’The
Enchantress’’), Hermann, Andrey (‘’Mazepa’’) and Sadko, several of which he
recorded. He sang in approximately 20 complete opera sets, among which his
agonized portrayal of the obsessive Hermann in the Melodiya recording of The
Queen of Spades is an unrivalled achievement.
Elisabeth Böhm Van Endert (Soprano) (Neuss 31. 12. 1876 † Zürich 27. 02. 1956)
She began her singing studies with Wally Schauseil in Düsseldorf and continued with Richard Müller in Dresden. First she appeared in concerts and oratorio parts. At the instigation of the great conductor Ernst von Schuch, who appeared in Dresden, she turned to the stage career. She made her stage debut in 1907 at the Hofoper in Dresden (as Marguerite in ‘’Faust’’), where she remained until 1910. From 1910 to 1913 she was engaged by the Court Opera in Berlin (where she had already performed in 1909), from 1913 to 1921 she was a soloist of the Deutsche Oper in Berlin-Charlottenburg, in the 1921-1923 seasons she sang at the Staatsoper in Berlin. Here she appeared as Pamina in ‘’Zauberflöte’’, Micaela in ‘’Carmen’’, Freia in '’’Rheingold’’, Eva in ‘’Meistersingern’’, Marguerite in ‘’Faust’’, Rosalinde in ‘’Fledermaus’’ and Octavian in ‘’Rosenkavalier’’. Guest performances and tours led the artist to England, Belgium, Holland and Switzerland. In the 1920s she undertook two major North American tours. During her Dresden engagement she appeared on 25. 1. 1909 in the world premiere of the opera ‘’Elektra’’ by R. Strauss. After 1923 she gave only single stage performances, but was mainly to be heard as a concert soloist, such as 1926 on a Holland tour and, also in 1926, in London. In her second marriage she was married the director of the Electrola record company, Leo Curth. After her retirement she lived in Berlin and taught singing, but in 1935she emigrated to North America.
Chronology of some appearances
1907-1910 Dresden Hofoper
1910-1913 Berlin Court Opera
1913-1921 Berlin-Charlottenburg Deutsche Oper
1921-1923 Berlin Staatsoper
Tuesday, October 9, 2018
Mafalda Salvatini (Soprano) (Baiae, Italy 17 October 1886 - Lugano, Switzerland 13 June 1971)
Santuzza
Her father was an officer of the Neapolitan army and she was already
orphaned when she was four. She studied singing under Jean de Reszke and
Pauline Viardot-Garcia in Paris. In 1908, during a guest performance at the
Berlin Court Opera, she caused a sensation as Aida and from 1911 to 1914 she
was a member of this opera house. In 1912 she performed at the Hofoper in
Munich, in 1913 at the Grand Opéra in Paris, where she performed as Valentine
in "Les Huguenots" of G. Meyerbeer. In the 1914-1923 seasons she was
engaged by the German Opera House in Berlin-Charlottenburg. Although in the
1924-1926 seasons she again appeared at the State Opera (the former Hofoper) in
Berlin, but came back in 1926 to the German Opera House, where she continued
her career until 1932. In 1926 she created for Berlin the title role in G.
Puccini’s opera "Turandot", where she scored one of her greatest
successes. In 1927 she was a guest at the Dresden State Opera, in 1922 and 1928
at the Vienna State Opera, in 1928 at the Riga Opera House. She also made guest
appearances in Holland and Belgium, but never in her native Italy. At the
beginning of the thirties she married the Lithuanian Ambassador in Germany.
After her retirement she lived in the Swiss canton of Ticino.
Sunday, September 9, 2018
Willis James Flanagan (Tenor) (Holyoke, Massachusetts 1882 - ?)
He began as a baritone studying with Murrie 1920's in Italy, France and Germany, making extensive tours singing. He then studied in London to become a tenor finishing his studies with Mr Addison Price the composer and vocal teacher. He has sung in London Palladium, Queens Theater and many other concerts hall in England with the best of the stars, one of them being Nordica. In Italy he appeared as Paul Castello.
