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eBay listing template 2013
Artists
CORELLI/CALLAS/BASTIANINI
Title
DONIZETTI POLIUTO
Item
Double 12" LP Vinyl Private
Record Box Set
Catalog
MRF-31
Condition
Excellent
Info
RARE red label
private pressing box set w/printed
illustrated synopsis insert.
Donizetti
Poliuto
with
Maria Callas, Franco Corelli, Ettore
Bastianini
Orchestra
& Chorus of La Scala, Milan
conducted
by
Antonino Votto
December 7,
1960
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Bio
Poliuto
is a three-act tragedia
lirica (or tragic opera)
by Gaetano Donizetti
from the Italian
libretto by Salvadore
Cammarano, which was
based on Pierre
Corneille's play
Polyeucte written in
1641–42. It reflected
the life of the early
Christian martyr Saint
Polyeuctus.
Regarded by one author
as Donizetti's "most
personal opera" with the
music being "some of the
finest Donizetti was to
compose", Poliuto was
written in 1838 for
performances planned at
the Teatro San Carlo in
Naples later that year.
However, close to the
time for rehearsals to
begin, King Ferdinand II
refused to allow the
martyrdom of a Christian
saint to be seen on
stage and forbade the
production.
Angry at the decision
and with a commission
for the Paris Opéra due
from the composer,
Donizetti paid the
penalty to the San Carlo
for not producing an
original work as a
substitute, and left
Naples for Paris
arriving on 21 October.
As his first commission
for Paris, he decided to
revise Poliuto and
between 1839-40 a French
text, with the title Les
martyrs, was prepared by
Eugene Scribe which
conformed to the
conventions of a French
four-act grand opera,
but which incorporated
80% of the music from
Poliuto. It was
presented in Paris on 10
April 1840. When
eventually given in
Italy, it was initially
presented in a
translation from the
French version under the
title of I martiri. It
took until 30 November
1848, months after the
composer's death, in
order for Poliuto to
finally appear for six
performances at the San
Carlo in its original
Italian three-act
version.
Although Donizetti had
been gradually
considering further
involvement with
Parisian stage, after
the tremendous success
of his Lucia di
Lammermoor at the
Théâtre-Italien in
December 1837, as Roger
Parker and William
Ashbrook note
"negotiations with
Charles Duponchel, the
director of the Opéra,
took on a positive note
for the first time". In
addition, while in
Venice for the premiere
of Maria de Rudenz
(which was a failure)
the following January,
he had met and had been
impressed with Adolphe
Nourrit, who, for more
than a decade, had been
the principal tenor in
Paris, having sung roles
written for him by the
major French composers
such as Meyerbeer,
Auber, Halevy, as well
as Rossini (in William
Tell) after he had moved
to Paris. However, by
the late 1830s,
Nourrit’s popularity in
Paris was in decline,
and he was in danger of
being supplanted in the
public's affections by
rising star Gilbert
Louis Duprez.
Donizetti returned to
Naples, arriving by
February 24, where he
began planning for the
production of Poliuto.
However, he had also
hoped for a permanent
supervisory appointment
at the Collegio di San
Pietro a Maiella.
Instead, it went to the
composer, Saverio
Mercadante. Therefore,
on 25 May 1838,
Donizetti responded to
an invitation from the
Paris Opéra to compose
two new works,
specifying that the
contract would require a
libretto from Scribe
with specific
performance dates and a
rehearsal periods
included. With Donizetti
committed to produce his
next opera for Naples,
musicologist William
Ashbrook notes that the
composer wrote Poliuto
"with more than half an
eye to its potential for
it being recast as a
French grand opera",
something he had also
done when writing
L'assedio di Calais two
years earlier, but which
failed to gain attention
outside Italy.
Since Nourrit was
staying in Naples at the
same time, determined to
"take on a [singing]
technique which was so
different from that
which he had been
taught", he was grateful
to the composer for
lessons in that
technique. Writing to
his wife, he expresses
his joy "at being born
to a new artistic life"
in singing Italian opera
under the composer's
direction, and he adds
that Donizetti is
"pulling strings to get
me engaged here"
It is known that the
tenor greatly influenced
the composer in his
choice of subject and in
the progress of the new
opera, such that
Donizetti tailored the
title role for the tenor
who had then been
engaged for the autumn
season in Naples.
However, he is also
regarded as influencing
Cammarano's contribution
in adapting Corneille's
play from what Ashbrook
describes as "a
spiritual drama, with
its carefully observed
unities" into a Romantic
melodrama. This was
achieved by adding
elements such as
Poliuto's jealousy,
which did not exist in
the original and, most
especially, altering the
play's narrative
perspective of the
action (which was
originally seen through
the eyes of Pauline's
confidante, Stratonice)
into directly-shown
dramatic action,
especially evidenced at
the end of act 2 with
Poliuto's overthrow of
the altar.
The composer began work
by 10 May on the music
for the opera, which
appears to have been
planned for the autumn
season. However, by the
middle of June, a glitch
in the proceedings had
appeared in the form of
a letter from the
Superintendent of the
Royal Theatres to the
San Carlo intendant,
Domenico Barbaja,
reminding him that
submission of a libretto
for proposed autumn
season opera was
overdue. This was duly
reported to Cammarano,
who responded with some
objections, not the
least of which was that
his original brief had
been totally reversed:
"a small part for the
tenor and then, with the
engagement of Signor
Nourrit, this condition
was totally changed" he
stated. Barbaja backed
up Cammarano's
objection, which also
included his inability
to meet with the newly
appointed censor, Royer,
until his appointment
was confirmed. Finally,
the completed libretto
moved up the chain of
command with Royer's
support until it reached
the King. The Minister
for Internal Affairs,
who received the king's
response, on 11 August
communicated to Barbaja
that "His majesty
deigned with his own
sacred hand to declare
that the histories of
the Martyrs are
venerated in the Church
and are not presented on
the stage"
The opera's last-minute
cancellation by the
Catholic King of the
Kingdom of the Two
Sicilies angered the
composer and, resolved
to move to Paris to
further his career
there, he left Naples by
October 1838, vowing
never to have any
further dealings with
the San Carlo
administration. But the
cancellation dealt a
crushing blow to
Nourrit's hopes of
reviving his flagging
career, and even though
he appeared in the opera
which was substituted,
Saverio Mercadante's Il
giuramento, and then
productions of Elena da
Feltre and Norma which
followed, depression
overtook him. On 8 March
1839 he jumped to his
death from a window of
his apartment in Naples.
For his part, Cammarano
re-used some of the
verses he had set for
Poliuto in other
librettos, including
Mercadante's La Vestale,
some of which became
quite well known. When
it finally came time,
ten years later, for
Poliuto to be staged in
Naples, he made a note
in his preface to the
libretto that: "out of
respect for the music,
and for the
distinguished if unhappy
friend who wrote it, I
have left the poetry as
it was in the original,
appealing to the
indulgence of the
public."
With the Poliuto
disaster behind him,
Donizetti arrived in
Paris in late October
1838 and quickly met and
became friendly with the
composer Adolphe Adam,
who was living in the
same apartment building
where he was staying.
Donizetti offered his
Poliuto to the Académie
Royale de Musique and it
was accepted for
performances to begin in
April 1840.
While in Paris, a city
which increasingly he
came to dislike,
Donizetti oversaw
stagings of Roberto
Devereux and L'elisir
d'amore during the
following December and
January, and he also
negotiated a longer
time-frame for the
delivery of the
completed libretto of
Les martyrs from Scribe
as well as that for
having the completed
score of the second
commission ready. This
commission, which became
known as Le duc d'Albe,
was never completed.
During 1839, Lucia di
Lammermoor, after being
translated into French,
became Lucie de
Lammermoor, and this
version was presented in
August. With rehearsals
for Les martyrs not
planned until early
1840, the composer had
time to write yet
another opera, La fille
du régiment, his first
written directly to a
French text. It received
its premiere on 11
February 1840, by which
time martyrs was in
rehearsal for
performances in April.
Although Donizetti was
obliged to shift the
placement of arias to
other locations in the
text, Scribe had to
accept the modification
of some of his text to
fit the existing music
but, given the overall
expansion of the opera
into four acts, new
material needed to be
created by both writer
and composer, most
especially for the end
of act 1 and the
beginning of act 2, both
of which were expanded
well beyond the
original.
Prior to the original
Poliuto being presented
in Italy, a translation
of Les martyrs appeared
there as Paolina e
Poliuto and then as
Paolina e Severo (in
Rome in December 1849),
finally becoming I
martiri. However, the
"more compact, three-act
Poliuto was generally
preferred" and under its
original title, it was
given its premiere on 30
November 1848, a few
months after Donizetti's
death.
Prior to 1860, and
performances were given
in some sixteen
locations throughout
Italy and "fairly
regularly throughout the
second half of the
[19th] century" In a
German translation, it
was given in Vienna on 6
June 1841 under
Donizetti's supervision.
Later, it provided a
vehicle for dramatic
tenors such as Enrico
Tamberlik (at Covent
Garden in London in
1852) and Francesco
Tamagno (in Rome in
April 1883) and he also
appeared in the second
and third acts in a
benefit in Rome in April
1904 conducted by Pietro
Mascagni.
As Poliuto, it was not
until 25 May 1859 that
it was given in New
York, but revived in
Bergamo in April 1850
where it was produced
nine times up to
November 1907.
Productions of Poliuto
staged from 1940 onward
have included those at
La Scala, Milan in 1940
(with Beniamino Gigli
and Maria Caniglia). It
was also given at the
Roman Baths of Caracalla
with Giacomo Lauri-Volpi
in 1948, and appeared
again in Milan in
December 1960 (with
Franco Corelli and Maria
Callas). At that point
in her career, Callas
was at the height of her
fame, albeit having been
absent from La Scala for
two year. However, her
performances were
regarded as triumphs
with the public and many
critics.
Another Rome Opera
production followed in
1989 with Nicola
Martinucci and Elizabeth
Connell and two
productions were
presented by the
Donizetti Festival in
Bergamo in 1993 and
2010. Other concert
performances were given
in the 1990s in cities
such as Vienna (1986),
Montpelier (1987), and
New York (1998). The
ABAO (Asociación
Bilbaína de Amigos de la
Ópera) company in Bilbao
staged the work in
February 2008 with
Francisco Casanova and
Fiorenza Cedolins in the
two principal roles.
Most recently, it was
given in Zurich in May
2012 with Massimiliano
Pisapia in the title
role.
As part of its 2015
season, the Glyndebourne
Festival will present
Poliuto with the support
of the Peter Moores
Foundation and it
appears to be planning
to feature tenor Michael
Fabiano in the title
role.
Roles
Eugenia Tadolini,
(1808–1872),
the original Paolina
Role
Voice
type
Premiere Cast:
Poliuto,
30 November 1848
(Conductor: Antonio
Farelli)
Poliuto, Roman convert
to
Christianity
tenor
Carlo Baucardé
Paolina, Poliuto's
wife
soprano
Eugenia Tadolini
Severo, Roman
Proconsul
baritone
Filippo Colini
Felice, Paolina's
father, Governor of
Armenia
tenor
Anafesto Rossi
Callistene, High Priest
of
Jupiter
bass
Marco Arati
Nearco, a Christian,
Poliuto's
friend
tenor
Domenico Ceci
A
Christian
tenor
Synopsis
Place: Mytilene
Time: c. 259 A.D.
Armenia has been
conquered by the Romans,
and they have decreed
that Christianity, which
has a significant
following in the
country, must be
destroyed and its
followers put to death.
Paolina had been in love
with the Roman general,
Severo, and had only
married Poliuto after
pressure from her
father, Felice, who told
her that Severo and been
killed in battle.
Act 1: The Baptism
Scene 1: The Entrance to
a Hidden Sanctuary
A secret gathering of
Christian worshippers
assembles, ready to be
baptised into the new
faith. (Chorus: Ancor ci
asconda un velo arcano /
"May a veil of secrecy
still protect us From
the ungodly sword which
threatens us"). As they
go into the cave,
Poliuto, the principal
magistrate of Mytilene,
enters and seeing his
friend Nearco, the
Christian leader,
embraces him as he
expresses his
reservations about being
baptised along with the
others. He confides to
his friend that he has
misgivings regarding his
wife’s loyalty to him,
fearing that he still
has a rival for her
affections. Nearco,
urging him to be calm
and to turn his thoughts
to God, causes Poliuto
to pray: D'un'alma
troppo fervida, tempra,
buon Dio, gli affetti /
"Temper the emotions,
dear God, of a soul that
is too ardent".
Poliuto enters the
shrine, as his wife
Paolina, who has been
following him, arrives
outside. She suspects
that he has become a
Christian convert, and
waits for him to
reappear from the
baptism, recognizing
that she has come to the
right place. She calls
to Nearco when he leaves
the cave, and he warns
her not to become
involved since death is
the penalty for all.
Upon hearing the voices
coming from the cave as
the service progresses,
she finds herself
strangely moved by its
sincerity and power as
the Christians pray for
their persecutors: "Yes,
the prayer enters my
heart" and, as the
prayers continue, she
feels the need to kneel
as the Christians pray
for their enemies as
well: (Aria. Di quai
soave lagrime, aspersa è
la mia gota / "My cheeks
are moistened, With such
gentle tears, How this
sweet unknown power,
goes straight to my
soul!....a dark veil
seems to fall from my
eyes").
At that moment, Nearco
and Poliuto leave the
sanctuary and find
Paolina there: "Have you
abandoned your
religion?" she asks her
husband, who states that
he has no fear. Sounds
of celebration outside
are heard as Nearco
returns to tell them
that Severo, the Roman
general, has returned
from Rome: "The
unsheathed sword hangs
over all our heads" says
Nearco, as Paolina
realises that the report
she had been given of
Severo's death in battle
was untrue. Experiencing
both great joy and utter
despair on learning that
her lover has survived,
she acknowledges to
herself that now they
can never be united. The
Christians, proclaiming
that they shall defy
death, leave Paolina
alone.
