Helena Tattermuschová

Helena Tattermuschová (born June 28, 1933[1]) is a Czech lyric coloratura soprano, known chiefly for her character roles in the operas of Mozart and Janáček.

Tattermuschová was born in Prague and studied vocal performance with Vlasta Linhartová at the Academy of Music in Prague.[2] Upon completion of her studies, she was engaged by the Ostrava Opera where she made her stage debut as Musetta in 1955. By 1956, she was a member of the Prague National Theater opera company where she continued to sing well into the 1980s.[3] She possessed a high lyric soprano voice that tended to cast her into either “daughter” roles or youthful trouser roles for many years into her career.

That distinctively girlish vocal quality inclined Tattermuschová to the soubrette characters in Mozart operas, notably Papagena in The Magic Flute, Zerlina in Don Giovanni and Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro. She also took on the coloratura roles of Rosina in Rossini's The Barber of Seville and Gilda in Verdi's Rigoletto.

Tattermuschová’s singular contribution to opera was her body of work singing the Czech repertoire on the national and international stage as well as on recordings. She enjoyed one of her greatest triumphs in 1970 in the title role of Vixen Sharp-Ears from Janáček’s The Cunning Little Vixen, which she subsequently recorded.[4] Her youthful voice uniquely suited her to the key role of the boy Aljeja in the nearly all-male cast of Janáček’s From the House of the Dead (performed at the 1964 Edinburgh Festival). She was also Krista in The Makropulos Affair.

In addition to her Janáček roles, Tattermuschová sang in the nationalist Czech operas of Smetana and Dvořák. Her stage roles in Smetana included the servant girl Barče in The Kiss, the Councillor’s daughter Blaženka in The Secret and the merry widow Karolina in The Two Widows. In Dvořák’s operas, she was the kitchen boy Turnspit in Rusalka and the schoolmaster’s daughter Terinka in The Jacobin. Outside of Czechoslovakia, she appeared as a guest artist at opera houses in Barcelona, Brussels, Amsterdam, Warsaw, Naples, Venice and Sofia.

Recordings

References

  1. Hall, Charles (2002). Chronology of Western Classical Music. Taylor & Francis Books, p. I322. ISBN 0-415-93878-3
  2. Cummings, David M., ed. (2003). International Who's Who in Classical Music 2003. Europa Publications, Ltd., p. 777. ISBN 1-85743-174-X
  3. Artist biography “The Cunning Little Vixen” album liner notes (Supraphon)
  4. Gruber, Paul, ed. (1993). The Metropolitan Opera Guide to Recorded Opera. Metropolitan Opera Guild, p. 197. ISBN 0-393-03444-5

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 4/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.