I wish to thank his grandchild Michelle Dennis for providing me information and photos
Saturday, August 25, 2018
Laczó István (Tenor) (September 16, 1904, Szombathely, Hungary - September 27, 1965 Budapest, Hungary)
He initially studied
architecture and then trained as singer mostly in Italy. In 1935 he made his
debut at the National Opera in Budapest and remained a member of this opera
house until the end of his career. Before the World War II, he guested at the
Grand Opéra in Paris, also in Turin and Rio de Janeiro. His repertoire included
Otello, the Manrico in ‘’Trovatore’’, Radames in ‘’Aida’’, Kalaf in
‘’Turandot’’, Arnoldo in ‘’Guglielmo Tell’’, Turiddu in "Cavalleria
Rusticana’’ and Canio in "Pagliacci". In 1963 he was appointed
Honored Artist of the Hungarian People's Republic.
Chronology of some
appearances
1935-1950’s
Budapest National Opera
Lajos Laurisin (Tenor) (March 26, 1897, Kalocsa, Hungary - January 10, 1977, New York City, New York, United States)
He received his
education in Budapest under Szidi Rákosi and Béla Szabados. From 1926 to 1944
he was a member of the Budapest National Opera. At this opera house he sang a
varied repertoire and his roles included Duke in "Rigoletto", Canio
in "Pagliacci", Cavaradossi in "Tosca", Kalaf in
"Turandot" and Rodolfo in "La Bohème". In addition, he was
a famous operetta singer. His brother was the composer Miklós Laurinsin
(1893-1949).
Chronology of some
appearances
1926-1944 Budapest
National Opera
Endre Rösler (Tenor) (November 27, 1904, Budapest, Hungary - December 13, 1963, Budapest, Hungary)
Almaviva
First he studied with
Géza Laszló in Budapest, then under Giuseppe de Luca in Milan and Edoardo
Garbin in Brescia. In 1927 he made his debut at the National Opera in Budapest
as Alfredo in "La Traviata". On 24. 4. 1932 he sang at the Budapest Opera
in the world premiere of Zoltán Kodály's "Die Spinnstube". He made
successful guest appearances in Vienna, Milano, Florence, Leipzig and Munich.
At the Budapest Opera his repertoire included the title part in Händel’s
"Xerxes", Count Almaviva in ‘’Barbiere di Siviglia’’, Belmonte in
"Entführung aus dem Serail", Don Ottavio in "Don Giovanni",
Ferrando in "Così fan tutte", Lenski in "Eugene Onegin",
Florestan in "Fidelio", Max in "Freischütz", Erik in "Fliegenden
Holländer", Loge in "Rheingold" and Schuiskij in "Boris
Godunov". Since 1953 he taught singing at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music
Budapest; one of his students was Eva Marton.
Chronology of some appearances
1927 Budapest National Opera Traviata
(Alfredo)
1932 Budapest National
Opera Die Spinnstube (-)
Gabor Carelli (Tenor) (Budapest, Hungary 1915 – New York 22 January 1999)
He studied law and
singing at the Franz Liszt Conservatory in Budapest. After two years of further
education in Italy (also under Beniamino Gigli), he made his debut in Florence
and then sang at the Italian opera houses. Then he went to North America, where
from 1951 to 1974 he was a member
of the Metropolitan Opera in New
York (almost 26 years) and sang mainly as tenor buffo. Here he made his debut
as Don Curzio in ‘’Nozze di Figaro'’ (which he sang there 111 times) and was
heard in 56 roles and in over a thousand performances there. His repertoire
included Arturo in ‘’Lucia di
Lammermoor’’, Abbé in ‘’Adriana
Lecouivreur’’, Borsa in ‘’Rigoletto’’ (which he sang 118 times), Gaston in ‘’La
Traviata’’, Trin in ‘’La Fanciulla del West’’, Elemer in ‘’Arabella’ by R.
Strauss, Count Almaviva in ‘’Il Barbiere di Siviglia’’, Ernesto in ‘’Don
Pasquale’’, Rodolfo in ‘’La Bohème’’, Pinkerton in ‘’Madama Butterfly’’, Duka
in ‘’Rigoletto’’, Cavaradossi in ‘’Tosca’’,
Alfredo in ‘’La Trvaiata’’,
Captain in ‘’Wozzeck’’and as Tonio in ‘’La Fille du régiment’’. During two
seasons he also worked in Israel. Since 1964 he taught singing at the Manhattan
School of Music New York.
