- Olga Borodina
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Olga Vladimirovna Borodina (born 29 July 1963 in Saint Petersburg)[1] is a leading dramatic mezzo-soprano, known for her roles in Russian operas at her home company, the Mariinsky Theatre, and for her international performing and recording career in a varied repertoire.
Borodina made her debut in Samson and Delilah at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden with Plácido Domingo. She performs frequently at the Metropolitan Opera and the San Francisco Opera and many other opera houses in roles including La Cenerentola, Marguérite in La damnation de Faust, Eboli in Don Carlos, Principessa in Adriana Lecouvreur, Carmen, Marfa in Khovanshchina and Amneris in Aida. Borodina is known for her "plush" voice.[2][3][4]
She has received recognition as a People's Artist of Russia in 2002, the first prize gold medal of the 1998 Rosa Ponselle Vocal Competition,[5] and also won the Barcelona competition in 1989.[6] She was awarded the State Prize of the Russian Federation (2006).[7] She was one of the winners of the 2007 Opera News Awards for distinguished achievement.
Borodina is featured in many Russian opera recordings on Philips conducted by Valery Gergiyev with the Mariinsky company. Her Russian heritage is very important to her:
"I'm one of the mad people who need their roots. I take nourishment from my native land, my motherland. I want my children to study in Russia, because they are Russian. I think this is tremendously important. But life in St Petersburg is becoming tougher by the day and the Russian spirit, the spirituality that was part and parcel of Russian culture, is almost not there any more.[8]
She once pulled out of a production of Carmen at La Scala because the recitatives were spoken instead of sung,[9] and left rehearsals at the Royal Opera House for Aida, directed by Robert Wilson, because she found the conductor's (Antonio Pappano) "approach too alien to the opera".[8] In 2006, the management of the Vienna State Opera "decided to distance itself from an engagement [with Borodina], not just for this production but also for all others" on the night of the première of L'italiana in Algeri.[10]
References
- ^ Borodina, Olga as RussiaProfile.org
- ^ "Working Out Those Royal Father-Son Issues on a Grand Stage" by Anthony Tommasini, The New York Times, 2 December 2006
- ^ "Rotterdam Philharmonic/Gergiev", by Erica Jeal, The Guardian, 22 August 2003
- ^ "Rossini’s L’italiana à la russe at the Met; Florez shines" by Robert Levine at ClassicsToday.com
- ^ Links to opera singers at RosaPonselle.com
- ^ Olga Borodina at Mariinsky Theatre
- ^ Президент России (Russian)
- ^ a b "'He's still very angry", interview by Stephen Everson, The Guardian, 28 July 2005
- ^ "The ambitious diva with designs to direct" by Galina Stolyarova, The St. Petersburg Times
- ^ "Vienna State Opera Fires Olga Borodina" by Matthew Westphal, Playbill, 20 June 2006
Mariinsky Theatre, Saint Petersburg Stock company Conductor and opera company director · Valery Gergiev | 22 sopranos · Anna Netrebko may be the best known | 13 mezzo-sopranos · Olga Borodina familiar to US and European audiences | 23 tenors | eight baritones | 14 bassesStages Categories:- 1963 births
- Living people
- Operatic mezzo-sopranos
- People's Artists of Russia
- Russian female singers
- Russian opera singers
- State Prize of the Russian Federation laureates
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