Scene 2: The Great
Square of Mytilene
A jubilant crowd hails
the arrival of Severo:
Plausi all'inclito
Severo, lauri eterni
alla sua chioma / "All
hail the illustrious
Severo, eternal laurels
for his head". He
addresses the people,
and without specifying
that he is describing
the Christians, he tells
them that he will sweep
away the unholy rabble
who, like a wicked
serpent, are in their
midst. Then, to himself,
he expresses his desire
to once again see his
love. (Aria: Di tua
beltade imagine è questo
sol ch'io miro / "This
sun I see is the image
of your beauty".)
Greeted by Callistene,
he sees Felice, wishes
to embrace him, and asks
where his daughter is.
In his awkward reply,
Felice points to
Poliuto, acknowledging
him as Paolina's
husband. Together,
Severo, Callistene and
Felice express their
anger, frustration and
confusion, with Severo
enraged and bitter when
he realizes that Paulina
in married. (Cabaletta:
No, l'acciar non fu
spietato che versava il
sangue mio / "No, the
sword that spilled my
blood was not merciless,
but the god who kept me
alive was merciless
indeed!") Again, each
man expresses his
anguish: for Poliuto it
is a "cold hand gripping
his heart"; for
Callistene it is
revenge; and for Felice,
the "sun has become
enshrouded in a thick
cloud."
Act 2: The Neophyte
Scene 1: The gardens of
Felice’s house
Callistene and Severo
are at Felice's home
where the priest tells
Severo that it is
possible that it was
Felice's idea that
Paolina marry Poliuto.
He then leaves, and
Severo waits for Paolina
who is surprised to find
him in her father's
house. Angrily he
confronts her: Il più
lieto dei vivent /
"Returning to this land,
I was the happiest man
alive! I hoped out
marriage would be a
blissful paradise!.."
Clearly conflicted by
Severo's sudden
confrontation and, as he
states that "my joy has
turned to weeping, my
broken heart is
bleeding", she expresses
to herself the anguish
which overtakes her:
(aria): Ei non vega il
pianto mio / "He must
not see my weeping, nor
understand my
agitation... If there is
a merciful God in
heaven, may he protect
me from myself. All my
former passion is
re-awakening in my
heart". Severo's pleas
to her are rebuffed,
albeit with some
reluctance. In the
background, Poliuto and
Callistene are seen
arriving.
Finally, Paolina
expresses her
frustration: Quest'alma
è troppo debole, In cosi
ro cimento!... / "This
soul is too week for
such a cruel trial" and
she demands that Severo
leave her to her grief.
No, vivi, esulta, o
barbara / "No, live and
rejoice, cruel woman" he
replies and, together,
they express their
conflicting feelings,
with Severo finally
leaving and Paolina
entering the house.
Entering alone, Poliuto,
believes that the couple
are guilty and he
pledges to revenge this
attack on his honour by
killing them both:
(cavatina:) Valeno è
l'aura ch'io respire!
Indegna! / "The air I
breathe is poison to me!
Despicable woman!.....So
tremble guilty couple...
My honour has been
sullied! This calls for
vengeance. Ah! my love
for her was immense!..
Now my fury is immense!"
But his bitter thoughts
of revenge are
interrupted by the news
that Nearco, a fellow
Christian, has been
arrested by the Romans
for his religious
beliefs. Quickly, he
casts aside thoughts of
revenge as he realizes
that greater action is
required: (Cabaletta:)
Sfolgorò divino raggio,
Da' miei lumi è tolto il
velo / "A ray of divine
light blazed down, the
veil has fallen from my
eyes [......] A holy
voice as if from heaven
spoke to me of
forgiveness." He rushes
off to the Temple.
Scene 2: The Temple of
Jupiter
The Priests are
assembled along with
Callistene, Severo,
Paolina, and the people.
The High Priest calls
down the vengeance of
the gods upon those who
insult the sacred cult.
As Nearco is dragged
into the temple in
chains, Callistene
demands to know the name
of an important new
convert to Christianity
about whom he has heard
rumour. Initially,
Nearco refuses to betray
the convert, but when
Severo threatens him
with torture until he
speaks, Poliuto proudly
reveals himself to be
the man they seek.
All assembled express
their feelings in an
ensemble: Severo,
Callistene, Felice,
Priests and the People:
La sacrilege parole Nel
delubro ancor rimbomba /
"The sacrilegious word
Still resounds in the
temple" and, addressing
Poliuto, declare "You
are destined to eternal
punishment amongst the
dead"; Paolina: Qual
preghiera al Ciel
disciolgo? / "What
prayer can I now offer
up?"; Poliuto: Dio,
proteggi l'umil servo, A
morir per te qui vengo/
"God, protect your
humble servant, I have
come here to die for
you, but worldly
emotions rise up
fiercely to fight
again"; and Nearco
expresses a longing for
death for himself.
In a concerted finale,
Paolina entreats her
father to save her
husband’s life, and then
throws herself at
Severo’s feet, begging
him to show mercy for
the sake of the love she
knows he still has for
her. Her actions so
enrage Poliuto that he
breaks free from his
captors and smashes the
pagan altar. He is
quickly overpowered and
led away with Nearco, as
Felice forcibly removes
his daughter from the
temple.
Act 3: Martyrdom
Scene 1: A sacred wood
near the Temple of
Jupiter
In the distance, the
people can be heard
encouraging all to go to
the circus where they
will see blood flow.
(Chorus: Vieni,
vieni...al circo
andiamo... / "Come,
come...let's go to the
circus").
Priests enter awaiting
the arrival of
Callistene, the High
Priest. He tells them
that others have come
forward and declared
that they too will die
for the Christian cause,
while Paolina has gone
to plead for Poliuto.
Callistene encourages
the priests to stir up
the crowd. (Aria, then
repeated by all:
Alimento alla fiamma si
porga, Tal che incendio
vorace ne sorga / "Let
the flames be fanned, So
that a voracious fire
blazes").
Scene 2: Inside the
prison of the Temple of
Jupiter
In his prison cell,
Poliuto is asleep and
wakes up, somewhat
confused. He has dreamed
that Paolina is in truth
a loyal and faithful
wife. (Aria: Visione
gradita!... Bella, e di
sol vestita / "A happy
vision! Beautiful in the
sunlight My wife
ascended heavenward.")
Just then, he hears
someone approaching, and
it is Paolina, who has
persuaded the guards to
let her visit him.
Although she explains
that she did love Severo
before meeting Poliuto,
she now wishes nothing
more than his death.
Suspicious, Poliuto asks
why then did she invite
him to meet her at her
father's house, but she
denies that this
happened and explains
that it was a plot by
the High Priest. He
understands, silently
begging for her
forgiveness as he
forgives her before he
will die.
They are reconciled, and
Paolina tells him that
it is arranged that he
need not die if he
renounces his Christian
beliefs. He responds:
"But my soul would be
lost!". Paolina: (Aria:
A' piedi tuoi son io...
Ah! fuggi da morte / "I
am at your feet... Ah!
flee from a death, That
is so horrible".) But
Poliuto is certain that
eternal salvation awaits
him after death: (Aria:
Lasciando la terra, Il
giusto non muore / "The
just man does not die
when leaving the world;
He is reborn in heaven
to a better life").
Coraggio inaudito!
("What incredible
courage"), she exclaims,
and recognising the
strength of his faith,
Paolina begs him to
baptize her, so that she
can die with him. At
first Poliuto is
unwilling to perform the
baptism, but when he
sees that her conversion
is genuine, he agrees:
"Grace has entered your
soul. The road to
salvation has just
opened for you" he tells
her.
Together they sing of
the joys of eternal life
together, Paolina
exclaiming Ah! Il suon
dell'arpe angeliche /
"Ah! I already hear the
sound, of angelic harps
all around me! I see the
light of a hundred and a
hundred more suns
shining!" and then,
together, "It is granted
me to live with you, in
heaven for all
eternity...." The doors
to the amphitheatre
open, revealing huge
crowds waiting for the
condemned.
Severo and his men
arrive to take Poliuto
to the arena. He chooses
death and, when Paolina
declares "I have
embraced the faith of
his God", Severo is
horrified. She demands
to die with her husband,
but Severo continues to
urge her to reconsider,
at the same time as
Callistene and the
assembled priests
continue to demands
their deaths. In spite
of his attempts, Savero
fails to persuade
Paolina to save herself
because of her father,
and the couple proclaim:
"Let us die together".
The signal is heard.
In a concerted finale,
each expresses his or
her feelings: Paolina
and Poliuto (Il suon
dell'arpe angeliche / "I
already hear the sound
of angelic harps");
Callistene, some
Priests, and the
assembled women (Sia
maledetto, Chi reca
insulta, Dei gran
Tonante / "Cursed be he,
who dares insult, the
holy cult"); Savero
(Giove credel, famelico,
Di sangue e di vendetta
/ "Cruel Jupiter,
starving, for blood and
vengeance"); and the
Priests urging then on
to the arena. After one
last attempt to change
Paolina's mind, the
couple, along with the
condemned Christians, go
off to their deaths.
Recordings
Year
Cast
(Poliuto, Paolina,
Severo,
Callistene)
Conductor,
Opera House and
Orchestra
Label
1960
Franco Corelli,
Maria Callas,
Ettore Bastianini,
Nicola
Zaccaria
Antonino Votto
Teatro alla Scala
Orchestra and Chorus
(Recording of a
performance at La Scala,
7
December)
Audio CD: EMI CDMB
Cat: 5 65448-2
1986
José Carreras,
Katia Ricciarelli,
Juan Pons,
László
Polgár
Oleg Caetani
Vienna Symphony
Orchestra
Audio CD: Sony Classical
Cat: CSCR 8119-20
1989
Nicola Martinucci,
Elizabeth Connell,
Renato Bruson,
Franco
Federici
Jan Latham-Koenig
Teatro dell'Opera di
Roma Orchestra and
Chorus
(Live
recording)
Audio CD: Nuova Era
Cat: 6776/77
1993
José Sempere,
Denia Mazzola Gavazzeni,
Simone Alaimo,
Ildebrando
d'Arcangelo
Gianandrea Gavazzeni,
Ochestra Sonfonica
dell'Emilaa Romagna
and the Coro del Teatro
Donizetti di Bergamo.
(Recording of a
performance of the
critical edition
at the Donizetti
Festival in Bergamo,
September)
Audio CD: Ricordi,
Cat: RFCD 2023
2010
Gregory Kunde,
Paoletta Marrocu,
Simone Del Savio,
Andrea
Papi
Marcello Rota,
Bergamo Musica Festival
Orchestra and Chorus
(Recorded at the Teatro
Donizetti, Bergamo,
September)
DVD: Bongiovanni,
Cat: 20021
*
*
*
*
*
Maria
Callas,
Commendatore OMRI
(Greek: Μαρία Κάλλας;
December 2, 1923 –
September 16, 1977), was
an American soprano of
Greek origin, and one of
the most renowned and
influential opera
singers of the 20th
century. Critics praised
her bel canto technique,
wide-ranging voice and
dramatic gifts. Her
repertoire ranged from
classical opera seria to
the bel canto operas of
Donizetti, Bellini and
Rossini and further, to
the works of Verdi and
Puccini; and, in her
early career, to the
music dramas of Wagner.
Her musical and dramatic
talents led to her being
hailed as La Divina.
Born in New York City
and raised by an
overbearing mother, she
received her musical
education in Greece and
established her career
in Italy. Forced to deal
with the exigencies of
wartime poverty and with
myopia that left her
nearly blind onstage,
she endured struggles
and scandal over the
course of her career.
She turned herself from
a heavy woman into a
svelte and glamorous one
after a mid-career
weight loss, which might
have contributed to her
vocal decline and the
premature end of her
career. The press
exulted in publicizing
Callas's allegedly
temperamental behavior,
her supposed rivalry
with Renata Tebaldi and
her love affair with
Aristotle Onassis.
Although her dramatic
life and personal
tragedy have often
overshadowed Callas the
artist in the popular
press, her artistic
achievements were such
that Leonard Bernstein
called her "the Bible of
opera" and her influence
so enduring that, in
2006, Opera News wrote
of her: "Nearly thirty
years after her death,
she's still the
definition of the diva
as artist—and still one
of classical music's
best-selling vocalists."
According to her birth
certificate, Maria
Callas was born Sophia
Cecelia Kalos at Flower
Hospital (now the
Terence Cardinal Cooke
Health Care Center), at
1249 Fifth Avenue in
Manhattan, on December
2, 1923 to Greek parents
George Kalogeropoulos
and Evangelia "Litsa"
(sometimes "Litza")
Dimitriadou, though she
was christened Anna
Maria Sofia Cecilia
Kalogeropoulou (Greek:
Aννα Μαρία Σοφία
Καικιλία
Καλογεροπούλου)—the
genitive of the
patronymic
Kalogeropoulos. Callas's
father had shortened the
surname Kalogeropoulos
first to "Kalos" and
subsequently to "Callas"
in order to make it more
manageable.
George and Evangelia
were an ill-matched
couple from the
beginning; he was
easy-going and
unambitious, with no
interest in the arts,
while his wife was
vivacious and socially
ambitious, and had held
dreams of a life in the
arts for herself. The
situation was aggravated
by George's philandering
and was improved neither
by the birth of a
daughter, named Yakinthi
(later called Jackie),
in 1917 nor the birth of
a son, named Vassilis,
in 1920. Vassilis's
death from meningitis in
the summer of 1922 dealt
another blow to the
marriage. In 1923, after
realizing that Evangelia
was pregnant again,
George made the
unilateral decision to
move his family to
America, a decision
which Yakinthi recalled
was greeted with
Evangelia "shouting
hysterically" followed
by George "slamming
doors". The family left
for New York in July
1923, moving first into
an apartment in Astoria,
Queens.
