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Roberta Peters

 
Artist: Roberta Peters
Roberta Peters
  • Country: USA
  • Born: May 04, 1930

Biography

Roberta Peters is one of the most durable stars of American opera, and one of the most popular coloratura singers.

She was born Roberta Peterman. She began serious voice studies at the age of thirteen. Her teacher was William Pierce Hermann, one of New York's best known vocal coaches, with a reputation for rigorous training, who gave his pupils a secure technical foundation.

Hermann brought her to the attention of impresario Sol Hurok and tenor Jan Peerce, who immediately urged the Metropolitan Opera Company to take an interest in her. They hired her when she was nineteen. At the time, she had no stage training or experience.

They scheduled her debut for February 1951, the role of The Queen of the Night in Mozart's The Magic Flute. The role requires extreme high notes and a sparkling coloratura technique, but is otherwise undemanding, since the Queen has essentially just her two arias to sing, and is a frequent debut role for promising young coloraturas.

However, the carefully developed plan was laid aside on 17 November 1950, when Nadine Connor was too ill to sing the part of Zerlina, the soubrette role in Mozart's Don Giovanni. Peters was asked, virtually at the last minute, to substitute, and made a sensation.

She immediately became a star and a mainstay of the Met, and one of America's most beloved classical musicians. She remained on the active roster of the Met for more than thirty-five years, the longest tenure of any female singer in the great house's history. She sang over five hundred performances in more than twenty roles.

Peters specialized in sparkling roles best suited to her special vocal quality (which Martin Bernheimer said possessed "considerable charm and flute-like accuracy") -- Gilda, Despina, Norina, Rosina, and Lucia di Lammermoor. When in later career her vocal quality broadened she also took on lyric soprano roles such as Mimi and Violetta.

She did not confine her appearances to the Met. She debuted at Covent Garden in 1951 in Balfe's The Bohemian Girl, conducted by Thomas Beecham, in various opera houses in Germany and Austria (including the Salzburg Festival), in San Francisco and Chicago and in Russia's Bolshoi and Kirov opera houses.

She was also active on television in an age when American television networks had classical music programs and the main variety shows included featured classical artists. She holds the record for highest number (sixty-five) of guest appearances on CBS's The Ed Sullivan Show. She made twenty-five appearances on the Voice of Firestone. As such, she was one of the most effective ambassadors of classical music to the general population, assisted by an appealing all-American personality. She also appeared in films, and sang Broadway musical numbers with a good sense of their style.

She was honored as the 1964 Federation of Women's Clubs' Woman of the Year, won the Bolshoi Medal from the Bolshoi Opera of Moscow in 1972, and in 1997 was one of the Jewish Cultural Achievement Awardees, cited for "her talent, her charm, and her commitment to the arts as well as to the Jewish people." She established a Roberta Peters Scholarship Fund at the Hebrew University in Tel Aviv, and has received numerous honorary degrees.

In 1991, President Bush appointed her to the National Council of the Arts, and she has served as member of the Boards of the Metropolitan Opera Guild and the Carnegie Hall Corporation.

She has given master classes, including a series in the People's Republic of China. In 2000, Peters received the Handel Medallion. The honor, presented to her by Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani is a tribute to individuals who have enriched New York City's cultural life.

~ Joseph Stevenson, All Music Guide

Discography

Roberta Peters Sings Operatic Arias

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Roberta Peters (born May 4, 1930) is an American coloratura soprano who enjoyed a long and distinguished career at the Metropolitan Opera, one of the most durable opera stars of America.

Life and career

Peters was born Roberta Peterman in The Bronx, a borough of New York City, the only child of Ruth (née Hirsch) and Sol Peterman,[1] a shoe salesman and a hat maker. She started her music studies at age 13, encouraged by tenor Jan Peerce, with William Herman, a strict teacher renowned for giving his students a thorough training. Herman made sure Peters had French, German and Italian lessons and made her sing scales from a clarinet method. After six years of training, Herman introduced her to impresario Sol Hurok, who arranged for an audition with Rudolf Bing, general manager of the Metropolitan Opera. Bing had her sing the Queen of the Night's second aria from The Magic Flute (with its four Fs above high C), seven times, listening from all parts of the hall to make sure she could fill the hall with sound. He scheduled her to sing the role in February 1951.

Fate had it otherwise. On November 17, 1950, Bing phoned her asking if she could sing that night. Nadine Conner, cast as Zerlina in Don Giovanni, was indisposed and could not perform. Peters who knew the role, but who had never sung with a full orchestra, never performed in a full opera production, never even performed on stage, professionally or otherwise, except for her audition, accepted. Fritz Reiner, the conductor that night, was known for being hard to follow, but he made a point of coming to Peters's dressing room to encourage her. Her performance was received with great enthusiasm, and her career took off.

Combining an attractive voice with sparkling coloratura and good looks, Peters became the darling of America and a great proponent of opera for the masses. She quickly established herself in the standard soubrette and coloratura repertoire, her roles included Susanna in Nozze di Figaro, Despina in Cosi fan tutte, The Queen of the Night in The Magic Flute, Amore in Gluck's Orfeo ed Euridice, Marzeline in Beethoven's Fidelio, Rosina in Il barbiere di Siviglia, Adina in Elisir d'amore, Norina in Don Pasquale, Oscar in Ballo in maschera, Nanetta in Falstaff, Olympia in Les contes d'Hoffmann, Sophie in Der Rosenkavalier, Zerbinetta in Ariadne auf Naxos, Adele in Die Fledermaus. She later added lyric-coloratura roles such as Amina in La Sonnambula, Lucia in Lucia di Lammermoor and Gilda in Rigoletto, the last being her farewell role at the Met in 1985.

Peters also appeared at the Lyric Opera of Chicago and the San Francisco Opera, as well as numerous cities around the United States, while on tour with the Met. Over the years, she expanded her repertoire to include roles such as Lakmé, Juliette in Roméo et Juliette, Massenet's Manon, even attempting occasionally Violetta in La Traviata, and Mimi in La Bohème.

Peters also appeared abroad as early as 1951, when she sang at the Royal Opera House in London, in Balfe's The Bohemian Girl, conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham. From the mid 1950s onwards, she appeared in several opera houses in Italy, the Vienna State Opera, the Salzburg Festival, and the Bolshoi in Moscow, in 1972.

Peters also appeared in recitals at all the great concert halls throughout the USA, and appeared numerous times on American television, in such program as The Voice of Firestone, and the Ed Sullivan Show on which she appeared a record 65 times! Early in her career in 1962, she dazzled an audience of over 13,000 guests while performing under the musical direction of Alfredo Antonini during the popular Italian Night concert series at Lewisohn Stadium.[2]

Later in her career she added operetta to her repertoire, such as The Merry Widow, and musical comedy such as The King and I. Peters never officially retired and still gives occasional recitals.

Roberta Peters was briefly married to baritone Robert Merrill in 1952. The two separated amicably, remained friends and went on performing together many times thereafter. She remarried in 1955, to Bertram Fields, with whom she had two sons.

Further reading

  • The Metropolitan Opera Encyclopedia, edited by David Hamilton, (Simon and Schuster, New York, 1987). ISBN 0-671-16732-X
  • Allmusic.com, Joseph Stevenson.

References

  1. ^ http://www.filmreference.com/film/9/Roberta-Peters.html
  2. ^ The New York Times, July 30, 1962, Pg. 14

 
 

 

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