- Regina Resnik
Regina Resnik (born
August 30 ,1922 ) is an Americanopera tic singer.Regina Resnik, the American mezzo-soprano, started a dramatic career ten months after earning her B.A. in Music at Hunter College. The role was Lady Macbeth under Fritz Busch in December, 1942 with the New Opera Company. The young singer's first appearance startled the opera world and, a few months later, she sang Fidelio and Micaela under Eric Kleiber in Mexico City. In between she sang Santuzza with the fledgling New York City Opera and, tossing off "Ernani, Involami" with dazzling agility, won the Metropolitan Auditions of the Air and her contract with that company for the 1944-45 season.
Miss Resnik's debut at the great theater was doubly dramatic - on one day's notice she substituted for Zinka Milanov as Leonora in "Il Trovatore" eliciting acclaim from the public, the critics noting that all the vocal "virtuosity" and her stage presence as an actress were very impressive. During the next decade, she offered twenty heroines: Donna Elvira, Donna Anna, Fidelio, Sieglinde, Gutrune, Chrysothemis, Rosalinda, Eboli, Aida, Alice Ford, Tosca, Butterfly and Musetta. She was the Met's first Ellen Orford in "Peter Grimes" and created Delilah in Bernard Roger's world premiere of "The Warrior." She then also began a long association with the San Francisco Opera. As for the voice, it was a regal dramatic soprano, so rich and vibrant, it invited comparison with the legendary Rosa Ponselle. During these years, her teacher was Rosalie Miller and her life began with the legendary conductors; Otto Klemperer, Bruno Walter, George Szell, Fritz Reiner, William Steinberg and Eric Leinsdorf.
In 1953, while singing Sieglinde in Bayreuth, the great conductor, Clemens Kraus, was to forecast her future, insinuating her voice was actually a mezzo. Despite her great success as a soprano, she realized that her entire voice was constantly darkening in color. In 1955 she began a year of restudy with the celebrated baritone, Giuseppe Danise. Her first two roles were Amneris in "Aida" and Laura in "La Gioconda." On February 15, 1956, she debuted as a mezzo-soprano at the Metropolitan in a brilliant portrayal of Marina in "Boris Godunov" under Dimitri Mitropoulos. October, 1957, was the beginning of a long career in London at the Royal Opera House. Her debut as Carmen was a sensation and, in time, she was heard as Amneris, Marina, Ulrica, the Nurse in "Frau Ohne Schatten" and the Old Prioress in "Dialogue of the Carmelites." In the historic Zeffirelli-Giulini production of "Falstaff", her Mistress Quickly became the model for this role. Carmen, Klytemnestra, Mistress Quickly and the now legendary Pique Dame became her signature parts.
From the French Press - "Hers was the most skillfully inflected Carmen with every nuance of the role and every syllable of her French set forth in a masterly manner. It was also the most beautifully sung performance of the role. From the dramatic standpoint, this was the ideal Carmen - ferocious, sultry, unpredictable; never banal, never vulgar." But with Klytemnestra, Miss Resnik met her greatest challenge – "a dramatic conception that is unforgettable and a vocal prowess without limit." Surely among the happiest memories are three comic masterpieces - her Orlovsky in "Die Fledermaus", the Marquise in "Daughter of the Regiment" (with Sutherland and Pavarotti) and her Mistress Quickly in the Leonard Bernstein – Zeffirelli "Falstaff" of 1964.
Fluent, singing in six languages, her multifaceted talent crossed stylistic lines from the classic to the romantic, the Wagnerian to the modern. As the years passed, Miss Resnik developed a steady network of international performances: La Scala, The Paris Opera (hailed as Carmen), Salzburg, Naples, Vienna, Lisbon, Madrid, Buenos Aires, Munich, Berlin, Brussels, Marseille, Stuttgart, Hamburg and a return to Bayreuth. The Met, however, remained her base and among her triumphs there, was the new "Elektra" (with Nilsson and Rysanek) and "Pique Dame." Outside the Met, she appeared in works by Poulenc, (an unforgettable portrait of the Old Prioress in "Dialogue of the Carmelites"), Menotti ("The Medium"), Von Einem ("Visit of the Old Lady"), Walton ("The Bear"), Weill ("Mahagonny"), Frank Martin ("MystPre"), Britten ("Lucretia" - both Female Chorus and Lucretia) and, of course, Barber (her legendary Baroness in "Vanessa"). She has recorded all her great signature roles, Carmen (Schippers), Klytemnestra (Solti), Mistress Quickly (Bernstein), Orlovsky (Karajan), "Pique Dame" Countess (Rostropovich) and Sieglinde (Kraus), among many others. She became the only singer in operatic history to have sung both the soprano and mezzo leads in much of her repertory. In the United States and Canada she has also appeared in countless regional companies.
In the decade spanning 1971-1981, she distinguished herself as a stage director with Arbit Blatas, the renowned Lithuanian-born painter and sculptor, as designer. "Carmen" (Hamburg) which became the film "The Dream and the Destiny", "Falstaff" (Venice, Warsaw, Madrid, Lisbon), "Queen of Spades" (Vancouver, Sydney), "The Medium" and "The Bear" (Lisbon), "Elektra" (Venice, Strasbourg, Lisbon) and "Salome" (Lisbon, Graz).
In 1987, Resnik conquered a new world making an incredible transition to the American musical theatre as a singing actress. Her Mrs. Schneider in "Cabaret" on Broadway earned her a Tony nomination and her now incomparable Mme. Armfeldt ("A Little Night Music") at Lincoln Center brought her a Drama Desk nomination in 1991.
Celebrations of her career began in New York City when "Regina Resnik Day" was proclaimed. She received the Lawrence Tibbett Award from the American Guild of Musical Artists and a special tribute from Lincoln Center. The city of Venice honored her 50th anniversary in a special event. The 60th anniversary of her illustrious career was celebrated by the Metropolitan Opera Guild at Lincoln Center in New York.
Her own ability to verbalize her unique ideas has made her an exceptional master class teacher at the Metropolitan Opera, for ten years, at the Mozarteum (Salzburg), the Canadian Opera (Toronto), the San Francisco Opera, the Opera Studio of Opera Bastille in Paris, the Curtis Institute of Music and the Juilliard School. She is Master Teacher- in - Residence in the Opera Department of the Mannes College of Music, and has been responsible for the preparation of "La Bohème", "The Magic Flute", "Don Giovanni", "Il Tabarro", "Gianni Schicchi", "The Marriage of Figaro" and "The Dialalogue of the Carmelites." In Italy, she is Master Teacher of Vocal Studies at the Ca’Zenobio Master Campus in Treviso, and Musical Director of Eurobottega, a unique program for young singers. of the European Union, with headquarters in Venice and Treviso. The now reknowned concert series "Regina Resnik Presents" has become part of the American musical scene. Conceived by her son, Michael Philip Davis who is Artistic Director and Dramaturg, Miss Resnik appears as narrator in these concerts that have been televised and shown on CUNY-TV and will soon become a DVD.
Hunter College has invested her with an Honorary Doctorate in Humane Letters and, in 2007, the New England Conservatory honored her with a Doctorate of Music. She has served as a trustee of the Hunter Foundation and as a member of the jury of the Peabody Awards for Radio and Television. She still serves as a member of the Board of Directors of the Metropolitan Opera Guild and the Board of Advisors of CUNY-TV.
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