Evangelia was convinced
that her third child
would be a boy; her
disappointment at the
birth of another
daughter was so great
that she refused to even
look at her new baby for
four days. Maria was
christened three years
later at the
Archdiocesan Cathedral
of the Holy Trinity in
1926. When Maria was 4,
George Callas opened his
own pharmacy, settling
the family in Manhattan
on 192nd Street in
Washington Heights where
Callas grew up.
Around the age of three,
Maria's musical talent
began to manifest
itself, and after
Evangelia discovered
that her youngest
daughter also had a
voice, she began
pressing "Mary" to sing.
Callas later recalled,
"I was made to sing when
I was only five, and I
hated it." George was
unhappy with his wife
favoring their elder
daughter, as well as the
pressure put upon young
Mary to sing and
perform. The marriage
continued to deteriorate
and in 1937 Evangelia
decided to return to
Athens with her two
daughters.
Callas's relationship
with Evangelia continued
to erode during the
years in Greece, and in
the prime of her career,
it became a matter of
great public interest,
especially after a 1956
cover story in Time
magazine which focused
on this relationship and
later, by Evangelia's
book My Daughter – Maria
Callas. In public,
Callas blamed the
strained relationship
with Evangelia on her
unhappy childhood spent
singing and working at
her mother's insistence,
saying,
My sister was slim and
beautiful and friendly,
and my mother always
preferred her. I was the
ugly duckling, fat and
clumsy and unpopular. It
is a cruel thing to make
a child feel ugly and
unwanted... I'll never
forgive her for taking
my childhood away.
During all the years I
should have been playing
and growing up, I was
singing or making money.
Everything I did for
them was mostly good and
everything they did to
me was mostly bad.
In 1957, she told Norman
Ross, "Children should
have a wonderful
childhood. I have not
had it – I wish I had."
On the other hand,
biographer
Petsalis-Diomidis
asserts that it was
actually Evangelia's
hateful treatment of
George in front of their
young children which led
to resentment and
dislike on Callas's
part. According to both
Callas's husband and her
close friend Giulietta
Simionato, Callas
related to them that her
mother, who did not
work, pressed her to "go
out with various men",
mainly Italian and
German soldiers, to
bring home money and
food during the Axis
occupation of Greece
during World War II.
Simionato was convinced
that Callas "managed to
remain untouched", but
Callas never forgave
Evangelia for what she
perceived as a kind of
prostitution forced on
her by her mother. In an
attempt to patch things
up with her mother,
Callas took Evangelia
along on her first visit
to Mexico in 1950, but
this only reawakened the
old frictions and
resentments, and after
leaving Mexico, the two
never met again. After a
series of angry and
accusatory letters from
Evangelia lambasting
Callas's father and
husband, Callas ceased
communication with her
mother altogether.
Callas received her
musical education in
Athens. Initially, her
mother tried to enroll
her at the prestigious
Athens Conservatoire,
without success. At the
audition, her voice,
still untrained, failed
to impress, while the
conservatoire's director
Filoktitis Oikonomidis
refused to accept her
without her satisfying
the theoretic
prerequisites (solfege).
In the summer of 1937,
her mother visited Maria
Trivella at the younger
Greek National
Conservatoire, asking
her to take Mary, as she
was then called, as a
student for a modest
fee. In 1957, Trivella
recalled her impression
of "Mary, a very plump
young girl, wearing big
glasses for her myopia":
The tone of the voice
was warm, lyrical,
intense; it swirled and
flared like a flame and
filled the air with
melodious reverberations
like a carillon. It was
by any standards an
amazing phenomenon, or
rather it was a great
talent that needed
control, technical
training and strict
discipline in order to
shine with all its
brilliance.
Trivella agreed to tutor
Callas completely,
waiving her tuition
fees, but no sooner had
Callas started her
formal lessons and vocal
exercises than Trivella
began to feel that
Callas was not a
contralto, as she had
been told, but a
dramatic soprano.
Subsequently, they began
working on raising the
tessitura of her voice
and to lighten its
timbre. Trivella
recalled Callas as "A
model student.
Fanatical,
uncompromising,
dedicated to her studies
heart and soul. Her
progress was phenomenal.
She studied five or six
hours a day. ...Within
six months, she was
singing the most
difficult arias in the
international opera
repertoire with the
utmost musicality". On
April 11, 1938, in her
public debut, Callas
ended the recital of
Trivella's class at the
Parnassos music hall
with a duet from Tosca.
Callas recalled that
Trivella "had a French
method, which was
placing the voice in the
nose, rather nasal...
and I had the problem of
not having low chest
tones, which is
essential in bel
canto... And that's
where I learned my chest
tones." However, when
interviewed by Pierre
Desgraupes on the French
program L'Invitee Du
Dimanche, Callas
attributed the
development of her chest
voice not to Trivella,
but to her next teacher,
the well-known Spanish
coloratura soprano
Elvira de Hidalgo.
Callas studied with
Trivella for two years
before her mother
secured another audition
at the Athens
Conservatoire with de
Hidalgo. Callas
auditioned with "Ocean,
Thou Mighty Monster." De
Hidalgo recalled hearing
"tempestuous,
extravagant cascades of
sounds, as yet
uncontrolled but full of
drama and emotion". She
agreed to take her as a
pupil immediately, but
Callas's mother asked de
Hidalgo to wait for a
year, as Callas would be
graduating from the
National Conservatoire
and could begin working.
On April 2, 1939, Callas
undertook the part of
Santuzza in a student
production of Mascagni's
Cavalleria rusticana at
the Olympia Theatre, and
in the fall of the same
year she enrolled at the
Athens Conservatoire in
Elvira de Hidalgo's
class.
In 1968, Callas told
Lord Harewood,
De Hildalgo had the real
great training, maybe
even the last real
training of the real bel
canto. As a young
girl—thirteen years
old—I was immediately
thrown into her arms,
meaning that I learned
the secrets, the ways of
this bel canto, which of
course as you well know,
is not just beautiful
singing. It is a very
hard training; it is a
sort of a strait-jacket
that you're supposed to
put on, whether you like
it or not. You have to
learn to read, to write,
to form your sentences,
how far you can go,
fall, hurt yourself, put
yourself back on your
feet continuously. De
Hidalgo had one method,
which was the real bel
canto way, where no
matter how heavy a
voice, it should always
be kept light, it should
always be worked on in a
flexible way, never to
weigh it down. It is a
method of keeping the
voice light and flexible
and pushing the
instrument into a
certain zone where it
might not be too large
in sound, but
penetrating. And
teaching the scales,
trills, all the bel
canto embellishments,
which is a whole vast
language of its own.
De Hidalgo later
recalled Callas as "a
phenomenon... She would
listen to all my
students, sopranos,
mezzos, tenors... She
could do it all." Callas
herself said that she
would go to "the
conservatoire at 10 in
the morning and leave
with the last pupil ...
devouring music" for 10
hours a day. When asked
by her teacher why she
did this, her answer was
that even "with the
least talented pupil, he
can teach you something
that you, the most
talented, might not be
able to do."
After several
appearances as a
student, Callas began
appearing in secondary
roles at the Greek
National Opera. De
Hidalgo was instrumental
in securing roles for
her, allowing Callas to
earn a small salary,
which helped her and her
family get through the
difficult war years.
Callas made her
professional debut in
February 1941, in the
small role of Beatrice
in Franz von Suppé's
Boccaccio. Soprano
Galatea Amaxopoulou, who
sang in the chorus,
later recalled, "Even in
rehearsal, Maria's
fantastic performing
ability had been
obvious. and from then
on, the others started
trying ways of
preventing her from
appearing." Fellow
singer Maria Alkeou
similarly recalled that
the established sopranos
Nafsika Galanou and Anna
(Zozó) Remmoundou "used
to stand in the wings
while [Callas] was
singing and make remarks
about her, muttering,
laughing, and point
their fingers at her".
Despite these
hostilities, Callas
managed to continue and
made her debut in a
leading role in August
1942 as Tosca, going on
to sing the role of
Marta in Eugen
d'Albert's Tiefland at
the Olympia Theatre.
Callas's performance as
Marta received glowing
reviews. Critic Spanoudi
declared Callas "an
extremely dynamic artist
possessing the rarest
dramatic and musical
gifts", and Vangelis
Mangliveras evaluated
Callas's performance for
the weekly To
Radiophonon:
The singer who took the
part of Marta, that new
star in the Greek
firmament, with a
matchless depth of
feeling, gave a
theatrical
interpretation well up
to the standard of a
tragic actress. About
her exceptional voice
with its astonishing
natural fluency, I do
not wish to add anything
to the words of
Alexandra Lalaouni:
'Kaloyeropoulou is one
of those God-given
talents that one can
only marvel at.'
Following these
performances, even
Callas's detractors
began to refer to her as
"The God-Given". Some
time later, watching
Callas rehearse
Beethoven's Fidelio,
erstwhile rival soprano
Remoundou asked a
colleague, "Could it be
that there is something
divine and we haven't
realized it?" Following
Tiefland, Callas sang
the role of Santuzza in
Cavalleria rusticana
again and followed it
with O Protomastoras at
the ancient Odeon of
Herodes Atticus theatre
at the foot of the
Acropolis.
During August and
September 1944, Callas
performed the role of
Leonore in a Greek
language production of
Fidelio, again at the
Odeon of Herodes
Atticus. German critic
Friedrich Herzog, who
witnessed the
performances, declared
Leonore Callas's
"greatest triumph":
When Maria
Kaloyeropoulou's Leonore
let her soprano soar out
radiantly in the
untrammelled jubilation
of the duet, she rose to
the most sublime
heights.... Here she
gave bud, blossom and
fruit to that harmony of
sound that also ennobled
the art of the prima
donne.
After the liberation of
Greece, de Hidalgo
advised Callas to
establish herself in
Italy. Callas proceeded
to give a series of
concerts around Greece,
and then, against her
teacher's advice, she
returned to America to
see her father and to
further pursue her
career. When she left
Greece on September 14,
1945, two months short
of her 22nd birthday,
Callas had given 56
performances in seven
operas and had appeared
in around 20 recitals.
Callas considered her
Greek career as the
foundation of her
musical and dramatic
upbringing, saying,
"When I got to the big
career, there were no
surprises for me."
After returning to the
United States and
reuniting with her
father in September
1945, Callas made the
round of auditions. In
December of that year,
she auditioned for
Edward Johnson, general
manager of the
Metropolitan Opera, and
was favorably received:
"Exceptional voice—ought
to be heard very soon on
stage". Callas
maintained that the Met
offered her Madama
Butterfly and Fidelio,
to be performed in
Philadelphia and sung in
English, both of which
she declined, feeling
she was too fat for
Butterfly and did not
like the idea of opera
in English. Although no
written evidence of this
offer exists in the
Met's records, in a 1958
interview with The New
York Post, Johnson
corroborated Callas's
story: "We offered her a
contract, but she didn't
like it—because of the
contract, not because of
the roles. She was right
in turning it down—it
was frankly a beginner's
contract."
In 1946, Callas was
engaged to re-open the
opera house in Chicago
as Turandot, but the
company folded before
opening. Basso Nicola
Rossi-Lemeni, who also
was to star in this
opera, was aware that
Tullio Serafin was
looking for a dramatic
soprano to cast as La
Gioconda at the Arena di
Verona. He later
recalled the young
Callas as being
"amazing—so strong
physically and
spiritually; so certain
of her future. I knew in
a big outdoor theatre
like Verona's, this
girl, with her courage
and huge voice, would
make a tremendous
impact." Subsequently he
recommended Callas to
retired tenor and
impresario Giovanni
Zenatello. During her
audition, Zenatello
became so excited that
he jumped up and joined
Callas in the Act 4
duet. It was in this
role that Callas made
her Italian debut.
Upon her arrival in
Verona, Callas met
Giovanni Battista
Meneghini, an older,
wealthy industrialist,
who began courting her.
They married in 1949,
and he assumed control
of her career until
1959, when the marriage
dissolved. It was
Meneghini's love and
support that gave Callas
the time needed to
establish herself in
Italy, and throughout
the prime of her career,
she went by the name of
Maria Meneghini Callas.
After La Gioconda,
Callas had no further
offers, and when
Serafin, looking for
someone to sing Isolde,
called on her, she told
him that she already
knew the score, even
though she had looked at
only the first act out
of curiosity while at
the conservatory. She
sight-read the opera's
second act for Serafin,
who praised her for
knowing the role so
well, whereupon she
admitted to having
bluffed and having
sight-read the music.
Even more impressed,
Serafin immediately cast
her in the role. Serafin
thereafter served as
Callas's mentor and
supporter.
According to Lord
Harewood, "Very few
Italian conductors have
had a more distinguished
career than Tullio
Serafin, and perhaps
none, apart from
Toscanini, more
influence". In 1968,
Callas recalled that
working with Serafin was
the "really lucky"
opportunity of her
career, because "he
taught me that there
must be an expression;
that there must be a
justification. He taught
me the depth of music,
the justification of
music. That's where I
really really drank all
I could from this man".
The great turning point
in Callas's career
occurred in Venice in
1949. She was engaged to
sing the role of
Brünnhilde in Die
Walküre at the Teatro la
Fenice, when Margherita
Carosio, who was engaged
to sing Elvira in I
puritani in the same
theatre, fell ill.
Unable to find a
replacement for Carosio,
Maestro Serafin told
Callas that she would be
singing Elvira in six
days; when Callas
protested that she not
only did not know the
role, but also had three
more Brünnhildes to
sing, he told her "I
guarantee that you can."
Michael Scott's words,
"the notion of any one
singer embracing music
as divergent in its
vocal demands as
Wagner's Brünnhilde and
Bellini's Elvira in the
same career would have
been cause enough for
surprise; but to attempt
to essay them both in
the same season seemed
like folie de grandeur".
