- Stella Roman
Stella Roman (
23 August 1904 -12 February 1992 ) was a Romanian operaticsoprano whose career brought her leading roles inItaly and theUnited States .Background and training
Stella Roman (née Florica Viorica Alma Stela Blasu) was born in Cluj,
Romania . She came from a musical background, and studied singing for eight years before making her concert début in Cluj and then in Bucharest. She then won a scholarship to continue her training in Italy with the great verismo interpreterGiuseppina Baldassare-Tedeschi , of whom she later said: "her style did not really suit me". Rasponi, Lanfranco. "The last prima donnas". (London, Gollancz, 1984), pp.553-560. ] Roman moved on to study withHariclea Darclée (who had created the title role ofTosca at the première in 1900), and was much happier under her guidance: "she taught me the value of every word and phrase". ]Career
Her operatic début was, by her own account, at Bologna in 1934 in the role of Maddalena in
Andrea Chénier , (though other accounts mention a performance in Piacenza in 1932). She sangTosca at theTeatro di San Carlo in Naples which inaugurated a long partnership with the tenorGiacomo Lauri-Volpi . In 1937 she was offered a three-year contract at Rome Opera House byTullio Serafin , and she found herself making a sudden début asAida .It was as Aida that she also made her first appearance at the
Metropolitan Opera in New York in 1941, and she continued to sing there throughout the 1940s in the the Italian repertoire:Il trovatore ,Otello ,Un ballo in maschera ,Cavalleria rusticana ,La Gioconda ,Tosca . She often shared these roles at the Met withZinka Milanov . She left the Met in 1951 after the arrival ofRudolph Bing as its general manager.Stella Roman had a particular association with
Richard Strauss , who chose her to sing the role of the Empress inDie Frau ohne Schatten for its Italian première atLa Scala in 1940. She later went to visit Strauss atPontresina in 1948 to study with him theFour Last Songs and the role of the Marschallin inDer Rosenkavalier , and it was as the Marschallin that she ended her career at the San Carlo theatre in Naples. She retired in 1953 after having married for the second time; her operatic career had lasted for 19 years.Her voice was admired for its warm lyrical quality and its ability to deliver high pianissimi and vibrant climaxes, but her technique was said to be "unorthodox and sometimes hectic". [ Schauensee, Max de. "Stella Roman", in "Grove Music Online" ed. L. Macy (Accessed 29 September 2006),
After her retirement, she took up painting and her work was exhibited. She died in New York at the age of 87.
Recordings
Several of Roman's performance at the Metropolitan Opera were recorded and have now been reissued on CD, including:
*
Un ballo in maschera , as Amelia, conducted by E.Panizza. February 1942.
*La forza del destino , as Leonora, conducted by Bruno Walter. January 1943. (Of this performance, Alan Blyth has written: "Stella Roman ... yields few points to such notable interpreters as Ponselle, Milanov and Tebaldi ... she uses her warm generous voice to unerring effect".)
*Otello , as Desdemona, with Torsten Ralf, conducted by George Szell. 1946.In addition, a recording of assorted opera arias with
Artur Rodziński conducting theLos Angeles Philharmonic , along with excerpts from Verdi's "Aida " withKarl Kritz conducting (1945-50), was released on Eklipse in 1997.Roman also reported that she had made some recordings of Romanian folk-songs with her compatriot
George Enescu , but it is not certain whether these were ever released.References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.