Chronology of appearances
1951-1974 New York Metropolitan Opera
Maria Russo (Mezzo-Soprano)
She was to young to
sing in Guy Golterman’s grand operas At
MUNY and Kiel, but St Louis
Mezzo-Soprano Maria’Russo’s career was ‘moved along’ by the impressario.
Golterman arranged auditions with the Met’s Fausto Cleve. He also contacted
Fortuno Gallo on her behalf. Maria persisted in New York. She found her role
‘Carmen’: First with the Charles Wagner Opera Company 1952 tour. This was
followed by a 10-weeks tour of South America with the South America Opera Company.others in the company
were Jan Pierce, Robert Weede and Herbs Nelli.
Her concert debut was with the St Louis Symphony Orchestra in 1949. In
New York she was coached by several of the Met’s conductors including Caesar
Sodero. Dramatic lessons by the Met’s Desire Defrere. The girl from the St Louis
‘Hill’ neighborhood did well. She never forgot Guy Golterman. Maria Russo never
came back to St Louis. I believe she stayed in New York.
By Ed
Golterman
Thursday, August 16, 2018
John Gläser (Tenor) (Berlin 12. June 1888 – Frankfurt am Main 27. May 1968)
He studied singing in Berlin, where he was already soloist of the court and cathedral choir. From 1909 to 1910 he was a member of the choir at the Berlin Komische Oper. As soloist he made his debut in 1911 at the Stadttheater of Ulm and then sang at the Court Theater of Altenburg (Thuringia). In 1912 he joined to the Opera House of Wroclaw, here he appeared five years. In 1917 he was engaged by to Opera of Frankfurt a.M., where he remained until the end of his career. Here, on 21.1.1920, he sang the role of Elis in the premiere of the opera ‘’Der Schatzgräber’’ by Schreker. He participated in the German premieres of the Mussorgsky’s operas ‘’Boris Godunov’’ (1913, in Wroclaw/as Dimitri) and ‘’Khovantchina’’ (1924, Frankfurt aM/as Galitzyn). On 10. 3. 1917 he sang at the Opera House of Wroclaw in the world premiere of the opera ‘’Eros and Psyche’’ by Lubomir Rózycki. He made guest appearances in Berlin, Munich, Hamburg and Vienna. At the Salzburg Festival (1926) he appeared as Bacchus in ‘’Ariadne auf Naxos’’ by R. Strauss. In 1942, at the Frankfurt Opera, on the occasion of his 25th anniversary he gave his farewell performance as Canio in ‘’Pagliacci’’. Since then he lived in Frankfurt and taught singing. Married the soprano Agnes Werninghaus.
Chronology of some appearances
1909-1910 Berlin Komische Oper
1911 Ulm Stadttheater
1911 Altenburg Court Theater
1912-1917 Wroclaw Opera House
1917-1942 Frankfurt a.M. Opera
1926 Salzburg Festival
Thursday, July 26, 2018
Arne Ohlson (Tenor) (Uddevalla, Sweden 2. 01. 1911 – Märsta, Sweden 1. 05. 2000)
He initially studied violin and music theory in Uppsala and Stockholm, but then trained by John Forsell, Joseph Hislop and Augustin Kock at the Stockholm Academy of Music. In 1941 he made his stage debut at the Royal Opera in Stockholm as Don Ottavio in "Don Giovanni". Until 1966 he was the first lyrical tenor of this opera house. In 1957 he appeared in the Swedish premiere of A. Berg's "Wozzeck". From 1948 to 1968 he was one of those singers, who made the Drottningholm Festival a first-class musical event. From 1966 to 1974 he worked at the Academy of Music in Aalborg. Since 1974 he taught singing in Stockholm and Uppsala.
Chronology of some appearances
1941-1966 Stockholm Royal Opera
Carlo Galeffi (Baritone) (Malamocco 4 June 1884 – Roma 22 September 1961)
Galeffi studied singing under the pedagogues Di Como, Sbriscia and later with Antonio Cotogni. He made his debut 1903 at the Teatro Quirino in Roma as Enrico in ‘’Lucia di Lammermoor’’. In her book Una Voce nel Mondo, Toti Dal Monte wrote, that Galeffi is the best baritone of her time.