Before the performance
actually took place, one
incredulous critic
snorted, "We hear that
Serafin has agreed to
conduct I puritani with
a dramatic soprano...
When can we expect a new
edition of La traviata
with [baritone] Gino
Bechi's Violetta?" After
the performance, one
critic wrote, "Even the
most sceptical had to
acknowledge the miracle
that Maria Callas
accomplished... the
flexibility of her
limpid, beautifully
poised voice, and her
splendid high notes. Her
interpretation also has
a humanity, warmth and
expressiveness that one
would search for in vain
in the fragile, pellucid
coldness of other
Elviras." Franco
Zeffirelli recalled,
"What she did in Venice
was really incredible.
You need to be familiar
with opera to realize
the enormity of her
achievement. It was as
if someone asked Birgit
Nilsson, who is famous
for her great Wagnerian
voice, to substitute
overnight for Beverly
Sills, who is one of the
great coloratura
sopranos of our time."
Scott asserts that "Of
all the many roles
Callas undertook, it is
doubtful if any had a
more far-reaching
effect." This initial
foray into the bel canto
repertoire changed the
course of Callas's
career and set her on a
path leading to Lucia di
Lammermoor, La traviata,
Armida, La sonnambula,
Il pirata, Il turco in
Italia, Medea and Anna
Bolena, and reawakened
interest in the
long-neglected operas of
Cherubini, Bellini,
Donizetti and Rossini.
In the words of soprano
Montserrat Caballé,
She opened a new door
for us, for all the
singers in the world, a
door that had been
closed. Behind it was
sleeping not only great
music but great idea of
interpretation. She has
given us the chance,
those who follow her, to
do things that were
hardly possible before
her. That I am compared
with Callas is something
I never dared to dream.
It is not right. I am
much smaller than
Callas.
As with I puritani,
Callas also learned and
performed Cherubini's
Medea, Giordano's Andrea
Chénier and Rossini's
Armida on a few days'
notice. Throughout her
career, Callas displayed
her vocal versatility in
recitals that pitched
dramatic soprano arias
alongside coloratura
pieces, including in a
1952 RAI recital in
which she opened with
Lady Macbeth's "letter
scene", followed by the
"Mad Scene" from Lucia
di Lammermoor, then
Abigaile's treacherous
recitative and aria from
Nabucco, finishing with
the "Bell Song" from
Lakmé capped by a
ringing high E in alt
(E6).
Although by 1951, Callas
had sung at all the
major theatres in Italy,
she had not yet made her
official debut at
Italy's most prestigious
opera house, Teatro alla
Scala in Milan.
According to composer
Gian-Carlo Menotti,
Callas had substituted
for Renata Tebaldi in
the role of Aida in
1950, and La Scala's
general manager, Antonio
Ghiringhelli, had taken
an immediate dislike to
Callas. Menotti recalls
that Ghiringhelli had
promised him any singer
he wanted for the
premiere of The Consul,
but when he suggested
Callas, Ghiringhelli
said that he would never
have Callas at La Scala
except as a guest
artist. However, as
Callas's fame grew, and
especially after her
great success in I
vespri siciliani in
Florence, Ghiringhelli
had to relent: Callas
made her official debut
at La Scala in Verdi's I
vespri siciliani on
opening night in
December 1951, and this
theatre became her
artistic home throughout
the 1950s. La Scala
mounted many new
productions specially
for Callas by directors
such as Herbert von
Karajan, Margherita
Wallmann, Franco
Zeffirelli and, most
importantly, Luchino
Visconti. Visconti
stated later that he
began directing opera
only because of Callas,
and he directed her in
lavish new productions
of La vestale, La
traviata, La sonnambula,
Anna Bolena and
Iphigénie en Tauride.
Callas was notably
instrumental in
arranging Franco
Corelli's debut at La
Scala in 1954, where he
sang Licinio in
Spontini's La vestale
opposite Callas's Julia.
The two had sung
together for the first
time the year previously
in Rome in a production
of Norma. Anthony
Tommasini wrote that
Corelli had "earned
great respect from the
fearsomely demanding
Callas, who, in Mr
Corelli, finally had
someone with whom she
could act." The two
collaborated several
more times at La Scala,
singing opposite each
other in productions of
Fedora (1956), Il pirata
(1958) and Poliuto
(1960). Their
partnership continued
throughout the rest of
Callas's career.
The night of the day she
married Meneghini in
Verona, she sailed for
Argentina to sing at the
Teatro Colón in Buenos
Aires. Callas made her
South American debut in
Buenos Aires on May 20,
1949, during the
European summer opera
recess. Aida, Turandot
and Norma roles were
directed by Tullio
Serafin, supported by
Mario Del Monaco, Fedora
Barbieri and Nicola
Rossi-Lemeni. It was her
only appearance on this
world renowned stage.
Her debut in America was
five years later in
Chicago in 1954, and
"with the Callas Norma,
Lyric Opera of Chicago
was born." Her
Metropolitan Opera
debut, opening the Met's
seventy-second season on
October 29, 1956, was
again with Norma, but
was preceded with an
unflattering cover story
in Time magazine, which
rehashed all of the
Callas clichés,
including her temper,
her supposed rivalry
with Renata Tebaldi and
especially her difficult
relationship with her
mother. As she had done
with Lyric Opera of
Chicago, on November 21,
1957, Callas gave a
concert to inaugurate
what then was billed as
the Dallas Civic Opera,
and helped establish
that company with her
friends from Chicago,
Lawrence Kelly and
Maestro Nicola Rescigno.
She further consolidated
this company's standing
when, in 1958, she gave
"a towering performance
as Violetta in La
traviata, and that same
year, in her only
American performances of
Medea, gave an
interpretation of the
title role worthy of
Euripides."
In 1958, a feud with
Rudolf Bing led to
Callas's Metropolitan
Opera contract being
cancelled. Impresario
Allen Oxenburg realised
that this situation
provided him with an
opportunity for his own
company, the American
Opera Society, and he
accordingly approached
her with a contract to
perform Imogene in Il
pirata. She accepted and
sang the role in a
January 1959 performance
that according to opera
critic Allan Kozinn
"quickly became
legendary in operatic
circles". Bing and
Callas later reconciled
their differences, and
she returned to the
house in 1965 to sing
the title role in two
performances as Tosca
opposite Franco Corelli
as Cavaradossi for one
performance (March 19,
1965) and Richard Tucker
(March 25, 1965) with
Tito Gobbi as Scarpia
for her final
performances at the Met.
In 1952, she made her
London debut at the
Royal Opera House in
Norma with veteran
mezzo-soprano Ebe
Stignani as Adalgisa, a
performance which
survives on record and
also features the young
Joan Sutherland in the
small role of Clotilde.
Callas and the London
public had what she
herself called "a love
affair", and she
returned to the Royal
Opera House in 1953,
1957, 1958, 1959, and
1964 to 1965. It was at
the Royal Opera House
where, on July 5, 1965,
Callas ended her stage
career in the role of
Tosca, in a production
designed and mounted for
her by Franco Zeffirelli
and featuring her friend
and colleague Tito
Gobbi.
In the early years of
her career, Callas was a
heavy and full-figured
woman; in her own words,
"Heavy—one can say—yes I
was; but I'm also a tall
woman, 5' 8½" [174
centimeters], and I used
to weigh no more than
200 pounds [91
kilograms]." Tito Gobbi
relates that during a
lunch break while
recording Lucia in
Florence, Serafin
commented to Callas that
she was eating too much
and allowing her weight
to become a problem.
When she protested that
she wasn't so heavy,
Gobbi suggested she
should "put the matter
to test" by stepping on
the weighing machine
outside the restaurant.
The result was "somewhat
dismaying, and she
became rather silent."
In 1968, Callas told
Edward Downes that
during her initial
performances in
Cherubini's Medea in May
1953, she realized that
she needed a leaner face
and figure to do
dramatic justice to this
as well as the other
roles she was
undertaking. She adds,
I was getting so heavy
that even my vocalizing
was getting heavy. I was
tiring myself, I was
perspiring too much, and
I was really working too
hard. And I wasn't
really well, as in
health; I couldn't move
freely. And then I was
tired of playing a game,
for instance playing
this beautiful young
woman, and I was heavy
and uncomfortable to
move around. In any
case, it was
uncomfortable and I
didn't like it. So I
felt now if I'm going to
do things right—I've
studied all my life to
put things right
musically, so why don't
I diet and put myself
into a certain condition
where I'm presentable.
During 1953 and early
1954, she lost almost 80
pounds (36 kg), turning
herself into what
Maestro Rescigno called
"possibly the most
beautiful lady on the
stage". Sir Rudolf Bing,
who remembered Callas as
being "monstrously fat"
in 1951, stated that
after the weight loss,
Callas was an
"astonishing, svelte,
striking woman" who
"showed none of the
signs one usually finds
in a fat woman who has
lost weight: she looked
as though she had been
born to that slender and
graceful figure, and had
always moved with that
elegance." Various
rumors spread regarding
her weight loss method;
one had her swallowing a
tapeworm, while Rome's
Panatella Mills pasta
company claimed she lost
weight by eating their
"physiologic pasta",
prompting Callas to file
a lawsuit. Callas stated
that she lost the weight
by eating a sensible
low-calorie diet of
mainly salads and
chicken.
Some believe that the
loss of body mass made
it more difficult for
her to support her
voice, triggering the
vocal strain that became
apparent later in the
decade (see vocal
decline), while others
believed the weight loss
effected a newfound
softness and femininity
in her voice, as well as
a greater confidence as
a person and performer.
Tito Gobbi said, "Now
she was not only
supremely gifted both
musically and
dramatically—she was a
beauty too. And her
awareness of this
invested with fresh
magic every role she
undertook. What it
eventually did to her
vocal and nervous
stamina I am not
prepared to say. I only
assert that she
blossomed into an artist
unique in her generation
and outstanding in the
whole range of vocal
history."
Callas's voice was and
remains controversial;
it bothered and
disturbed as many as it
thrilled and inspired.
Walter Legge stated that
Callas possessed that
most essential
ingredient for a great
singer: an instantly
recognizable voice.
During "The Callas
Debate", Italian critic
Rodolfo Celletti stated,
"The timbre of Callas's
voice, considered purely
as sound, was
essentially ugly: it was
a thick sound, which
gave the impression of
dryness, of aridity. It
lacked those elements
which, in a singer's
jargon, are described as
velvet and varnish...
yet I really believe
that part of her appeal
was precisely due to
this fact. Why? Because
for all its natural lack
of varnish, velvet and
richness, this voice
could acquire such
distinctive colours and
timbres as to be
unforgettable." However,
in his review of
Callas's 1951 live
recording of I vespri
siciliani, Ira Siff
writes, "Accepted wisdom
tells us that Callas
possessed, even early
on, a flawed voice,
unattractive by
conventional
standards—an instrument
that signaled from the
beginning vocal problems
to come. Yet listen to
her entrance in this
performance and one
encounters a rich,
spinning sound,
ravishing by any
standard, capable of
delicate dynamic nuance.
High notes are free of
wobble, chest tones
unforced, and the middle
register displays none
of the "bottled" quality
that became more and
more pronounced as
Callas matured."
Nicola Rossi-Lemeni
relates that Callas's
mentor Tullio Serafin
used to refer to her as
"Una grande vociaccia";
he continues, "Vociaccia
is a little bit
pejorative—it means an
ugly voice—but grande
means a big voice, a
great voice. A great
ugly voice, in a way."
Callas herself did not
like the sound of her
own voice; in one of her
last interviews,
answering whether or not
she was able to listen
to her own voice, she
replies,
Yes, but I don't like
it. I have to do it, but
I don't like it at all
because I don't like the
kind of voice I have. I
really hate listening to
myself! The first time I
listened to a recording
of my singing was when
we were recording San
Giovanni Battista by
Stradella in a church in
Perugia in 1949. They
made me listen to the
tape and I cried my eyes
out. I wanted to stop
everything, to give up
singing... Also now even
though I don't like my
voice, I've become able
to accept it and to be
detached and objective
about it so I can say,
"Oh, that was really
well sung," or "It was
nearly perfect."
Maestro Carlo Maria
Giulini has described
the appeal of Callas's
voice:
It is very difficult to
speak of the voice of
Callas. Her voice was a
very special instrument.
Something happens
sometimes with string
instruments—violin,
viola, cello—where the
first moment you listen
to the sound of this
instrument, the first
feeling is a bit strange
sometimes. But after
just a few minutes, when
you get used to, when
you become friends with
this kind of sound, then
the sound becomes a
magical quality. This
was Callas.
Callas's voice has been
difficult to place in
the modern vocal
classification or Fach
system, especially since
in her prime, her
repertoire contained the
heaviest dramatic
soprano roles as well as
roles usually undertaken
by the highest, lightest
and most agile
coloratura sopranos.
Regarding this
versatility, Maestro
Tullio Serafin said,
"This woman can sing
anything written for the
female voice". Michael
Scott argues that
Callas's voice was a
natural high soprano,
and going by evidence of
Callas's early
recordings, Rosa
Ponselle likewise felt
that "At that stage of
its development, her
voice was a pure but
sizable dramatic
coloratura—that is to
say, a sizable
coloratura voice with
dramatic capabilities,
not the other way
around." On the other
hand, music critic John
Ardoin has argued that
Callas was the
reincarnation of the
19th century soprano
sfogato or "unlimited
soprano", a throwback to
Maria Malibran and
Giuditta Pasta, for whom
many of the famous bel
canto operas were
written. He avers that
like Pasta and Malibran,
Callas was a natural
mezzo-soprano whose
range was extended
through training and
willpower, resulting in
a voice which "lacked
the homogeneous color
and evenness of scale
once so prized in
singing. There were
unruly sections of their
voices never fully under
control. Many who heard
Pasta, for example,
remarked that her
uppermost notes seemed
produced by
ventriloquism, a charge
which would later be
made against Callas".
