Fiorenza Cossotto

Fiorenza Cossotto (born April 22, 1935) is an Italian mezzo-soprano. She is considered by many to be one of the greatest mezzo-sopranos of the 20th century.

Life and career

Born on April 22, 1935 in Crescentino,[1] Province of Vercelli, Italy, Cossotto attended the Turin Academy of Music and studied with Mercedes Llopart. She made her operatic debut as Sister Matilde in the world premiere of Poulenc's Dialogues of the Carmelites in 1957 at La Scala in Milan. Her international debut was at the 1958 Wexford Festival as Giovanna Seymour in Donizetti's Anna Bolena. Her Covent Garden debut was in 1959 as Neris in Cherubini's Médée, with Maria Callas in the title role. A 1962 performance of the lead in La favorita at La Scala led to wider fame and she made her American debut in the same role in 1964 at the Lyric Opera of Chicago and as Amneris at the Metropolitan Opera in 1968.

Altogether, between the seasons of 1967–68 and 1988–89, Cossotto gave 148 performances at the Met (exclusively leading roles). She was considered an expert in portrayals of major mezzo/contralto roles in mid-19th-century Italian opera such as Favorita (La favorita), Amneris (Aida), Azucena (Il trovatore), Eboli (Don Carlos), Preziosilla (La forza del destino), Maddalena (Maddalena), Ulrica (Un ballo in maschera) and Laura (La Gioconda). She also portrayed Carmen, Mozart's Cherubino, Urbain in Meyerbeer's Les Huguenots, Bellini's Romeo and Marfa in Khovantschina.

In 2005, Cossotto celebrated her 70th birthday with a performance of Suor Angelica at the Théâtre Royal in Liège, Belgium.

Cossotto was married to the Italian bass Ivo Vinco for over 40 years (ending in divorce). Their only child was a son, Roberto.

Cossotto and Callas

Fiorenza sang with Maria Callas as early as 1957 in Gluck's Iphigénie en Tauride, and many times later, until Callas' last Norma in Paris. The last performance of the latter was truncated when Callas' walked out right after their quintessential duet, "Mira, o Norma." Some claim that Cossotto intentionally sabotaged Callas by singing over her and holding high notes longer with the latter's voice (by that time, 1965) past its prime and in poor form. Others claim, in favor of Cossotto, that she encouraged Callas to sing as best as she could, and was quite cautious with her and tried to give her as much support as she could. Private recordings made at the time (and issued subsequently) are interpreted in both ways. Both Cossotto (in an interview, 2006) and Ivo Vinco (1982) said that Callas was a great friend of Cossotto, and invited her to sing Adalgisa to her Norma in the first place. On the other hand, Zeffirelli and older star mezzo Giulietta Simionato both took the accusers' side. This controversy is still being debated, particularly because the one who is closest to the truth; i.e., Callas herself, died in 1977.

Cossotto on the subject:

"But look, it's a disgrace! It's been forty years, and books still come out speaking ill of me. The first year we did our rehearsals, and everything went well. Callas was in good voice. There was no reason for her not to do Norma, which was her warhorse. During the last two performances [in 1965], she was not well —- she had a cold, which passed down [into the chest]. The last performance, poor thing, she couldn't say no, because all Onassis's elite [retinue] was in the theater. But logically she couldn't [sing], because she had already sung two performances [with] the cold. You don't play with Norma! In the [first] duet, it goes up to an A for the mezzo-soprano and Callas must do the C; [but] the C didn't come out. When we got to the end of the duet, she could no longer do [here Cossotto sings the four ascending notes to the C]. But I couldn't hear this. I didn't know if she sang or didn't sing. I thought it was better I sing my A calmly so people won't notice, just in case. Instead, they started to say, 'Look, she sings when the other one doesn't sing anymore!' But the other one didn't make a sound because she was ill —- the voice didn't come out.
"Later, Callas, at the end of the second act, said to me, 'Fiorenza, stay tonight until the end because I am not well, and we will all go out [to take curtain calls and bow] together.' We'll make a bit of a good impression, is what she wanted to say. 'Look,' I said, 'I can't, because I have to pack since tomorrow morning I have to leave really early, but let's see.' My hotel was right next to the Opéra. I said, 'I'll manage. I'll go and come back right away.' If she had been angry with me, she wouldn't have said this. Is it true or not? But no one has ever published this! They have never said, 'Callas insisted that Cossotto be present at the end of the third act, that she go and thank the audience.' So how does one explain this? If I had sung an extra note —- something only idiots can assert -— she wouldn't have said to me, 'Stay.' She would have been angry. From there it started. Even now, at a distance of forty years, they still speak ill of me. She wanted me the second year, wanted my presence. So what is all this fantasy? They do it to enrich the books and the articles, and so they damage a person. I tried to help her onstage in every way. I have always been a serious colleague, not a colleague who does harm to people."

Simionato's claim:

"...she [Callas] asked me to sing with her in two of her final performances of Norma [in Paris], for her other partner [Fiorenza Cossotto] had been behaving inconsiderately."

