- Anna Tomowa-Sintow
Anna Tomowa-Sintow (born
September 22 ,1941 , inStara Zagora ,Bulgaria ) is a Bulgariansoprano who has sung to great acclaim in all the major opera houses around the world in a repertoire that includes Mozart, Rossini, Verdi, Puccini, Wagner, and Strauss. She enjoyed a particularly close professional relationship with conductorHerbert von Karajan from 1973 until the conductor’s death in 1989.Tomowa-Sintow began studying piano at age six. At sixteen she won a national singing competition. She later attended the National Conservatory of Sofia, where she studied voice with Professor Georgi Zlatev-Tcherkin and soprano Katia Spiridonowa and graduated with diplomas in voice and piano, making her stage debut, for her master class finals, as Tatiana in Tchaikovsky’s "Eugene Onegin". Upon graduation, she joined the Opera Studio of the Leipzig Opera, where, in 1967, she made her professional debut as Abigaille in Verdi’s "
Nabucco ". While with this company she built up her repertoire with the leading roles in Puccini’s "Madama Butterfly " and "Manon Lescaut "; Verdi’s "La traviata ", "Il trovatore ", and "Otello "; Mozart’s "Don Giovanni "; Strauss’s "Arabella "; and Werner Egk’s "Die Zaubergeige". For many of these roles she studied with the company’s music director, Professor Peter Schmitz, who had studied with Richard Strauss.In 1972, she was invited to join the Deutsche Staatsoper Berlin, where she was named "Kammersängerin" during her very first year. In Berlin she continued to expand her repertoire with leading roles in Mozart’s "
The Marriage of Figaro " and "Così fan tutte ", Verdi’s "Aida ", Puccini’s "Tosca ", Tchaikovsky’s "Eugene Onegin", Wagner’s "Tannhäuser " and "Lohengrin", and Strauss’s "Ariadne auf Naxos " and "Der Rosenkavalier ".She is also a "Kammersängerin" of the Vienna Staatsoper.
In 1973, Tomowa-Sintow auditioned for conductor Herbert von Karajan for the upcoming world premiere of Carl Orff’s "De temporum fine comœdia" at the
Salzburg Festival . He hired her immediately, and for the next seventeen years (until Karajan’s death) the two worked frequently together in opera houses, concert halls, and recording studios around the world. Karajan called Tomowa-Sintow "the greatest talent I have encountered over the past years." From 1973 through 1991, Tomowa-Sintow was a permanent guest of the Salzburg Festival. With that maestro, she recorded "Le nozze di Figaro" (1978), "Lohengrin" (oppositeRené Kollo andDunja Vejzovic , 1976-81) and "Der Rosenkavalier" (withAgnes Baltsa andJanet Perry , 1982).Tomowa-Sintow made her
San Francisco Opera debut in 1974, as Donna Anna in "Don Giovanni"; her Covent Garden debut in 1975, as Fiordiligi in "Così fan tutte"; herMetropolitan Opera debut in 1976 and herLyric Opera of Chicago debut in 1980, both as Donna Anna; and herLa Scala debut in 1982, as Elsa in "Lohengrin".Her recording of "Ariadne auf Naxos" with
James Levine and the Vienna Philharmonic won the 1988Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording .External links
* [http://www.tomowa-sintow.com/ Anna Tomowa-Sintow: Primadonna with Heart]
* [http://www.ucis.pitt.edu/opera/OFB/stars/tom01.htm Her page on the Stars of Bulgarian Opera site with 4 mp3 audio clips of selected arias]
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