Ardoin points to the
writings of Henry
Fothergill Chorley about
Pasta which bear an
uncanny resemblance to
descriptions of Callas:
"There was a portion of
the scale which differed
from the rest in quality
and remained to the last
'under a veil.' ...out
of these uncouth
materials she had to
compose her instrument
and then to give it
flexibility. Her studies
to acquire execution
must have been
tremendous; but the
volubility and
brilliancy, when
acquired, gained a
character of their
own... There were a
breadth, an
expressiveness in her
roulades, an evenness
and solidity in her
shake, which imparted to
every passage a
significance totally
beyond the reach of
lighter and more
spontaneous singers...
The best of her audience
were held in thrall,
without being able to
analyze what made up the
spell, what produced the
effect—as soon as she
opened her lips".
Callas herself appears
to have been in
agreement not only with
Ardoin's assertions that
she started as a natural
mezzo-soprano, but also
saw the similarities
between herself and
Pasta and Malibran. In
1957, she described her
early voice as: "The
timbre was dark, almost
black—when I think of
it, I think of thick
molasses", and in 1968
she added, "They say I
was not a true soprano,
I was rather toward a
mezzo". Regarding her
ability to sing the
heaviest as well as the
lightest roles, she told
James Fleetwood,
"It's study; it's
Nature. I'm doing
nothing special, you
know. Even Lucia, Anna
Bolena, Puritani, all
these operas were
created for one type of
soprano, the type that
sang Norma, Fidelio,
which was Malibran of
course. And a funny
coincidence last year, I
was singing Anna Bolena
and Sonnambula, same
months and the same
distance of time as
Giuditta Pasta had sung
in the Nineteenth
Century... So I'm really
not doing anything
extraordinary. You
wouldn't ask a pianist
not to be able to play
everything; he has to.
This is Nature and also
because I had a
wonderful teacher, the
old kind of teaching
methods... I was a very
heavy voice, that is my
nature, a dark voice
shall we call it, and I
was always kept on the
light side. She always
trained me to keep my
voice limber".
Regarding the sheer size
of Callas's instrument,
Celletti says, "Her
voice was penetrating.
The volume as such was
average: neither small
nor powerful. But the
penetration, allied to
this incisive quality
(which bordered on the
ugly because it
frequently contained an
element of harshness)
ensured that her voice
could be clearly heard
anywhere in the
auditorium." Yet,
paradoxically enough, in
Le grandi voci, Celletti
states that Callas had
not a mere penetrating
voice but "a voluminous,
resonant and dark" one
("una voce voluminosa,
squillante e di timbro
scuro"). After her first
performance of Medea in
1953, the critic for
Musical Courier wrote
that "she displayed a
vocal generosity that
was scarcely believable
for its amplitude and
resilience." In a 1982
Opera News interview
with Joan Sutherland and
Richard Bonynge, Bonynge
stated, "But before she
slimmed down, I mean
this was such a colossal
voice. It just poured
out of her, the way
Flagstad's did....
Callas had a huge voice.
When she and Stignani
sang Norma, at the
bottom of the range you
could barely tell who
was who ... Oh it was
colossal. And she took
the big sound right up
to the top." In his
book, Michael Scott
makes the distinction
that whereas Callas's
pre-1954 voice was a
"dramatic soprano with
an exceptional top",
after the weight loss,
it became, as one
Chicago critic described
the voice in Lucia, a
"huge soprano leggiero".
In performance, Callas's
vocal range was just
short of three octaves,
from F-sharp (F♯3) below
middle C (C4) heard in
"Arrigo! Ah parli a un
core" from I vespri
siciliani to E-natural
(E6) above high C (C6),
heard in the aria
"Mercè, dilette amiche"
in the final act of the
same opera, as well as
in Rossini's Armida and
Lakmé's Bell Song.
Whether or not Callas
ever sang a high
F-natural in performance
has been open to debate.
After her June 11, 1951
concert in Florence,
Rock Ferris of Musical
Courier said, "Her high
E's and F's are taken
full voice." Although no
definite recording of
Callas singing high F's
have surfaced, the
presumed E-natural at
the end of Rossini's
Armida—a poor-quality
bootleg recording of
uncertain pitch—has been
referred to as a high F
by Italian musicologists
and critics Eugenio Gara
and Rodolfo Celletti.
Callas expert Dr. Robert
Seletsky, however,
stated that since the
finale of Armida is in
the key of E, the final
note could not have been
an F, as it would have
been dissonant. Author
Eve Ruggieri has
referred to the
penultimate note in
"Mercè, dilette amiche"
from the 1951 Florence
performances of I vespri
siciliani as a high F;
however, this claim is
refuted by John Ardoin's
review of the live
recording of the
performance as well as
by the review of the
recording in Opera News,
both of which refer to
the note as a high
E-natural. In a 1969
French television
interview with Pierre
Desgraupes on the
program L'invitée du
dimanche, maestro
Francesco Siciliani
speaks of Callas's voice
going to high F (he also
talk about her lower
register extending to
C3), but within the same
program, Callas's
teacher, Elvira de
Hidalgo, speaks of the
voice soaring to a high
E-natural but does not
mention a high F;
meanwhile, Callas
herself remains silent
on the subject, neither
agreeing nor disagreeing
with either claim.
Callas's voice was noted
for its three distinct
registers: Her low or
chest register was
extremely dark and
almost baritonal in
power, and she used this
part of her voice for
dramatic effect, often
going into this register
much higher on the scale
than most sopranos. Her
middle register had a
peculiar and highly
personal sound—"part
oboe, part clarinet", as
Claudia Cassidy
described it—and was
noted for its veiled or
"bottled" sound, as if
she were singing into a
jug. Walter Legge
attributed this sound to
the "extraordinary
formation of her upper
palate, shaped like a
Gothic arch, not the
Romanesque arch of the
normal mouth". The upper
register was ample and
bright, with an
impressive extension
above high C, which—in
contrast to the light
flute-like sound of the
typical coloratura, "she
would attack these notes
with more vehemence and
power—quite differently
therefore, from the very
delicate, cautious,
'white' approach of the
light sopranos." Legge
adds, "Even in the most
difficult fioriture
there were no musical or
technical difficulties
in this part of the
voice which she could
not execute with
astonishing,
unostentatious ease. Her
chromatic runs,
particularly downwards,
were beautifully smooth
and staccatos almost
unfailingly accurate,
even in the trickiest
intervals. There is
hardly a bar in the
whole range of
nineteenth century music
for high soprano that
seriously tested her
powers." And as she
demonstrated in the
finale of La sonnambula
on the commercial EMI
set and the live
recording from Cologne,
she was able to execute
a diminuendo on the
stratospheric high
E-flat, which Scott
describes as "a feat
unrivaled in the history
of the gramophone."
Regarding Callas's soft
singing, Celletti says,
"In these soft passages,
Callas seemed to use
another voice
altogether, because it
acquired a great
sweetness. Whether in
her florid singing or in
her canto spianato, that
is, in long held notes
without ornamentation,
her mezza-voce could
achieve such moving
sweetness that the sound
seemed to come from on
high ... I don't know,
it seemed to come from
the skylight of La
Scala."
This combination of
size, weight, range and
agility was a source of
amazement to Callas's
own contemporaries. One
of the choristers
present at her La Scala
debut in I vespri
siciliani recalled, "My
God! She came on stage
sounding like our
deepest contralto, Cloe
Elmo. And before the
evening was over, she
took a high E-flat. And
it was twice as strong
as Toti Dal Monte's!" In
the same vein,
mezzo-soprano Giulietta
Simionato said: "The
first time we sang
together was in Mexico
in 1950, where she sang
the top E-flat in the
second-act finale of
Aida. I can still
remember the effect of
that note in the opera
house—it was like a
star!" For Italian
soprano Renata Tebaldi,
"the most fantastic
thing was the
possibility for her to
sing the soprano
coloratura with this big
voice! This was
something really
special. Fantastic
absolutely!"
Callas's vocal
registers, however, were
not seamlessly joined;
Walter Legge writes,
"Unfortunately, it was
only in quick music,
particularly descending
scales, that she
completely mastered the
art of joining the three
almost incompatible
voices into one unified
whole, but until about
1960, she disguised
those audible gear
changes with cunning
skill." Rodolfo Celletti
states,
In certain areas of her
range her voice also
possessed a guttural
quality. This would
occur in the most
delicate and troublesome
areas of a soprano's
voice—for instance where
the lower and middle
registers merge, between
G and A. I would go so
far as to say that here
her voice had such
resonances as to make
one think at times of a
ventriloquist ... or
else the voice could
sound as though it were
resonating in a rubber
tube. There was another
troublesome spot ...
between the middle and
upper registers. Here,
too, around the treble F
and G, there was often
something in the sound
itself which was not
quite right, as though
the voice were not
functioning properly.
As to whether these
troublesome spots were
due to the nature of the
voice itself or to
technical deficiencies,
Celletti says: "Even if,
when passing from one
register to another,
Callas produced an
unpleasant sound, the
technique she used for
these transitions was
perfect." Musicologist
and critic Fedele
D'Amico adds, "Callas's
'faults' were in the
voice and not in the
singer; they are so to
speak, faults of
departure but not of
arrival. This is
precisely Celletti's
distinction between the
natural quality of the
voice and the
technique." In 2005, Ewa
Podleś said of Callas,
"Maybe she had three
voices, maybe she had
three ranges, I don't
know—I am a professional
singer. Nothing
disturbed me, nothing! I
bought everything that
she offered me. Why?
Because all of her
voices, her registers,
she used how they should
be used—just to tell us
something!"
Eugenio Gara states,
"Much has been said
about her voice, and no
doubt the discussion
will continue. Certainly
no one could in honesty
deny the harsh or
"squashed" sounds, nor
the wobble on the very
high notes. These and
others were precisely
the accusations made at
the time against Pasta
and Malibran, two
geniuses of song (as
they were then called),
sublime, yet imperfect.
Both were brought to
trial in their day. ...
Yet few singers have
made history in the
annals of opera as these
two did."
Though adored by many
opera enthusiasts,
Callas was a
controversial artist.
While Callas was the
great singer often
dismissed simply as an
actress she considered
herself first and
foremost "a musician,
that is, the first
instrument of the
orchestra." Grace Bumbry
states, "If I followed
the musical score when
she was singing, I would
see every tempo marking,
every dynamic marking,
everything being adhered
to, and at the same
time, it was not
antiseptic; it was
something that was very
beautiful and
moving." Maestro
Victor de Sabata
confided to Walter
Legge, "If the public
could understand, as we
do, how deeply and
utterly musical Callas
is, they would be
stunned", and Maestro
Tullio Serafin assessed
Callas's musicality as
"extraordinary, almost
frightening." Callas
possessed an innate
architectural sense of
line-proportion and an
uncanny feel for timing
and for what one of her
colleagues described as
"a sense of the rhythm
within the rhythm".
Regarding Callas's
technical prowess,
Celletti says, "We must
not forget that she
could tackle the whole
gamut of ornamentation:
staccato, trills,
half-trills, gruppetti,
scales, etc." D'Amico
adds, "The essential
virtue of Callas's
technique consists of
supreme mastery of an
extraordinarily rich
range of tone colour
(that is, the fusion of
dynamic range and
timbre). And such
mastery means total
freedom of choice in its
use: not being a slave
to one's abilities, but
rather, being able to
use them at will as a
means to an end." While
reviewing the many
recorded versions of
"perhaps Verdi's
ultimate challenge", the
aria "D'amor sull'ali
rosee" from Il
Trovatore, Richard Dyer
writes,
Callas articulates all
of the trills, and she
binds them into the line
more expressively than
anyone else; they are
not an ornament but a
form of intensification.
Part of the wonder in
this performance is the
chiaroscuro through her
tone—the other side of
not singing full-out all
the way through. One of
the vocal devices that
create that chiaroscuro
is a varying rate of
vibrato; another is her
portamento, the way she
connects the voice from
note to note, phrase to
phrase, lifting and
gliding. This is never a
sloppy swoop, because
its intention is as
musically precise as it
is in great string
playing. In this aria,
Callas uses more
portamento, and in
greater variety, than
any other singer ...
Callas is not creating
"effects", as even her
greatest rivals do. She
sees the aria as a
whole, "as if in an
aerial view", as
Sviatoslav Richter's
teacher observed of his
most famous pupil;
simultaneously, she is
on earth, standing in
the courtyard of the
palace of Aliaferia,
floating her voice to
the tower where her
lover lies imprisoned.
In addition to her
musical skills, Callas
had a particular gift
for language and the use
of language in music. In
recitatives, she always
knew which word to
emphasize and which
syllable in that word to
bring out. Michael Scott
notes, "If we listen
attentively, we note how
her perfect legato
enables her to suggest
by musical means even
the exclamation marks
and commas of the text."
Technically, not only
did she have the
capacity to perform the
most difficult florid
music effortlessly, but
also she had the ability
to use each ornament as
an expressive device
rather than for mere
fireworks. Soprano
Martina Arroyo states,
"What interested me most
was how she gave the
runs and the cadenzas
words. That always
floored me. I always
felt I heard her saying
something—it was never
just singing notes. That
alone is an art." Walter
Legge states that,
Most admirable of all
her qualities, however,
were her taste, elegance
and deeply musical use
of ornamentation in all
its forms and
complications, the
weighting and length of
every appoggiatura, the
smooth incorporation of
the turn in melodic
lines, the accuracy and
pacing of her trills,
the seemingly inevitable
timing of her
portamentos, varying
their curve with
enchanting grace and
meaning. There were
innumerable exquisite
felicities—minuscule
portamentos from one
note to its nearest
neighbor, or over
widespread intervals—and
changes of color that
were pure magic. In
these aspects of bel
canto she was supreme
mistress of that art.