Spectrum of roles

According to the book "Opera" published by Koenemann, "She [Cossotto] and Giulietta Simionato were the leading Italian mezzo-sopranos of the 1960s and 1970s. She [Cossotto] won plaudits in the annals of operatic history for her wonderful vocal timbre, her perfect singing technique, and the ease with which she could master different registers. Besides singing the great mezzo roles, she also took the outstanding alto parts of the Italian operatic repertoire." Among her competitors were Shirley Verrett, Grace Bumbry, Rita Gorr, Christa Ludwig, Marilyn Horne, Viorica Cortez and Tatiana Troyanos.

Apart from mezzo and alto roles, she also sang soprano roles traditionally sung by mezzos such as Santuzza (Cavalleria Rusticana) and Adalgisa (Norma).

She sang Adalgisa next to the Normas of Callas, Joan Sutherland, Montserrat Caballé, Leyla Gencer, Elinor Ross[2] and Elena Souliotis. Full live documents (except only partially for Callas) of these performances have been commercially released in audio and/or video.

She also tried her luck in soprano roles (alas in studio only) of Lady Macbeth and Marchesa del Poggio (Un giorno di regno), and made a commercial recording of soprano arias by Verdi.

Her repertory at the Met included Amneris, Eboli, Adalgisa, Santuzza, Azucena, Dalila, Carmen (only on tour and in outdoor park concerts), Principessa (Adriana Lecouvreur) and Mistress Quickly (which she added in 1985, singing with Giuseppe Taddei as Falstaff).

Studio discography

Year Work
Role
Conductor
Cast members
Label
1957La sonnambula,
Teresa
Antonino Votto
Maria Callas
Nicola Monti
EMI Classics
1957Andrea Chénier,
Bersi
Gianandrea Gavazzeni
Renata Tebaldi
Mario del Monaco
Decca
1958Madama Butterfly,
Suzuki
Tullio Serafin
Renata Tebaldi
Carlo Bergonzi
Decca Records
1959La Gioconda,
Laura
Antonino Votto
Maria Callas
Piero Cappuccilli
EMI Classics
1959The Marriage of Figaro,
Cherubino
Carlo Maria Giulini
Giuseppe Taddei
Elisabeth Schwarzkopf
EMI Classics
1959Requiem (Verdi),
Mezzo-Soprano
Tullio Serafin
Boris Christoff
Eugenio Fernandi
Testament Records
1961Don Carlos,
Eboli
Gabriele Santini
Boris Christoff
Antonietta Stella
Deutsche Grammophon
1963Il trovatore,
Azucena
Tullio Serafin
Carlo Bergonzi
Antonietta Stella
Deutsche Grammophon
1964Rigoletto,
Maddalena
Rafael Kubelík
Renata Scotto
Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
Deutsche Grammophon
1965Cavalleria rusticana,
Santuzza
Herbert von Karajan
Carlo Bergonzi
Giangiacomo Guelfi
Deutsche Grammophon
1967Medea,
Neris
Lamberto Gardelli
Gwyneth Jones
Bruno Prevedi
Decca Records
1967Requiem (Verdi),
Mezzo-Soprano
Herbert von Karajan
Leontyne Price
Luciano Pavarotti
Deutsche Grammophon
(audio and video)
1968Cavalleria rusticana,
Santuzza
Herbert von Karajan
Gianfranco Cecchele
Giangiacomo Guelfi
Deutsche Grammophon
(Film)
1970Requiem (Verdi),
Mezzo-Soprano
Sir John Barbirolli
Montserrat Caballé
Jon Vickers
EMI Classics
1970Il trovatore,
Azucena
Zubin Mehta
Leontyne Price
Plácido Domingo
RCA Records
1972Norma,
Adalgisa
Carlo Felice Cillario
Montserrat Caballé
Plácido Domingo
RCA Records
1973Suor Angelica,
La zia Principessa
Bruno Bartoletti
Katia Ricciarelli
Maria Grazia Allegri
RCA Records
1974Un giorno di regno,
Marchesa del Poggio
Lamberto Gardelli
Jessye Norman
José Carreras
Philips Records
1974Aida,
Amneris
Riccardo Muti
Montserrat Caballé
Plácido Domingo
EMI Classics
1974La favorite,
Leonora
Richard Bonynge
Luciano Pavarotti
Gabriel Bacquier
Decca Records
1975Un ballo in maschera,
Ulrica
Riccardo Muti
Martina Arroyo
Plácido Domingo
EMI Classics
1976Macbeth,
Lady Macbeth
Riccardo Muti
Sherrill Milnes
José Carreras
EMI Classics
1976La forza del destino,
Preziosilla
James Levine
Leontyne Price
Plácido Domingo
RCA Records
1978Tancredi,
Tancredi
Gabriele Ferro
Lella Cuberli
Nicola Ghiuselev
Warner Fonit
1978Arie di Verdi,
Abigaille (Nabucco)
Elvira (Ernani)
Medora(Il Corsaro)
Eboli (Don Carlo)
Amelia (Un ballo in maschera)
Nello Santi
Ivo Vinco
Warner Fonit

References

  1. Francesco Sanvitale, La romanza italiana da salotto, Studi, tesi, ricerche, 3 (Turin: EDT, 2002), p. 454.
  2. http://www.archiviostoricolafenice.org
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