Chronology of some appearances
1907 Roma Teatro Quirino Pagliacci (Tonio)
1908 Roma Teatro Adriano Amica (Rinaldo)
1908 Palermo Teatro Massimo Ballo in maschera (Renato)
1908 Messina Teatro Vittorio Emanuele Pagliacci (Tonio)
1908 Roma Teatro Adriano Carmen (Escamillo)
1910 Lisbona Teatro San Carlos Carmen (Escamillo)
1910 Buenos Ayres Teatro Coliseo Pagliacci (Tonio)
1910 Buenos Ayres Teatro Coliseo Rigoletto (Rigoletto)
1910 Rosario di Santa Fè Teatro Colon Pagliacci (Tonio)
1910 Boston Opera House Pagliacci (Tonio)
1911 Philadelphia Teatro Metropolitan Pagliacci (Tonio)
1911 Rio de Janeiro Teatro Municipal Amica (Rinaldo)
1912 Milano Teatro alla Scala Lohengrin (Tetralmondo)
1913 Firenze Politeama Fiorentino Ballo in maschera (Renato)
1914 San Pietroburgo Teatro Petit Pagliacci (Tonio)
1915 Montevideo Teatro Solis Carmen (Escamillo)
1916 Pesaro Salone Pedrotti Barbiere di Siviglia (Figaro)
1917 Genova Politeama Genovese Barbiere di Siviglia (Figaro)
1918 Roma Teatro Costanzi Ballo in maschera (Renato)
1919 Firenze Teatro Della Pergola Barbiere di Siviglia (Figaro)
1919 Chicago Civic Opera House Barbiere di Siviglia (Figaro)
1920 New York Lexington Theater Barbiere di Siviglia (Figaro)
1920 Buenos Ayres Teatro Colon Lohengrin (Tetralmondo)
1921 Buenos Ayres Teatro Colon Barbiere di Siviglia (Figaro)
1921 Buenos Ayres Teatro Colon Ballo in maschera (Renato)
1922 Milano Teatro La Scala Lohengrin (Tetralmondo)
1924 Milano Teatro La Scala Lohengrin (Tetralmondo)
1925 Milano Teatro La Scala Ballo in maschera (Renato)
1925 Lisbona Coliseo Recrejos Pagliacci (Tonio)
1927 Buenos Ayres Teatro Colon Lohengrin (Tetralmondo)
1929 Milano Teatro La Scala Ballo in maschera (Renato)
1929 Milano Teatro La Scala Lohengrin (Tetralmondo)
1930 Buenos Ayres Teatro Colon Boheme (Marcello)
1930 Buenos Ayres Teatro Colon Cavalleria Rusticana (Alfio)
1935 Buenos Ayres Teatro Colon Ballo in maschera (Renato)
1936 Trieste Teatro Verdi Ballo in maschera (Renato)
1938 Buenos Ayres Teatro Colon Carmen (Escamillo)
Saturday, July 14, 2018
Hermann Schramm (Tenor) (Berlin, Germany 7. 02. 1871 - Frankfurt am Main, Germany 11. 12. 1951)
Like his father, first
he became a merchant, but then studied singing and made his debut in 1895 at
the Wroclaw Opera House as Gomez in "Nachtlager in Granada" by C. Kreutzer.
In the 1896-1900 seasons he worked as a lyric tenor at the Cologne Opera House,
then started to appear only in buffo roles. He was a highly respected member of
the Frankfurt am Main Opera House (1900-1933). On the German stage he was
unequaled Mime in the Ring cycle and David in "Meistersingern". In
1899 he also sang the part of David at the Bayreuth Festival. Already in 1899
he guested at the London Covent Garden Opera. He also had a significant career
in Brussels,Paris and Holland. In 1912 he appeared in Amsterdam in the Dutch
premiere of opera "Königskinder" by Humperdinck. Other guest
appearances took him to the Court Operas of Berlin (1897), Dresden (1898-99)
and Munich (1898), to the Court Theater of Hanover (1899), Wiesbaden (since
1900), Karlsruhe (since 1906) and Mannheim (1900), since 1900 also to the City Theater
of Zurich. In the 1923-1924 season he took part in the North American tour of
German Opera. As a Jew, he retired from the stage in Frankfurt in 1934, but
survived during the Nazi era in Frankfurt. His son, Friedrich Schramm
(1900-1981), for a long time was director of the Stadttheater of Basel, then
director of the Staatstheater in Wiesbaden.