Regarding Callas's
acting ability, vocal
coach and music critic
Ira Siff remarked, "When
I saw the final two
Toscas she did in the
old [Met], I felt like I
was watching the actual
story on which the opera
had later been based."
Callas was not, however,
a realistic or verismo
style actress: her
physical acting was
merely "subsidiary to
the heavy Kunst of
developing the
psychology of the roles
under the supervision of
the music, of singing
the acting... Suffering,
delight, humility,
hubris, despair,
rhapsody—all this was
musically appointed,
through her use of the
voice flying the text
upon the notes."
Seconding this opinion,
verismo specialist
soprano Augusta
Oltrabella said,
"Despite what everyone
says, [Callas] was an
actress in the
expression of the music,
and not vice versa."
Mathew Gurewitsch adds,
In fact the essence of
her art was refinement.
The term seems odd for a
performer whose
imagination and means of
expression were so
prodigious. She was
eminently capable of the
grand gesture; still,
judging strictly from
the evidence of her
recordings, we know (and
her few existing film
clips confirm) that her
power flowed not from
excess but from unbroken
concentration,
unfaltering truth in the
moment. It flowed also
from irreproachable
musicianship. People say
that Callas would not
hesitate to distort a
vocal line for dramatic
effect. In the throes of
operatic passion plenty
of singers snarl, growl,
whine, and shriek.
Callas was not one of
them. She found all she
needed in the notes.
Ewa Podleś likewise
stated that "It's enough
to hear her, I'm
positive! Because she
could say everything
only with her voice! I
can imagine everything,
I can see everything in
front of my eye." Opera
director Sandro Sequi,
who witnessed many
Callas performances
close-up, states, "For
me, she was extremely
stylized and classic,
yet at the same time,
human—but humanity on a
higher plane of
existence, almost
sublime. Realism was
foreign to her, and that
is why she was the
greatest of opera
singers. After all,
opera is the least
realistic of theater
forms... She was wasted
in verismo roles, even
Tosca, no matter how
brilliantly she could
act such roles." Scott
adds, "Early
nineteenth-century
opera... is not merely
the antithesis of
reality, it also
requires highly stylized
acting. Callas had the
perfect face for it. Her
big features matched its
grandiloquence and spoke
volumes from a
distance."
In regard to Callas's
physical acting style,
Nicola Rescigno states,
"Maria had a way of even
transforming her body
for the exigencies of a
role, which is a great
triumph. In La traviata,
everything would slope
down; everything
indicated sickness,
fatigue, softness. Her
arms would move as if
they had no bones, like
the great ballerinas. In
Medea, everything was
angular. She'd never
make a soft gesture;
even the walk she used
was like a tiger's
walk." Sandro Sequi
recalls, "She was never
in a hurry. Everything
was very paced,
proportioned, classical,
precise... She was
extremely powerful but
extremely stylized. Her
gestures were not
many... I don't think
she did more than 20
gestures in a
performance. But she was
capable of standing 10
minutes without moving a
hand or finger,
compelling everyone to
look at her." Edward
Downes recalled Callas
watching and observing
her colleagues with such
intensity and
concentration as to make
it seem that the drama
was all unfolding in her
head. Sir Rudolf Bing
similarly recalled that
in Il trovatore in
Chicago, "it was
Callas's quiet
listening, rather than
Björling's singing that
made the dramatic
impact... He didn't know
what he was singing, but
she knew."
Callas herself stated
that, in Opera, Acting
must be based on the
Music, quoting Maestro
Tullio Serafin's advice
to her:
"When one wants to find
a gesture, when you want
to find how to act
onstage, all you have to
do is listen to the
music. The composer has
already seen to that. If
you take the trouble to
really listen with your
Soul and with your
Ears—and I say 'Soul'
and 'Ears' because the
Mind must work, but not
too much also—you will
find every gesture
there."
Callas's most
distinguishing quality
was her ability to
breathe life into the
characters she
portrayed, or in the
words of Matthew
Gurewitsch, "Most
mysterious among her
many gifts, Callas had
the genius to translate
the minute particulars
of a life into tone of
voice." Italian critic
Eugenio Gara adds:
Her secret is in her
ability to transfer to
the musical plane the
suffering of the
character she plays, the
nostalgic longing for
lost happiness, the
anxious fluctuation
between hope and
despair, between pride
and supplication,
between irony and
generosity, which in the
end dissolve into a
superhuman inner pain.
The most diverse and
opposite of sentiments,
cruel deceptions,
ambitious desires,
burning tenderness,
grievous sacrifices, all
the torments of the
heart, acquire in her
singing that mysterious
truth, I would like to
say, that psychological
sonority, which is the
primary attraction of
opera.
Ethan Mordden writes,
"It was a flawed voice.
But then Callas sought
to capture in her
singing not just beauty
but a whole humanity,
and within her system,
the flaws feed the
feeling, the sour
plangency and the
strident defiance
becoming aspects of the
canto. They were
literally defects of her
voice; she bent them
into advantages of her
singing." Maestro
Giulini believes, "If
melodrama is the ideal
unity of the trilogy of
words, music, and
action, it is impossible
to imagine an artist in
whom these three
elements were more
together than Callas."
He recalls that during
Callas's performances of
La traviata, "reality
was onstage. What stood
behind me, the audience,
auditorium, La Scala
itself, seemed artifice.
Only that which
transpired on stage was
truth, life itself." Sir
Rudolf Bing expressed
similar sentiments:
Once one heard and saw
Maria Callas—one can't
really distinguish it—in
a part, it was very hard
to enjoy any other
artist, no matter how
great, afterwards,
because she imbued every
part she sang and acted
with such incredible
personality and life.
One move of her hand was
more than another artist
could do in a whole act.
To Maestro Antonino
Votto, Callas was the
last great artist. When
you think this woman was
nearly blind, and often
sang standing a good 150
feet from the podium.
But her sensitivity!
Even if she could not
see, she sensed the
music and always came in
exactly with my
downbeat. When we
rehearsed, she was so
precise, already
note-perfect... She was
not just a singer, but a
complete artist. It's
foolish to discuss her
as a voice. She must be
viewed totally—as a
complex of music, drama,
movement. There is no
one like her today. She
was an esthetic
phenomenon.
During the early 1950s,
controversy arose
regarding a supposed
rivalry between Callas
and Renata Tebaldi, an
Italian lyrico spinto
soprano. The contrast
between Callas's often
unconventional vocal
qualities and Tebaldi's
classically beautiful
sound resurrected an
argument as old as opera
itself, namely, beauty
of sound versus the
expressive use of sound.
In 1951, Tebaldi and
Maria Callas were
jointly booked for a
vocal recital in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil.
Although the singers
agreed that neither
would perform encores,
Tebaldi took two, and
Callas was reportedly
incensed. This incident
began the rivalry, which
reached a fever pitch in
the mid-1950s, at times
even engulfing the two
women themselves, who
were said by their more
fanatical followers to
have engaged in verbal
barbs in each other's
direction. Tebaldi was
quoted as saying, "I
have one thing that
Callas doesn't have: a
heart" while Callas was
quoted in Time magazine
as saying that comparing
her with Tebaldi was
like "comparing
Champagne with Cognac.
No, with Coca Cola."
However, witnesses to
the interview stated
that Callas only said
"champagne with cognac",
and it was a bystander
who quipped, "No, with
Coca-Cola", but the Time
reporter attributed the
latter comment to
Callas.
According to John
Ardoin, however, these
two singers should never
have been compared.
Tebaldi was trained by
Carmen Melis, a noted
verismo specialist, and
she was rooted in the
early 20th century
Italian school of
singing just as firmly
as Callas was rooted in
19th century bel canto.
Callas was a dramatic
soprano, whereas Tebaldi
considered herself
essentially a lyric
soprano. Callas and
Tebaldi generally sang a
different repertoire: in
the early years of her
career, Callas
concentrated on the
heavy dramatic soprano
roles and later in her
career on the bel canto
repertoire, whereas
Tebaldi concentrated on
late Verdi and verismo
roles, where her limited
upper extension and her
lack of a florid
technique were not
issues. They shared a
few roles, including
Tosca in Puccini's opera
and La Gioconda, which
Tebaldi performed only
late in her career.
The alleged rivalry
aside, Callas made
remarks appreciative of
Tebaldi, and vice versa.
During an interview with
Norman Ross in Chicago,
Callas said, "I admire
Tebaldi's tone; it's
beautiful—also some
beautiful phrasing.
Sometimes, I actually
wish I had her voice."
Francis Robinson of the
Met wrote of an incident
in which Tebaldi asked
him to recommend a
recording of La Gioconda
in order to help her
learn the role. Being
fully aware of the
alleged rivalry, he
recommended Zinka
Milanov's version. A few
days later, he went to
visit Tebaldi, only to
find her sitting by the
speakers, listening
intently to Callas's
recording. She then
looked up at him and
asked, "Why didn't you
tell me Maria's was the
best?"
Callas visited Tebaldi
after a performance of
Adriana Lecouvreur at
the Met in 1968, and the
two were reunited. In
1978, Tebaldi spoke
warmly of her late
colleague and summarized
this rivalry:
This rivality was really
building from the people
of the newspapers and
the fans. But I think it
was very good for both
of us, because the
publicity was so big and
it created a very big
interest about me and
Maria and was very good
in the end. But I don't
know why they put this
kind of rivality [sic],
because the voice was
very different. She was
really something
unusual. And I remember
that I was very young
artist too, and I stayed
near the radio every
time that I know that
there was something on
radio by Maria.
Several singers have
opined that the heavy
roles undertaken in her
early years damaged
Callas's voice. The
mezzo-soprano Giulietta
Simionato, Callas's
close friend and
frequent colleague,
stated that she told
Callas that she felt
that the early heavy
roles led to a weakness
in the diaphragm and
subsequent difficulty in
controlling the upper
register.
Louise Caselotti, who
worked with Callas in
1946 and 1947, prior to
her Italian debut, felt
that it was not the
heavy roles that hurt
Callas's voice, but the
lighter ones. Several
singers have suggested
that Callas's heavy use
of the chest voice led
to stridency and
unsteadiness with the
high notes. In his book,
Callas's husband
Meneghini wrote that
Callas suffered an
unusually early onset of
menopause, which could
have affected her voice.
Soprano Carol Neblett
once said, "A woman
sings with her
ovaries—you're only as
good as your hormones."
Critic Henry Pleasants
has stated that it was a
loss of physical
strength and
breath-support that led
to Callas's vocal
problems, saying,
Singing, and especially
opera singing, requires
physical strength.
Without it, the singer's
respiratory functions
can no longer support
the steady emissions of
breath essential to
sustaining the
production of focused
tone. The breath
escapes, but it is no
longer the power behind
the tone, or is only
partially and
intermittently . The
result is a breathy
sound—tolerable but
hardly beautiful—when
the singer sings
lightly, and a voice
spread and squally when
under pressure.
In the same vein, Joan
Sutherland, who heard
Callas throughout the
1950s, said in a BBC
interview,
[Hearing Callas in Norma
in 1952] was a shock, a
wonderful shock. You
just got shivers up and
down the spine. It was a
bigger sound in those
earlier performances,
before she lost weight.
I think she tried very
hard to recreate the
sort of "fatness" of the
sound which she had when
she was as fat as she
was. But when she lost
the weight, she couldn't
seem to sustain the
great sound that she had
made, and the body
seemed to be too frail
to support that sound
that she was making. Oh,
but it was oh so
exciting. It was
thrilling. I don't think
that anyone who heard
Callas after 1955 really
heard the Callas voice.
Michael Scott has
proposed that Callas's
loss of strength and
breath support was
directly caused by her
rapid and progressive
weight loss, something
that was noted even in
her prime. Of her 1958
recital in Chicago,
Robert Detmer wrote,
"There were sounds
fearfully uncontrolled,
forced beyond the
too-slim singer's
present capacity to
support or sustain."
Photos and videos of
Callas during her heavy
era show a very upright
posture with the
shoulders relaxed and
held back. On all videos
of Callas from the
period after her weight
loss, "we watch... the
constantly sinking,
depressed chest and hear
the resulting
deterioration". This
continual change in
posture has been cited
as visual proof of a
progressive loss of
breath support.
Commercial and bootleg
recordings of Callas
from the late 1940s to
1953—the period during
which she sang the
heaviest dramatic
soprano roles—show no
decline in the fabric of
the voice, no loss in
volume and no
unsteadiness or
shrinkage in the upper
register. Of her
December 1952 Lady
Macbeth—coming after
five years of singing
the most strenuous
dramatic soprano
repertoire—Peter
Dragadze wrote for
Opera, "Callas's voice
since last season has
improved a great deal,
the second passagio on
the high B-natural and C
has now completely
cleared, giving her an
equally colored scale
from top to bottom." And
of her performance of
Medea a year later, John
Ardoin writes, "The
performance displays
Callas in as secure and
free a voice as she will
be found at any point in
her career. The many top
B's have a brilliant
ring, and she handles
the treacherous
tessitura like an eager
thoroughbred."
In recordings from 1954
(immediately after her
80-pound weight loss)
and thereafter, "not
only would the
instrument lose its
warmth and become thin
and acidulous, but the
altitudinous passages
would to her no longer
come easily." It is also
at this time that
unsteady top notes first
begin to appear. Walter
Legge, who produced
nearly all of Callas's
EMI/Angel recordings,
states that Callas "ran
into a patch of vocal
difficulties as early as
1954": during the
recording of La forza
del destino, done
immediately after the
weight loss, the "wobble
had become so
pronounced" that he told
Callas they "would have
to give away seasickness
pills with every side".
