- Susan Chilcott
Susan Chilcott (
July 8 1963 –September 4 2003 ) was an Englishsoprano , considered one of the best of her generation. [cite web| url= http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/09/05/db0502.xml | publisher=The Daily Telegraph | date=5 September 2003 | title= Susan Chilcott obituary | accessdate= 2008-02-19] While achieving worldwide fame among the aficionados ofopera andclassical music in general, she failed to become a household name, something which she would have undoubtedly have done but for her untimely death frombreast cancer at the age of 40. She had success in many of the major opera houses around the world and was particularly known for her interpretations ofBritten andJanacek .Early life
Susan Chilcott was born in the village of Timsbury, near Bath,
England . Her talent was obvious from an early age. She sang in chapels and community halls in the area as well in school assemblies atWrithlington School , near Bath, which she attended between 1974 and 1979.At the age of 12 her talent was noted by Mollie Petrie, a singing teacher, who remained with her as a singing coach and advisor for the rest of her career. In 1982, she started studying at the
Guildhall School of Music , where her tutor was Noelle Barker.Singing career
Her operatic debut was as the First Lady in
The Magic Flute , inOviedo in 1991. In that year she also sang with theScottish Opera . The performance which could be described as her major breakthrough, bringing her to the attention of a wider audience, was her interpretation of Ellen Orford inBenjamin Britten ’sPeter Grimes atLa Monnaie inBelgium in 1994. During the next few years, she had huge success inEurope , singing roles fromVerdi ,Boesman , Dvořák, Britten andJanacek . Indeed, her performance in 1999 in Janacek’sKatya Kabanova was considered by many critics to be one of her best.Another triumphant performance was in 2001 at
Glyndebourne asDesdemona in Sir Peter Hall’s production ofOtello . In 2002 she sang oppositePlácido Domingo inTchaikovsky ’s The Queen of Spades atConvent Garden . Apart from her operatic work, she also gave concerts, often with pianistIain Burnside , a close friend, and with him and the actressFiona Shaw , gave intimate poetry recitals.Illness and Death
In 2001, Chilcott was diagnosed with
breast cancer , but recovered sufficiently to return to the stage. In 2003, she relapsed, and died on4 September 2003 , aged 40.Family life
Susan Chilcott was raised by adoptive parents. In adulthood, she had a relationship, which produced her only son, Hugh, and later married her agent, David Sigall. She had an affair with
Jonathan Dimbleby which led to his divorce fromBel Mooney .Scholarship
After her death, a scholarship, known as the Susan Chilcott Scholarship, was set up to help aspiring singers with their careers. Its patron is
Plácido Domingo and the trustees areDame Josephine Barstow ,Iain Burnside ,Neal Davies ,Jonathan Dimbleby ,Anthony Freud ,Alan Parker andShaun Woodward .External links
* [http://www.susanchilcott.org.uk Susan Chilcott Scholarship]
* [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2003/09/05/db0502.xmll Daily Telegraph obituary]
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,3604,1036609,00.html Guardian obituary]References
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