Anna Girò

Anna Girò (born circa 1710), or Anna Giraud La Mantovana, was the stage name of Anna Maddalena Tessieri, an Italian mezzo-soprano. She is best known for her collaborations with composer Antonio Vivaldi, who wrote several operatic roles for her.

Life and career

Girò was born in Mantua. Girò's father was a French barber and wig manufacturer. She began to study with Vivaldi around 1720. She made her debut at Treviso in the fall of 1723, and in 1724 debuted on stage in Venice, performing Laodice by Tomaso Albinoni. She sang for Vivaldi starting with her 1726 appearance in his opera Dorilla in Tempe, after that she also sang in Motezuma in 1733.[1] Vivaldi's contemporaries and modern scholars have speculated on the nature of the relationship between Vivaldi and Girò, but Vivaldi insisted the relationship was purely artistic.[2]

Girò was prima donna on dozens of performances through her career. She continued her successful career until 1748, when, after singing during the carnival in Piacenza, she married a widower, Count Antonio Maria Zanardi Landi, and retired from performing.

Notes

  1. The Chamber Cantatas of Antonio Vivaldi. By Michael Talbot. (review). Music & Letters Volume88, Issue3, pp. 515–519.
  2. Heller, Karl (1997). Antonio Vivaldi: The red priest of Venice. Hal Leonard Corporation, ISBN 978-1-57467-015-8

References

  • Vivaldi's Muse by Sarah Bruce Kelly, Bel Canto Press 2011, ISBN 978-0-9836304-0-1
  • The Red Priest's Annina by Sarah Bruce Kelly, Bel Canto Press 2009, ISBN 978-0-578-02565-0



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