There were others,
however, who felt that
the voice had benefitted
from the weight loss. Of
her performance of Norma
in Chicago in 1954,
Claudia Cassidy wrote
that "there is a slight
unsteadiness in some of
the sustained upper
notes, but to me her
voice is more beautiful
in color, more even
through the range, than
it used to be". And at
her performance of the
same opera in London in
1957 (her first
performance at Covent
Garden after the weight
loss), critics again
felt her voice had
changed for the better,
that it had now
supposedly become a more
precise instrument, with
a new focus. Many of her
most critically
acclaimed appearances
are from the period
1954–1958 (Norma, La
traviata, Sonnambula and
Lucia of 1955, Anna
Bolena of 1957, Medea of
1958, to name a few).
Callas's close friend
and colleague Tito Gobbi
thought that her vocal
problems all stemmed
from her state of mind:
I don't think anything
happened to her voice. I
think she only lost
confidence. She was at
the top of a career that
a human being could
desire, and she felt
enormous responsibility.
She was obliged to give
her best every night,
and maybe she felt she
wasn't [able] any more,
and she lost confidence.
I think this was the
beginning of the end of
this career.
In support of Gobbi's
assertion, a bootleg
recording of Callas
rehearsing Beethoven's
aria "Ah! Perfido" and
parts of Verdi's La
forza del destino
shortly before her death
shows her voice to be in
much better shape than
much of her 1960s
recordings and far
healthier than the 1970s
concerts with Giuseppe
Di Stefano.
Soprano Renée Fleming
has stated that videos
of Callas in the late
1950s and early 1960s
reveal a posture that
betrays breath-support
problems:
I have a theory about
what caused her vocal
decline, but it's more
from watching her sing
than from listening. I
really think it was her
weight loss that was so
dramatic and so quick.
It's not the weight loss
per se - you know,
Deborah Voigt has lost a
lot of weight and still
sounds glorious. But if
one uses the weight for
support, and then it's
suddenly gone and one
doesn't develop another
musculature for support,
it can be very hard on
the voice. And you can't
estimate the toll that
emotional turmoil will
take as well. I was
told, by somebody who
knew her well, that the
way Callas held her arms
to her solar plexus
[allowed her] to push
and create some kind of
support. If she were a
Soubrette, it would
never have been an
issue. But she was
singing the most
difficult repertoire,
the stuff that requires
the most stamina, the
most strength.
However, writing about
Dramatic soprano Deborah
Voigt shortly after her
135 weight loss after
gastric bypass surgery,
music critic Peter G.
Davis brings up
comparisons with Callas
and notes an increasing
acidity and thinning in
Voigt's voice that
recall the changes in
Callas's voice after her
weight loss:
A change has also come
over Voigt’s voice
lately, though it’s hard
to tell if it’s from
weight loss or normal
aging—controversy still
rages over whether Maria
Callas’s drastic diets
contributed to her rapid
vocal decline. Not that
Voigt as yet exhibits
any of Callas’s
technical problems: Her
voice continues to be
reliably supported and
under control. What is
noticeable,
however—earlier this
season in Verdi’s La
Forza del Destino and
now in Tosca—is a marked
thinning of quality at
the very center of the
instrument, together
with a slight acidity
and tightening of the
tone that has definitely
taken the youthful bloom
off, especially at the
top.
Voigt herself explained
how her dramatic weight
loss affected her
breathing and breath
support:
Much of what I did with
my weight was very
natural, vocally. Now
I've got a different
body—there's not as much
of me around. My
diaphragm function, the
way my throat feels, is
not compromised in any
way. But I do have to
think about it more now.
I have to remind myself
to keep my ribs open. I
have to remind myself,
if my breath starts to
stack. When I took a
breath before, the
weight would kick in and
give it that extra
Whhoomf! Now it doesn't
do that. If I don't
remember to get rid of
the old air and
re-engage the muscles,
the breath starts
stacking, and that's
when you can't get your
phrase, you crack high
notes.
Callas herself
attributed her problems
to a loss of confidence
brought about by a loss
of breath support, even
though she does not make
the connection between
her weight and her
breath support. In an
April 1977 interview
with journalist Philippe
Caloni, she stated,
"My best recordings were
made when I was skinny,
and I say skinny, not
slim, because I worked a
lot and couldn't gain
weight back; I became
even too skinny ... I
had my greatest
successes—Lucia,
Sonnambula, Medea, Anna
Bolena—when I was skinny
as a nail. Even for my
first time here in Paris
in 1958 when the show
was broadcast through
Eurovision, I was
skinny. Really skinny."
And shortly before her
death, Callas confided
her own thoughts on her
vocal problems to Peter
Dragadze:
I never lost my voice,
but I lost strength in
my diaphragm. ...
Because of those organic
complaints, I lost my
courage and boldness. My
vocal cords were and
still are in excellent
condition, but my 'sound
boxes' have not been
working well even though
I have been to all the
doctors. The result was
that I overstrained my
voice, and that caused
it to wobble. (Gente,
October 1, 1977)
Whether Callas's vocal
decline was due to ill
health, early menopause,
over-use and abuse of
her voice, loss of
breath-support, loss of
confidence, or weight
loss will continue to be
debated. Whatever the
cause may have been, her
singing career was
effectively over by age
40, and even at the time
of her death at age 53,
according to Walter
Legge, "she ought still
to have been singing
magnificently".
A 2010 study by Italian
vocal researchers Franco
Fussi and Nico Paolillo
revealed Callas was very
ill at the time of her
death and her illness
was related to her vocal
deterioration.
According to their
findings, presented at
the University of
Bologna in 2010, Callas
had dermatomyositis, a
disease that causes a
failure of the muscles
and tissues, including
the larynx. They believe
she was showing signs of
this disease as early as
the 1960s. Fussi and
Paolillo cite an initial
report by physician
Mario Giacovazzo, who in
2002 revealed he had
diagnosed Callas with
dermatomyositis in 1975.
Treatment includes
corticosteroids and
immunosuppressive
agents, which affect
heart function. Callas's
death from heart failure
may have been related to
the disease or to the
medicine she took for
it.
At an event hosted by
the journal Il
Saggiatore Musicale,
Fussi and Paolillo
presented documentation
showing when and how her
voice changed over time.
Using modern audio
technology, they
analyzed live Callas
studio recordings from
the 1950s through the
1970s, looking for signs
of deterioration.
Spectrographic analysis
showed that she was
losing the top half of
her range. Fussi
observed video
recordings in which
Callas's posture seemed
strained and weakened.
He felt that her drastic
weight loss in 1954
further contributed to
reduced physical support
of her voice.
Fussi and Paolillo also
examined restored
footage of the infamous
1958 Norma "walkout" in
Rome, which led to harsh
criticism of Callas as a
temperamental superstar.
By applying
spectrographic analysis
to film from that
night's performance, the
researchers observed her
voice was tired and she
lacked control. She
really did have the
bronchitis and
tracheitis she claimed,
and the dermatomyositis
was already causing her
muscles to deteriorate.
The latter half of
Callas's career was
marked by a number of
scandals. Following a
performance of Madama
Butterfly in Chicago,
Callas was confronted by
a process server who
handed her papers about
a lawsuit brought by
Eddy Bagarozy, who
claimed he was her
agent. Callas was
photographed with her
mouth turned in a
furious snarl. The photo
was sent around the
world and gave rise to
the myth of Callas as a
temperamental prima
donna and a "Tigress".
In 1956, just before her
debut at the
Metropolitan Opera, Time
ran a damaging cover
story about Callas, with
special attention paid
to her difficult
relationship with her
mother and some
unpleasant exchanges
between the two.
In 1957, Callas was
starring as Amina in La
sonnambula at the
Edinburgh International
Festival with the forces
of La Scala. Her
contract was for four
performances, but due to
the great success of the
series, La Scala decided
to put on a fifth
performance. Callas told
the La Scala officials
that she was physically
exhausted and that she
had already committed to
a previous engagement, a
party thrown for her by
her friend Elsa Maxwell
in Venice. Despite this,
La Scala announced a
fifth performance, with
Callas billed as Amina.
Callas refused to stay
and went on to Venice.
Despite the fact that
she had fulfilled her
contract, she was
accused of walking out
on La Scala and the
festival. La Scala
officials did not defend
Callas or inform the
press that the
additional performance
was not approved by
Callas. Renata Scotto
took over the part,
which was the start of
her international
career.
In January 1958, Callas
was to open the Rome
Opera House season with
Norma, with Italy's
president in attendance.
The day before the
opening night, Callas
alerted the management
that she was not well
and that they should
have a standby ready.
She was told "No one can
double Callas". After
being treated by
doctors, she felt better
on the day of
performance and decided
to go ahead with the
opera. A surviving
bootleg recording of the
first act reveals Callas
sounding ill. Feeling
that her voice was
slipping away, she felt
that she could not
complete the
performance, and
consequently, she
cancelled after the
first act. She was
accused of walking out
on the president of
Italy in a fit of
temperament, and
pandemonium broke out.
Doctors confirmed that
Maria had bronchitis and
tracheitis, and the
President's wife called
to tell her they knew
she was sick. However,
they made no statements
to the media, and the
endless stream of press
coverage aggravated the
situation. A newsreel
included file footage of
Callas from 1955
sounding well,
intimating the footage
was of rehearsals for
the Rome Norma, with the
voiceover narration,
"Here she is in
rehearsal, sounding
perfectly healthy",
followed by "If you want
to hear Callas, don't
get all dressed up. Just
go to a rehearsal; she
usually stays to the end
of those." The scandal
became notorious as the
"Rome Walkout". Callas
brought a lawsuit
against the Rome Opera
House, but by the time
the case was settled
thirteen years later and
the Rome Opera was found
to be at fault for
having refused to
provide an understudy,
Callas's career was
already over.
Callas's relationship
with La Scala had also
started to become
strained after the
Edinburgh incident, and
this effectively severed
her major ties with her
artistic home. Later in
1958, Callas and Rudolf
Bing were in discussion
about her season at the
Met. She was scheduled
to perform in Verdi's La
traviata and in Macbeth,
two very different
operas which almost
require totally
different singers.
Callas and the Met could
not reach an agreement,
and before the opening
of Medea in Dallas, Bing
sent a telegram to
Callas terminating her
contract. Headlines of
"Bing Fires Callas"
appeared in newspapers
around the world.
Maestro Nicola Rescigno
later recalled, "That
night, she came to the
theater, looking like an
empress: she wore an
ermine thing that draped
to the floor, and she
had every piece of
jewellery she ever
owned. And she said,
'You all know what's
happened. Tonight, for
me, is a very difficult
night, and I will need
the help of every one of
you.' Well, she
proceeded to give a
performance [of Medea]
that was historical."
Bing later said that
Callas was the most
difficult artist he ever
worked with, "because
she was so much more
intelligent. Other
artists, you could get
around. But Callas you
could not get around.
She knew exactly what
she wanted, and why she
wanted it." Despite
this, Bing's admiration
for Callas never
wavered, and in
September 1959, he
sneaked into La Scala in
order to listen to
Callas record La
Gioconda for EMI. Callas
and Bing reconciled in
the mid 1960s, and
Callas returned to the
Met for two performances
of Tosca with her friend
Tito Gobbi.
In her final years as a
singer, she sang in
Medea, Norma, and Tosca,
most notably her Paris,
New York, and London
Toscas of
January–February 1964,
and her last performance
on stage, on July 5,
1965, at Covent Garden.
A television film of Act
2 of the Covent Garden
Tosca of 1964 was
broadcast in Britain on
February 9, 1964, giving
a rare view of Callas in
performance and,
specifically, of her
on-stage collaboration
with Tito Gobbi.
In 1969, the Italian
filmmaker Pier Paolo
Pasolini cast Callas in
her only non-operatic
acting role, as the
Greek mythological
character of Medea, in
his film by that name.
The production was
grueling, and according
to the account in
Ardoin's Callas, the Art
and the Life, Callas is
said to have fainted
after a day of strenuous
running back and forth
on a mudflat in the sun.
The film was not a
commercial success, but
as Callas's only film
appearance, it documents
her stage presence.
From October 1971 to
March 1972, Callas gave
a series of master
classes at the Juilliard
School in New York.
These classes later
formed the basis of
Terrence McNally's 1995
play Master Class.
Callas staged a series
of joint recitals in
Europe in 1973 and in
the U.S., South Korea,
and Japan in 1974 with
the tenor Giuseppe Di
Stefano. Critically,
this was a musical
disaster owing to both
performers' worn-out
voices. However, the
tour was an enormous
popular success.
Audiences thronged to
hear the two performers,
who had so often
appeared together in
their prime. Her final
public performance was
on November 11, 1974, in
Sapporo, Japan.
In 1957, while still
married to husband
Giovanni Battista
Meneghini, Callas was
introduced to Greek
shipping magnate
Aristotle Onassis at a
party given in her honor
by Elsa Maxwell after a
performance in
Donizetti's Anna Bolena.
The affair that followed
received much publicity
in the popular press,
and in November 1959,
Callas left her husband.
Michael Scott asserts
that Onassis was not why
Callas largely abandoned
her career, but that he
offered her a way out of
a career that was made
increasingly difficult
by scandals and by vocal
resources that were
diminishing at an
alarming rate. Franco
Zeffirelli, on the other
hand, recalls asking
Callas in 1963 why she
had not practiced her
singing, and Callas
responding that "I have
been trying to fulfill
my life as a woman."
According to one of her
biographers, Nicholas
Gage, Callas and Onassis
had a child, a boy, who
died hours after he was
born on March 30, 1960.
In his book about his
wife, Meneghini states
categorically that Maria
Callas was unable to
bear children. As well,
various sources dismiss
Gage's claim, as they
note that the birth
certificates Gage used
to prove this "secret
child" were issued in
1998, twenty-one years
after Callas's death.
Still other sources
claim that Callas had at
least one abortion while
involved with Onassis.
