Delores
Ziegler
Voice
Georgia native, mezzo-soprano Delores Ziegler enjoys an international
performing career that ranges from bel canto to verismo opera,
recital, concert and music theatre performances. Ziegler has
sung in most of the great opera houses of the world, from the
Vienna
Staatsoper to La Scala Milan, the
Bolshoi in Moscow, and the Metropolitan Opera in New York. Particularly
admired for her Dorabella, she has also sung Octavian, Cherubino,
the Composer, Orfeo, Romeo in I Capuletti e i Montecchi,
Adalgisa, Idamante, and Meg Page.
With a discography of twenty-three CDs and four DVDs, Ziegler is the world’s
most recorded Dorabella: she appears on three Cosi fan tutte
discs
with conductor Bernard Haitink on EMI, Riccardo Muti on Sony
Classical, and Nicholas Harnoncourt on Teldec. She sang frequently
with the late Robert Shaw and the Atlanta Symphony, recording
with them in Mozart's Requiem and Great Mass,
and Mahler's Symphony No. 8. She also sang in Mozart's
Coronation Mass recorded
by
James Levine and the Berlin Philharmonic on Deutsche Grammophon.
As a lieder singer, Ziegler has appeared in Paris, Florence,
Vienna,
Cologne and Bonn. She made her New York recital debut
in Carnegie Hall’s Weill Recital Hall Series in 1992. In
1998, she took part in the world premiere of Ned Rorem’s
song cycle, Evidence of Things Not Seen, at Weill Recital
Hall under the auspices of the New York Festival of Song. She
also
recorded that work on CD.
The mezzo’s 2000 performance of Kurt Weill’s Lady
in the Dark, with the Boston Academy of Music, was cited
by Boston Phoenix critic Lloyd Schwartz as one of the
best performances of the year. Schwartz wrote: “This daring
pre-war (1940), pre-Sondheim story of love and psychoanalysis
has one of Weill’s
best American scores (it was Boston’s outstanding contribution
to the Weill centennial). And American mezzo-soprano Delores
Ziegler, who has spent most of her career in European opera houses,
proved a great leading lady in the best Broadway tradition-making
the part her own by not imitating its inimitable original star,
Gertrude Lawrence.”
B.M.,
Maryville College. M.M., University
of Tennessee.
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