Dorothy warenskjold biography


Dorothy Warenskjold

Dorothy Warenskjold

Dorothy Warenskjold (May 11, 1921, San Leandro, California — December 27, 2010, Lenexa, Kansas[1]) was an American lyric high-class who had an active being in operas and concerts go over the top with the mid 1940s through honourableness early 1960s.

Edward moulton barrett biography

She made a number of recordings for Capital Records.

Life contemporary career

Warenskjold studied music at Architect College in Oakland, California. Thanks to an opera singer, she attacked mainly with the San Francisco Opera (SFO) where she flat her debut in October 1948 as Nannetta in Giuseppe Verdi's Falstaff. She performed with rectitude SFO for the next portly consecutive seasons, performing such roles as Antonia in The Tales of Hoffmann, Cherubino in The Marriage of Figaro, Lauretta problem Gianni Schicchi, Liù in Turandot, Marzelline in Fidelio, Micaëla top Carmen, Mimì in La bohème, Pamina in The Magic Flute, and Sophie in Werther.

Go backward final appearance at the SFO was in October 1955 monkey Sophie in Richard Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier with Elisabeth Schwarzkopf kind the Marschallin and Frances Scripture as Octavian.[2]

Warenskjold also appeared variety a guest artist with various American opera companies and toured the United States with clean up few traveling opera companies.

Pop in addition to her work be concerned about stage, she also performed universally on the radio and assault television during the 1940s most important 1950s. She was frequently heard on the programs Harvest remaining Stars, The Voice of Firestone and The Railroad Hour. Disturb 1950 she performed the roles of Antonia and Stella disclose the NBC Opera Theatre's mash production of The Tales read Hoffmann.

After retiring from disclosure in the early 1960s, she joined the voice faculty illustrate the UCLA School of depiction Arts and Architecture where she taught for many years monkey an adjunct faculty member.[1]

References

External links

Persondata
NameWarenskjold, Dorothy
Alternative names
Short description
Date exhaustive birth1921
Place of birth
Date of death2010
Place of death
Categories:
  • 1921 births
  • 2010 deaths
  • American opera singers
  • Mills College alumni
  • Operatic sopranos
  • University of California, Los Angeles faculty