- Antonio Pini-Corsi
Antonio Pini-Corsi (June,
1859 -April 21 ,1918 ) was an Italianbuffo baritone of international renown.Pini-Corsi was born into a family of singers. His birthplace, Zara, later known as
Zadar . Zara was located in theAustro-Hungarian Empire at that time. It would successively become part of theKingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes ;Yugoslavia ; and, finally,Croatia .He made his debut in
Cremona in 1878, subsequently appearing inopera house s throughout Italy. So successful was he thatGiuseppe Verdi invited him to appear as Ford in thepremiere of his final opera, "Falstaff", atLa Scala , Milan, in 1893. He made his debut in theUnited States on November 20, 1909, appearing at the New YorkMetropolitan Opera as Schaunard in "La boheme ", a role that he had sung at the opera's première in 1896. He remained with the Met through to the 1913-14 season, appearing in numerous world premieres, including those ofWalter Damrosch 's "Cyrano de Bergerac", "La fanciulla del West ",Engelbert Humperdinck 's "Königskinder ", andVictor Herbert 's "Madeline". He also appeared in the American premieres of two operas byErmanno Wolf-Ferrari , "L'amore medico " and "Le donne curiose ", and that ofAlberto Franchetti 's "Germania".Pini-Corsi died in
Milan , aged only 58. Records confirm that he was the finest comic baritone of his era. He possessed a ripe-toned voice of great flexibility and displayed tremendous skill at patter singing.ome roles created by Pini-Corsi
*1893: Ford in "Falstaff" (Verdi)
*1903: Miskinski in "Siberia" (Giordano)
*1910: Happy in "La fanciulla del West " (Puccini )
*1910: Innkeeper in "Königskinder " (Humperdinck)References
*David Ewen, "Encyclopedia of the Opera: New Enlarged Edition". New York; Hill and Wang, 1963.
*Michael Scott, "The Record of Singing", London; Duckworth, 1977.
*cite book | last = Warrack| first = John, and Ewan West| year = 1992| title = The Oxford Dictionary of Opera| publisher = Oxford University Press| location = Oxford| id = ISBN 0-19-869164-5
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