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Cecilia Bartoli veers into opera management while still singing at 57

Still singing at age 57, mezzo-soprano Cecilia Bartoli has branched into opera management

Ronald Blum
Monday 07 August 2023 13:16 EDT
Opera-Bartoli
Opera-Bartoli

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Cecilia Bartoli has a favorite role she wished she could sing.

ā€œThere is one character which I was always in love with since I started my Mozart career, and itā€™s Don Giovanni,ā€ she said. ā€œWith me, you never know.ā€

She laughed at her thought of a baritone part. Now 57, the mezzo-soprano has highlighted 17th and 18th century music and is singing the lead in Gluckā€™s ā€œOrfeo ed Eurydice, which opened Friday at the Salzburg Festival in modern-dress Cristof Loy production that has five performances through Aug. 14.

Bartoli has expanded into an administrative career, succeeding Riccardo Muti as artistic director of the Salzburg Whitsun Festival in 2012 and in January became director of the OpƩra de Monte-Carlo.

ā€œAfter 35 years of singing, I think itā€™s a great challenge,ā€ she said. ā€œWhen you are the performer, you are concentrating in your music,ā€ she said. ā€œYou donā€™t know exactly the other artists, what are their needs. Everybodyā€™s different, has a different body, has a different way of reacting about stress. Each artist has a different way to see that.ā€

Bartoli made her opera debut in 1987 and gained recognition for her work in Rossini and Mozart. She has excelled in Baroque roles that veered from the mainstream, releasing recordings devoted to 19th century soprano Maria Malibran, castrati and composers Antonio Salieri and Agostino Steffani.

ā€œSheā€™s not only a fantastic singer, a fantastic musician, sheā€™s one of the few artists in this region ā€” where the air is quite thin,ā€ Salzburg Festival artistic director Markus HinterhƤuser said. ā€œHer knowledge and her interest in questions of music is absolutely amazing, And also, sheā€™s very, very brave.ā€

She selects the operas she stars in for a pair of performances at the Whitsun Festival each year in late May and early June, a production that returns for the main summer festival. She has worked in recent years with conductor Gianluca Capuano, and for ā€œOrfeoā€ picked Loy, who paired with set designer Johannes Leiacker for a minimalist staging dominated by stairs that looked like the lobby of a museum or a courthouse. Loy also directed Bartoli in a 2017 staging of Handel's ā€œAriodanteā€ in Salzburg.

ā€œIt is fascinating to do a male character because for a long time in during my career I did always women's roles,ā€ she said.

Ursula Renzenbrink costumed Bartoli in a dark suit and turtleneck for the trousers role of Orfeo, who is allowed by Amore (Madison Nonoa) to retrieve his wife Euridice (MĆ©lissa Petit) from the underworld on the condition he not look at her until they return to Earth. The dance-heavy opera is presented over 90 minutes without intermission and Bartoli is on stage for almost the entire performance.

Bartoli goes her own way. She hates flying and hasnā€™t appeared at the Metropolitan Opera since 1998 or Carnegie Hall since 2009.

ā€œThe fact that I donā€™t like flying somehow preserved my voice,ā€ she said. ā€œBecause when you fly it, you go from one place to there, ping-pong, and then you get tired, your body gets tired.ā€

Next January Bartoli will sing Cleopatra in Handelā€™s ā€œGiulio Cesare in Egitto (Julius Ceasar in Egypt)ā€ at Monte Carlo in a Davide Livermore staging that will travel in July to the Vienna State Opera in the workā€™s first performances there since 1960. Her season includes Rossiniā€™s ā€œLā€™Italiana in Algeri (The Italian Girl in Algiers)ā€ at the Zurich Opera in December and January plus concerts across Europe that include joint appearances with actor John Malkovich in Monte Carlo, Versailles and Vienna.

She scheduled 20 performances of Andrew Lloyd Webberā€™s ā€œThe Phantom of the Operaā€ from Dec. 16-31 in Monte Carlo at a building designed by Charles Garnier, the architect of the famous Paris opera house. And sheā€™s working on programming future seasons in Monte Carlo.

ā€œItā€™s a great challenge,ā€ she said. ā€œI like the idea of continuing this for other artists.ā€

When sheā€™s home, Bartoli veers into unexpected territory.

ā€œIn the shower, I can sing pop music,ā€ Bartoli said. ā€œIt really depends on the day and the mood.ā€

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