- Alan Titus
Alan Titus (born in
New York City , onOctober 24 ,1945 ) is an internationally-celebratedbaritone . He studied underAksel Schiøtz at the Colorado School of Music, and Hans Heinz atThe Juilliard School . His official debut was as Marcello in "La bohème", in Washington, DC, in 1969.He came to prominence, however, in
Leonard Bernstein 's theatre piece "MASS" as the Celebrant, in 1971. That same year, he created the role of Archie Kramer inLee Hoiby 's "Summer and Smoke" (afterTennessee Williams ) at St. Paul. The latter was the opera of his debut the same year at theNew York City Opera , where he was a leading baritone for many seasons, participating in nationally-televised performances of "Il barbiere di Siviglia" (withBeverly Sills , 1976), "Il turco in Italia" (1978), "La cenerentola" (oppositeSusanne Marsee andRockwell Blake , 1980), and "Madama Butterfly" (conducted byChristopher Keene , 1982). He made his only appearances with theMetropolitan Opera in 1976, as Harlekin in "Ariadne auf Naxos", withMontserrat Caballé .In 1973, Titus made his European debut, in Amsterdam, as Pelléas. He has since been heard at Glyndebourne, Munich, Milan (
Teatro alla Scala ), Vienna, Paris, Rome, London (Covent Garden ), Berlin, etc. In 2000, he was Wotan in "Der Ring des Nibelungen" at theBayreuth Festival , where he had previously portrayed the name part in "Der fliegende Holländer".In 1984, the singing-actor was awarded the title of Kammersänger, in Munich.
In his discography are recordings of Beethoven's "Fidelio" (as Don Pizzaro), Bizet's "Carmen", Catalani's "La Wally", Donizetti's "Don Pasquale" (with Sills, conducted by
Sarah Caldwell ), Haydn's "La fedeltà premiata" (conducted byAntal Doráti ), Lehár's "Die lustige Witwe" (excerpts, in English, underJulius Rudel ), Leoncavallo's "La bohème", Mozart's "Don Giovanni" (led byRafael Kubelík ) and "Le nozze di Figaro" (as Figaro, conducted by SirColin Davis ), Puccini's "La bohème" (led byKent Nagano ), and Verdi's "Falstaff" (as Ford, with Sir Colin).References
* "The Metropolitan Opera Encyclopedia", edited by David Hamilton, Simon and Schuster, 1987. ISBN 0-671-61732-X
External links
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wp3AXzIUTXo] YouTube: Alan Titus in an excerpt from "La cenerentola" (1980).
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