"To sing is an expression of your being, a being which is
becoming." -Maria Callas
Maria Callas was born Cecilia
Sophia Anna Maria Kalogeropoulos on December 2, 1923, in New York, New York.
She was the daughter of a Greek couple, Evangelina Dimitriadis and George Kalogeropoulos, who had arrived in America in
August of 1923. When her mother moved back to Greece
in early 1937, Maria went along with her and shortly after began training with
Elvira de Hidalgo at the National Conservatory in Athens.
After three years of training,
Maria made her professi 10510w2220k onal stage debut in November of 1940 at the National
Lyric Theatre in Athens
in Suppé's operetta, Boccaccio.
Her first success came in 1942 when she was asked to perform in Tosca at
the Athens
Opera. Soon after, she performed Fidelio, Tiefland,
and CavalleriaRusticana
in Athens and returned to her birthplace, New York, in the hopes
of starting a successful career in opera.
Her auditions had not been going
well until she was asked to audition for Edward Johnson, the General Manager of
the Metropolitan Opera. Johnson heard her and immediately offered her the
leading roles in two productions of the 1946/7 season: Beethoven's Fidelio
and Puccini's Madama Butterfly. Maria,
to Johnson's surprise, turned the roles down. She didn't want to sing Fidelio
in English and she felt that she was too heavy to portray the young, fragile
Butterfly. This story may just be a myth, though, since the Met maintains
Callas' audition was not a success and that she was never offered a contract.
Maria was, however, able to find
work. After an engagement in La Gioconda in Verona, she traveled to Venice to sing Brünnhilde
in Die Walküre for the 1948/9 season with TullioSerafin conducting. I Puritani would be performed in Venice shortly after starring the Italian
soprano MargheritaCarosio
as Elvira. One night, Maria got tired of Brünnhilde's
Ho-jo-to-hos and began sight-reading Elvira's music.
When Serafin's wife heard Maria, she immediately
called her husband and requested that Maria sing for him also. She did just
that but Maria did not know that Carosio had fallen
ill and that a replacement would be needed. The following morning, Maria sang
for the Musical Director of the Opera House who decided that Maria would be the
best choice as Elvira. She was given one week to learn the entire opera, a week
which contained three performances of Die Walküre.
After the first I Puritani on January 19,
1949, Maria became the talk of Italy.
It was a huge success, even though she had made some small mistakes, one of
them being that instead of singing "son verginvezzosa" (I am a charming virgin), she sang "son verginviziosa" (I am a
vicious virgin). Three months after her success, she married Giovanni Battista Meneghini, a man almost 30 years older than Maria, on 21
April 1949, in the ChiesadeiFilippini in Verona,
Italy.
After her Elviras
in Venice, Maria had become a major opera
celebrity in Italy but had
still not been offered a role at La Scala in Milan. Finally, Maria was
offered the lead role in Verdi's Aïda after RenataTebaldi (who had been cast
in the role) became unavailable. Maria and Meneghini
expected a huge triumph, but when Aïda opened
on April 12, 1950, she received a polite reception and lukewarm reviews. It
wasn't until 7 December 1950 that La Scala
surrendered to Maria Callas. She had opened the 1950/1 season with I VespriSiciliani and was
greeted with thunderous applause and enthusiastic reviews.
In July of 1952, Maria signed an
exclusive recording contract with Walter Legge,
director of EMI. A few days after the contract was signed, Legge
and his wife, the great German soprano Elisabeth Schwarzkopf, went to see Maria
in La Traviata at the Arena in Verona, Italy.
Following the performance, Schwarzkopf offered Maria one of the most moving
tributes she had ever received: Elisabeth would never sing La Traviata again. When asked to explain her decision,
Schwarzkopf replied, "What is the sense in doing a part that another
contemporary artist can do to perfection?"
November 17, 1955, was the day
that established Maria's image as a tigress. She had just finished performing Madama Butterfly at the Lyric Opera of Chicago and was backstage
celebrating her triumph. As the audience continued to applaud, Maria was
approached by Marshal Stanley Pringle, who presented Maria with a summons to
court. She was being sued by a former manager, Eddie Bagarozy,
on behalf of a 1947 contract that named Bagarozy as
Maria's sole representative. Though the two had not been in contact for several
years, Bagarozy claimed that he was entitled to a
percentage of Maria's fees and the expenses he was supposed to have incurred on
her behalf - a total of $300,000. The case was settled out of court on 7
November 1957. The terms were not made public.
Maria finally made her debut at
the Metropolitan Opera on 28 October 1956 as Norma in Bellini's Norma.