Chronology of some
appearances
1895 Wroclaw Opera
House
1896-1900 Cologne
Opera House
1900-1933 Frankfurt
am Main Opera House
Thursday, July 12, 2018
Margaret Burke Sheridan (Castlebar, Republic of Ireland 15. 10. 1889 – Dublin, Republic of Ireland 16. 04. 1958)
First she was trained
in Dublin, then at the Royal Academy of Music in London under William
Shakespear and completed her education
in Milan with soprano Tina Sconamiglio. In 1911, under the name Margaret
Burke-Sheridan, she sang at Dublin in Handel's ‘’Messiah’’. She made her debut
in 1918 at the Teatro Costanzi in Roma as Mimi in "La Bohème". She
had a great success especially at the Teatro San Carlo in Napoli. In 1921 she
sang for the first time at La Scala in Milano, where she became very popular in
the following years and appeared here until 1924. In 1923 she sang the part of
Olimpia in the premiere of Respighi's "Belfagor". She was highly
acclaimed by Giacomo Puccini. Her roles at La Scala included also Wally in the
same opera by Catalani and Maddalena in Giordano’s "Andrea Chénier".
In 1924, for political reasons, she left the theatre with A. Toscanini, who
previously promoted her career. She was also successful at the Arena di Verona
and in several guest appearances at the Covent Garden Opera (since 1919). Here
she appeared in the first performance of Mascagni's "Iris" (1919). In
the 1925-1930 seasons she sang constantly at the Covent Garden Opera. After
leaving the stage she returned to her Irish home and worked as vocal pedagogue
in Dublin.
Chronology of some
appearances
1918 Roma Teatro
Costanzi
1919 London Covent
Garden
1921-1924 Milano La
Scala
Max Rohr (Tenor) (? 1875 – München 1917)
His stage debut took
place in 1901 at the Court Theater in Detmold. In 1902 he continued his
education and in the 1903-04 season he was engaged by the Municipal Theater of
Landshut (Bavaria), from 1904 to 1905 he appeared at the Municipal Theater in
Regensburg. In 1905 he became a member of the Carl Theater in Wien, whose
member he remained until 1910. Here he sang in numerous operettas and and also
participated in the world premieres of "Die Schützenliesel" by Edmund
Eysler (1905) and "Zigeunerliebe" of F. Lehár (1910). In the 1910-1913
seasons he sang at the Raimund Theater in Wien, then a season at the local
Johann Strauss Theater. From 1915 until his early death, he worked at the Münchner
Theater am Gärtnerplatz. He was very successful in operettas of Franz Lehar,
Leo Fall, Oscar Straus, E. Kalman and E. Eysler. He retired from the stage in
1917.
Chronology of
appearances
1901 Detmold Court
Theater
1903-1904 Landshut Municipal
Theater
1904-1905 Regensburg Municipal
Theater
1905-1910 Wien Carl
Theater
1910-1913 Wien Raimund
Theater
1914 Wien Johann
Strauss Theater
1915-1917 Münchner
Theater am Gärtnerplatz
Friday, June 15, 2018
Libero De Luca (Tenor) (Kreuzlingen, Switzerland 1913 - Horn, Switzerland 1998)
After studying
architecture, he was trained by Max Kraus in Munich as baritone (1932-1934),
but then retrained as tenor in Zurich by Alfredo Cairati. After winning a first
prize at an international voice competition in Geneva, in 1941, he made his
professional debut the following year at the Solothurn Municipal Theatre. After
one season at the Bern Municipal Theatre, he joined to the Zurich Opera (1943-1949).