In 1966, Callas
renounced her U.S.
citizenship at the
American Embassy in
Paris, to facilitate the
end of her marriage to
Meneghini. This was
because after her
renunciation, she was
only a Greek citizen,
and under Greek law a
Greek could only legally
marry in a Greek
Orthodox church. As she
had married in a Roman
Catholic church, this
divorced her in every
country except Italy.
The renunciation also
helped her finances, as
she no longer had to pay
US taxes on her income.
The relationship ended
two years later in 1968,
when Onassis left Callas
in favor of Jacqueline
Kennedy. However, the
Onassis family's private
secretary, Kiki, writes
in her memoir that even
while Aristotle was with
Jackie, he frequently
met up with Maria in
Paris, where they
resumed what had now
become a clandestine
affair.
Callas spent her last
years living largely in
isolation in Paris and
died at age 53 on
September 16, 1977, of a
heart attack. A funerary
liturgy was held at
Agios Stephanos (St.
Stephen's) Greek
Orthodox Cathedral on
rue Georges-Bizet,
Paris, on September 20,
1977. She later was
cremated at the Père
Lachaise Cemetery and
her ashes were placed in
the columbarium there.
After being stolen and
later recovered, in the
spring of 1979 they were
scattered over the
Aegean Sea, off the
coast of Greece,
according to her wish.
During a 1978 interview,
upon being asked "Was it
worth it to Maria
Callas? She was a
lonely, unhappy, often
difficult woman," music
critic and Callas's
friend John Ardoin
replied,
That is such a difficult
question. There are
times when certain
people are blessed—and
cursed—with an
extraordinary gift, in
which the gift is almost
greater than the human
being. Callas was one of
these people. It was as
if her own wishes, her
life, her own happiness
were all subservient to
this incredible,
incredible gift that she
was given, this gift
that reached out and
taught us things about
music that we knew very
well, but showed us new
things, things we never
thought about, new
possibilities. I think
that is why singers
admire her so. I think
that's why conductors
admire her so. I know
it's why I admire her
so. And she paid a
tremendously difficult
and expensive price for
this career. I don't
think she always
understood what she did
or why she did it. She
usually had a tremendous
effect on audiences and
on people. But it was
not something she could
always live with
gracefully or happily. I
once said to her "It
must be a very enviable
thing to be Maria
Callas." And she said,
"No, it's a very
terrible thing to be
Maria Callas, because
it's a question of
trying to understand
something you can never
really understand." She
couldn't really explain
what she did. It was all
done by instinct. It was
something embedded deep
within her.
In 1998, a photo of
Maria Callas was part of
the poster series
commissioned by Apple
Computer for their
"Think different"
advertising campaign.
Previously she was shown
in the commercial.
In late 2004, opera and
film director Franco
Zeffirelli made what
many consider a bizarre
claim that Callas may
have been murdered by
her confidant, Greek
pianist Vasso Devetzi,
in order to gain control
of Callas's United
States $9,000,000
estate. A more likely
explanation is that
Callas's death was due
to heart failure brought
on by (possibly
unintentional) overuse
of Mandrax
(methaqualone), a
sleeping aid.
According to biographer
Stelios Galatopoulos,
Devetzi insinuated
herself into Callas's
trust and acted
virtually as her agent.
This claim is
corroborated by Iakintha
(Jackie) Callas in her
book Sisters, wherein
she asserts that Devetzi
conned Maria out of
control of half of her
estate, while promising
to establish the Maria
Callas Foundation to
provide scholarships for
young singers. After
hundreds of thousands of
dollars had allegedly
vanished, Devetzi
finally did establish
the foundation.
In 2002, filmmaker
Zeffirelli produced and
directed a film in
Callas's memory. Callas
Forever was a highly
fictionalized motion
picture in which Callas
was played by Fanny
Ardant. It depicted the
last months of Callas's
life, when she was
seduced into the making
of a movie of Carmen,
lip-synching to her 1964
recording of that opera.
Terrence McNally's play
Master Class, which
premiered in 1995,
presents Callas as a
glamorous, commanding,
larger-than-life,
caustic, and
surprisingly drop-dead
funny pedagogue holding
a voice master class.
Alternately dismayed and
impressed by the
students who parade
before her, she retreats
into recollections about
the glories of her own
life and career,
culminating in a
monologue about
sacrifice taken for art.
Several selections of
Callas actually singing
are played during the
recollections.
In 2007, Callas was
posthumously awarded the
Grammy Lifetime
Achievement Award. In
the same year, she was
voted the greatest
soprano of all time by
BBC Music Magazine.
The 30th anniversary of
the death of Maria
Callas was selected as
the main motif for a
high value euro
collectors' coin: the
€10 Greek Maria Callas
commemorative coin,
minted in 2007. Her
image is shown in the
obverse of the coin,
while on the reverse the
National Emblem of
Greece with her
signature is depicted.
On December 2, 2008, on
the 85th anniversary of
Callas's birth, a group
of Greek and Italian
officials unveiled a
plaque in her honor at
Flower Hospital (now the
Terence Cardinal Cooke
Health Care Center)
where she was born. Made
of Carrara marble and
engraved in Italy, the
plaque reads, "Maria
Callas was born in this
hospital on December 2,
1923. These halls heard
for the first time the
musical notes of her
voice, a voice which has
conquered the world. To
this great interpreter
of universal language of
music, with gratitude."
Gus Van Sant's 2008 film
Milk features selected
recordings of Callas's
rendition of Tosca,
which, it is suggested,
was an opera of which
Harvey Milk was
particularly fond.
Similarly, Jonathan
Demme's 1993 movie
Philadelphia features a
recording by Callas. The
2011 film The Iron Lady,
about former British
Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher, includes a
recording of Callas
singing Norma's famous
aria, "Casta Diva".
In 2012, Callas was
voted into Gramophone
Magazine's Hall of Fame.
A number of musical
artists including Anna
Calvi, Linda Ronstadt,
Patti Smith and Emmylou
Harris have mentioned
Callas as a great
musical influence, and
some have paid tribute
to Callas in their
music:
R.E.M. mention Callas in
their song "E-Bow the
Letter" from the album
New Adventures in Hi-Fi.
Enigma released the
instrumental "Callas
Went Away" using samples
of Callas's voice, on
their 1990 album MCMXC
a.D..
Buffalo Tom's 2007 album
Three Easy Pieces
contains the song "C.C.
and Callas", which
appears to be about
songwriter Chris
Colbourn's reflections
on Callas.
The Fatima Mansions's
1994 release Lost in the
Former West featured the
single "The Loyaliser",
where a passing
reference is made to
Callas.
La Diva, on Celine
Dion's 2007 French
language album D'elles
is about Maria Callas.
The track samples the
1956 recording of La
bohème.
Singer/songwriter Rufus
Wainwright mentions
Callas in his song
"Beauty Mark", from his
album Rufus Wainwright.
Rufus is known to be an
opera fan, particularly
passionate about
Callas's work. In an
interview to the Spanish
newspaper El País, he
declared that one of the
things anyone should do
at least once in a
lifetime was to listen
to a Maria Callas album
after a night out, if
possible during sunrise.
On Jonathan Ross's Radio
2 show he stated that
Lord Harewood's
interview of Callas is
part of the inspiration
for his opera Prima
Donna.
Jason Mraz lists her
performance of "O mio
babbino caro" as a
romantic musical
influence for him.
Her recording of "O mio
babbino caro" is also
heard in a 2010 UBS
commercial featuring
unique people from
recent history.
Ben Sollee mentions her
in his song "Mute with a
Bullhorn."
The Mountain Goats
mention Callas in their
song "Horseradish Road"
from the album The
Coroner's Gambit.
Tom Stoppard's 1982 play
The Real Thing includes
the line, 'I was taken
once to Covent Garden to
hear a woman called
Callas in a sort of
foreign musical with no
dancing which people
were donating kidneys to
get tickets for... Not
even close. That woman
would have had a job
getting into the top
thirty if she was
hyped.'
She can be heard singing
selections from Norma at
several points in
Lorenzo's Oil.
Google honored Callas on
her 90th birthday by
showing her in a Doodle
on December 2, 2013.
Notable recordings
All recordings are in
mono unless otherwise
indicated. Live
performances are
typically available on
multiple labels.
Verdi, Nabucco,
conducted by Vittorio
Gui, live performance,
Napoli, December 20,
1949
Verdi, Il trovatore,
conducted by Guido
Picco, live performance,
Mexico City, June 20,
1950. In the aria
'D'amor sulla li rosi',
Callas sings Verdi's
original high D flat,
likewise in her 1951 San
Carlo performance.
Wagner, "Parsifal", live
performance conducted by
Vittorio Gui, RAI Rome,
1950
Verdi, "Il Trovatore",
live performance
conducted by Serafin,
Teatro San Carlo,
Naples, 1951
Verdi, Aida, conducted
by Oliviero De
Fabritiis, live
performance, Palacio de
Bellas Artes, Mexico
City, July 3, 1951
Verdi, "I Vespri
Siciliani", live
performance conducted by
Erich Kleiber, Teatro
Communale, Florence,
1951
Cherubini, "Medea", live
performance conducted by
Vittorio Gui, Teatro
Communale, Florence,
1952
Ponchielli, La Gioconda,
conducted by Antonino
Votto, studio recording
for Fonit Cetra,
September 1952
Bellini, Norma,
conducted by Vittorio
Gui, live performance,
Covent Garden, London,
November 18, 1952
Verdi, Macbeth,
conducted by Victor de
Sabata, live
performance, La Scala,
Milan, December 7, 1952
Verdi "Il Trovatore"
life performance
conducted by Votto, La
Scala 1953
Bellini, I puritani,
conducted by Tullio
Serafin, studio
recording for EMI,
March–April 1953
Rossini, "Armida",
Teatro Communale,
Serafin, 1952
Mascagni, Cavalleria
rusticana, conducted by
Tullio Serafin, studio
recording for EMI,
August 1953
Puccini, Tosca (Sabata
recording), conducted by
Victor de Sabata, studio
recording for EMI,
August 1953.
Verdi, La traviata,
conducted by Gabriele
Santini, studio
recording for Fonit
Cetra, September 1953
Cherubini, Medea,
conducted by Leonard
Bernstein, live
performance, La Scala,
Milan, December 10, 1953
Leoncavallo, Pagliacci,
conducted by Tullio
Serafin, studio
recording for EMI, June
1954
Spontini, La vestale,
conducted by Antonino
Votto, live performance,
La Scala, Milan,
December 7, 1954
Gluck, "Alceste", La
Scala, Milan, Giulini,
1954
Verdi, La traviata,
conducted by Carlo Maria
Giulini, live
performance, La Scala,
Milan, May 28, 1955
Puccini, Madama
Butterfly, conducted by
Herbert von Karajan,
studio recording for
EMI, August 1955
Verdi, Aida, conducted
by Tullio Serafin,
studio recording for
EMI, August 1955
Verdi, Rigoletto,
conducted by Tullio
Serafin, studio
recording for EMI,
September 1955
Donizetti, Lucia di
Lammermoor, conducted by
Herbert von Karajan,
live performance,
Berlin, September 29,
1955
Bellini, Norma,
conducted by Antonino
Votto, live performance,
La Scala, Milan,
December 7, 1955.
Verdi, Il trovatore,
conducted by Herbert von
Karajan, studio
recording for EMI,
August 1956
Puccini, La bohème,
conducted by Antonino
Votto, studio recording
for EMI,
August–September 1956.
Like her later recording
of Carmen, this was her
only performance of the
complete opera, as she
never appeared onstage
in it.
Verdi, Un ballo in
maschera, conducted by
Antonino Votto, studio
recording for EMI,
September 1956
Rossini, The Barber of
Seville, conducted by
Alceo Galliera, studio
recording for EMI in
stereo, February 1957
Bellini, La sonnambula,
conducted by Antonino
Votto, studio recording
for EMI, March 1957
Gluck, "Iphigine en
Tauride", La Scala,
Sanzogno, 1957
Donizetti, Anna Bolena,
conducted by Gianandrea
Gavazzeni, live
performance, La Scala,
Milan, April 14, 1957
Bellini, La sonnambula,
conducted by Antonino
Votto, live performance,
Cologne, July 4, 1957
Puccini, Turandot,
conducted by Tullio
Serafin, studio
recording for EMI, July
1957
Cherubini, Medea,
conducted by Tullio
Serafin, studio
recording for Ricordi in
stereo, September 1957
Verdi, Un ballo in
maschera, conducted by
Gianandrea Gavazzeni,
live performance, La
Scala, Milan, December
7, 1957
Verdi, La traviata,
conducted by Franco
Ghione, live
performance, Lisbon,
March 27, 1958
Mad Scenes (excerpts
from Anna Bolena,
Bellini's Il pirata and
Ambroise Thomas's
Hamlet), conducted by
Nicola Rescigno, studio
recording for EMI in
stereo, September 1958
Cherubini, Medea
conducted by Nicola
Rescigno, live
performance at the
Dallas Civic Opera in
1958; considered to be
Callas's most notable
performance of
Cherubini's opera.
Ponchielli, La Gioconda,
conducted by Antonino
Votto, studio recording
for EMI in stereo,
September 1959
Puccini, Tosca,
conducted by Carlo
Felice Cillario, live
performance, London,
January 1964
Bizet, Carmen, conducted
by Georges Prêtre,
studio recording for EMI
in stereo, 1964. It is
her only performance of
the role, and her only
performance of the
complete opera; she
never appeared in it
onstage. The recording
used the recitatives
added after Bizet's
death. Callas's
performance caused
critic Harold C.
Schonberg to speculate
in his book The Glorious
Ones that Callas perhaps
should have sung mezzo
roles instead of simply
soprano ones.
Puccini, Tosca,
conducted by Georges
Prêtre, studio recording
for EMI in stereo,
December 1964.
- wikipedia