Unfortunately for Maria, Time magazine had done an interview with Maria's
mother, the woman Maria blamed for robbing her of her childhood. Maria had last
seen her mother in Mexico
in 1950 and had vowed that she would never meet or speak with her again (a
promise she took with her to her death). The Time article portrayed Maria as an
ungrateful daughter and the New York
public reacted coldly when Maria's Met debut came. In fact, the legendary
soprano ZinkaMilanov
received more applause when she took her seat than Maria did when she made her
entrance. By the end of the final act, though, the New York public surrendered and Maria
received 16 curtain calls.
The next time Maria made
headlines was when she was scheduled to sing in a gala performance of Norma
at the Rome
Opera House on 2 January 1958. The performance was to be attended by Italy's
president, Giovanni Gronchi and his wife.
Unfortunately, Maria had seen in the New Year by drinking champagne and staying
up very late at the fashionable Rome
nightclub, CircolodegliSacchi. When Maria awoke, less than thirty-six hours before
curtain-up, her voice had gone. She couldn't even whisper, let alone sing. The
Opera House was informed that a replacement would be needed. There was no
understudy and a cancellation would have been disastrous. What happened instead
was worse than a disaster. Maria, against the orders of her doctors, went on
stage but it was clear from her first note that her voice was in ruins. At the
end of the first act, half the audience jeered while the other half sat in
shocked silence. Maria escaped through a back exit and an announcement had to
be made that the performance simply could not go on. The public was furious but
Maria was relieved to receive a phone call from Signora Gronchi
assuring her that neither she nor her husband had been offended.
On 3 September 1959, Maria
announced that she would be parting from her husband. She began a 9 year love
affair with Aristotle Onassis. The couple was
expected to marry but in the end, Aristotle married Jackie Kennedy, John F.
Kennedy's widow, on 20 October 1968. His death on 15 March 1975, is considered
to be one of the major factors behind Maria's death.
In the meantime, Maria was performing
Medea at La Scala on
11 December 1961. She was not in good voice and during her first act duet with
Jason (performed by Jon Vickers), the audience began hissing. Maria ignored the
crowd until she reached the point in the text where she denounces Jason with a
word "Crudel!" (Cruel man!). After the
first "Crudel!" she stopped singing. She
looked out into the crowd and directed her second "Crudel!"
directly to the public. She paused and started again with the words "Ho datotutto a te"
(I gave everything to you) and shook her fist at the gallery. The audience
stopped hissing and Maria received a huge ovation at the end.
In May of 1965, Maria's voice
once again became the subject of dispute. She was performing Norma at
the Paris Opera
with FiorenzaCossotto as Adalgisa. Cossotto knew that
Maria was exhausted and her voice was weak so Cossotto
intentionally held on to notes longer than Maria could. On the night of the
final Norma on 29 May, Maria was at her weakest. To make things worse, Cossotto treated their big duet like a duel. At the end,
when the curtain came down, Maria collapsed and was carried unconscious to her
dressing room.
In June 1969, Maria began work
on a film of Medea (not Cherubini's
opera or Euripide's tragedy but the myth of Medea) with Pier Paolo Pasolini.
She hardly sang but still worked very hard. So hard that one day she fainted
after running on a dry riverbed in the sun for a particular shot. Unfortunately
for Maria, the film was not a success.
By 1970, Maria's singing career
had come to a quick halt. On May 25, she was rushed to the hospital and it was
announced that she had tried to commit suicide by taking an overdose of
barbiturates. It seems unlikely that she actually attempted suicide, though by
this time she was known to take more sleeping-tablets to find sleep and more
barbiturates to find peace.
In 1973, she began a comeback
tour with Giuseppe di Stefano. For the first time in
eight years, Maria Callas was singing in public. It was clear from the first
concert in Hamburg
on 25 October that the tour would be an artistic disaster. Callas and di Stefano had as an accompanist, Ivor
Newton, who was well into his eighties. During the tour, Newton began having dizzy spells in the
street and fantasizing about his death. He once said to Robert Sutherland, who
was turning the pages for Newton,
"If I have a heart attack while Maria is singing a high note, you are to
push me off my stool and take over as though nothing had happened." Maria
refused to fire Newton, fearing that doing so would probably kill him.
Sutherland eventually took over as accompanist when the tour travelled to the U.S. The final concert took place
on November 11, 1974, in the city of Sapporo in
northern Japan.
That was the last place on earth that would hear Maria sing.
On 16 September 1977, Maria woke
up late in her home in Paris.
She had breakfast in bed, then got up and started towards the bathroom. There
was a piercing pain in her left side and she collapsed. She was put back into
bed and drank some strong coffee. After failing to get a hold of any medical
help, they called Maria's butler's doctor who started out immediately for
Maria's residence. She was dead before he arrived. Her funeral was held on
September 20th. She was cremated and her remains kept at the cemetery of PèreLachaise in
Paris. In the
spring of 1979, the ashes were taken to Greece
and were scattered in the Aegean.
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