- Mario (tenor)
Mario (
October 18 ,1810 –December 11 ,1883 ) was an Italianopera singer, considered to be the most famoustenor of the 19th century. His real name and hereditary title was Cavaliere Giovanni Matteo de Candia, Marquis of Candia. Born inCagliari ,Sardinia , Mario came from theHouse of Candia , aPiedmont noble family which belonged to Italy's social elite. His family formed part of the Royal Court ofTurin and his father was an army general.In order to free himself from the burdensome ancestral traditions which he had inherited, and mitigate his father's opposition to a member of the high-born Candia family pursuing a 'lowly' musical career, the young singer disguised his aristocratic origins by adopting the stage name of "Mario", when aged in his 20s.
Mario's decision to become a professional singer was the result of accidental circumstances, however. While serving as an officer of the King of
Sardinia 's Guards, he had been imprisoned atCagliari for a trifling offence. When his period of confinement was over, he resigned his commission and went toParis in the company of a ballerina, with whom he had eloped. He took singing lessons from two teachers, Ponchard andMarco Bordogni , and his success as an amateur vocalist led to the offer of an engagement with the Opéra. He made his debut there in 1838, as the hero ofMeyerbeer 's "Robert le Diable ".Mario's success was immediate and complete but he did not stay long at the Paris Opéra. In 1839, he joined the Théâtre Italien, which included on its roster of artists such celebrated singers as
Maria Malibran ,Henriette Sontag ,Fanny Persiani ,Giulia Grisi ,Giovanni Battista Rubini ,Antonio Tamburini andLuigi Lablache . His initial appearance with this company was in the role of Nemorino in Donizetti's "L'Elisir d'Amore ".London heard him for the first time during the course of that same year.The acclaim that Mario achieved in
Italian opera surpassed even that which he had won in French opera, and he soon acquired a Europe-wide reputation. He had a handsome face and a graceful figure, and his lyrical voice, though less powerful than that of his virtuoso tenor rival Rubini, or the baritone Tamburini, possessed a beguiling velvety softness that made it unique. Experience gave him ease as an actor, even though he never would excel in tragic parts. He was, nevertheless, an ideal stage lover, and he retained the grace and charm of youth long after his voice had begun to show signs of decay.Mario was not a particularly adventurous singer. He created few operatic parts, that of Ernesto in "
Don Pasquale " (1843) being perhaps the only one deserving of mention. Among the most successful of his other parts wereOtello in Rossini's opera of that name, Gennaro in "Lucrezia Borgia ", Alamviva in "Il Barbiere di Siviglia", Fernando in "La favorite ", the Duke in "Rigoletto " and Manrico in "Il trovatore ". TheRoyal Opera House ,Covent Garden , was the scene of many of his stage triumphs. He sang there in 1847–1867 and again during 1871, which would prove to be his last operatic season in London.He also made occasional appearances in England in
oratorio , singing for example at theBirmingham Festival of 1849 and at theHereford Festival of 1855. He also undertook various concert tours in theUnited Kingdom , but his name is principally associated with triumphs in the theatre. Around 1849 he acquired the "Villa Salviati" inFlorence and made it his home in Italy. Here he played host to many "grandi" art figures and, of course, members the European nobility. In 1854, he toured America. Two years later he married, in London,Giulia Grisi , the famoussoprano , who had links to the patrician Colonna family and the Royal Houses of Greece and Russia. He and Grisi had five daughters and a son.Mario bade farewell on the stage in 1871. His decision to retire followed the loss of his wife, who had died in
Berlin a few years earlier while returning from engagements in Russia. Mario ended his singing career at the imperial Russian opera house inSt Petersburg . During this time, his daughters were put under the care of tutors assigned by their Godmother, theGrand Duchess Maria Nikolaievna, Duchess of Leuchtenberg and president of theImperial Academy of Arts in St Petersburg.Mario returned to Italy and spent his last years composing music and writing; but he never fully recovered from the death of his spouse. A benefit concert was mounted for him in London in 1880. He died in
Rome three years later in difficult financial circumstances.One of his daughters was the writer
Cecilia Maria de Candia , who married Godfrey Pearce (also spelt "Pearse").References
*1911
External links
*" [http://www.archive.org/details/romanceofgreatsi00peariala The romance of a great singer; a memoir of Mario] " by Cecilia Maria de Candia Pearse and Frank Hird, 1910, from the
Internet Archive
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.