There he sang in the premieres of the operas ‘’Der unsterbliche Kranke’’ by
Hans Haug (1947) and ‘’Die schwarze Spinne’’ of W. Burkhard (1949). In 1948 he
performed at the Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires and at the Teatro San Carlo in Napoli,
in 1949 at the Covent Garden Opera in London; He was also a guest at the opera
houses of Brussels, Munich and Vienna. In 1949 he became the first tenor of the
Opéra-Comique in Paris, where he appeared in numerous operas of French
repertoire. He also sang at the Paris Grand Opéra, thus in 1948 as Edgardo in ‘’Lucia di Lammermoor’’
opposite Lily Pons. Until 1960 he was a soloist of two major Parisian opera
houses. Also at the concert area he had a successful career with appearances in
Zurich, Basel and Bern, in Bordeaux, Strasbourg and Paris. In 1961 he retired
from the stage. Later he became a full-time voice teacher in Horn, Switzerland,
near Lake Constance.
Chronology of some
appearances
1941 Solothurn
Municipal Theatre
1942 Bern Municipal
Theatre
1943 -1949 Zurich
Opera
1948 Buenos Aires Teatro
Colon
1949 London Covent
Garden
1949 Paris Opéra-Comique
Sunday, May 13, 2018
Ettore Campana (Baritone) (Savignano sul Rubicone 1875 - Los Angeles 1941)
He studied singing at the Liceo Musicale
in Pesaro and made his debut at the Teatro Comunale in Cesenatico as Marcello in
‘’Boheme’’ (1902). Around 1910 he went to USA and became a principal baritone
of Bevani Opera Company. After his retirement,
he taught singing in Los Angeles. His wife was the famous actress Esperanza
Susanna.
Chronology of some
appearances
1902 Cesenatico
Teatro Comunale Boheme (Marcello)
1910 Oakland Idora
Park Faust (Valentin)
1912 Mexico City Theatre
Arbeu Aida (Amonasro)
1916 Pasadena Cauldron Club Concert
1917 Los Angeles Auditorium
Concert
Saturday, May 12, 2018
Eugène Graux (Tenor) (Hellemmes-Lille, France 27. 01. 1895 – Amiens, France 05 05. 1963)
Graux studied singing at the Conservatoire de Lille under Alphonse Capon. After the war,
where he was wounded, he was admitted to the Conservatoire de Paris (1920). Probably
he made his debut at the Grand-Théâtre de Nancy, he was very successful. He made
guest appearances at the Grand-Théâtre de Bordeaux, l'Opéra de Lyon, le Casino
municipal de Cannes, l'Opéra de Monte-Carlo. In 1928 he made his debut at the Opéra-Comique
in Paris as Gérald in ‘’Lakmé’’ (1928). In 1931 he was appointed professor of
singing at the Conservatoire de Lille. He never made records.
Chronology of some
appearances
1921? Grand-Théâtre
de Nancy
1928 Paris Opéra-Comique
Thursday, May 10, 2018
Josip Križaj (Bass) (Vevče, Ljubljana 5 March 1887 – Zagreb 30 July 1968)
He received his vocal
training in Ljubljana and in Munich. In 1907 he made his debut at the Slovenian
National Opera and Ballet Theatre. Here he appeared up to 1913. From 1913 to 1940
he became one of the most popular artists of Croatian National Theatre in
Zagreb. He sang several roles here in first performances of operas for
Yugoslavia: the title hero in Mussorgsky's "Boris Godunov" and
Dosifey in his "Khovantchina" (1926), the Ochs in "Rosenkavalier",
King Philip in Verdi's "Don Carlo", the King Mark in "Tristan
und Isolde" and Wotan in "Rheingold". On 12. 11. 1935 he sang
the role of Marko in Zagreb in the world premiere of the Croatian opera "Ero
s onoga svijeta" by Jakov Gotovac. His repertoire included Rocco in
"Fidelio", the Kezal in "Prodaná nevěsta ", Figaro in
"Nozze di Figaro", Hans Sachs in "Meistersingern", the
Wanderer in "Siegfried" and Gurnemanz in "Parsifal". His
wife was the famous soprano Paula Trauttner (Ruma, Croatia 1888 – Zagreb 1976).
Chronology of some
appearances
1907-1913 Ljubljana Slovenian
National Opera and Ballet Theatre
1913-1940 Zagreb Croatian
National Theatre
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