Lisette Oropesa

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Lisette Oropesa
Lisette Oropesa in a red dress by Austin Scarlett
Lisette Oropesa at the Park Avenue Armory, 2016
Background information
Born (1983-09-29) September 29, 1983 (age 37)
New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.
GenresOpera
Occupation(s)Opera singer (soprano)
Years active2005–present
Websitelisetteoropesa.com

Lisette Oropesa (born September 29, 1983) is a Cuban-American operatic soprano.[1] She has a wide repertoire that includes works from Gluck, Handel, Mozart, Rossini, Donizetti, Wagner, Verdi, Bizet, Massenet and Puccini. With her lyric coloratura soprano voice,[2] she has performed roles in her native Spanish and English, as well as German, French and Italian. She is particularly noted in the roles of Susanna, Gilda, Konstanze, Lucia and Manon.

Oropesa is a vegan, and avid runner/marathoner who has been featured in Runner's World Magazine.[3] In 2014, she co-contributed to Running, Eating, Thinking: A Vegan Anthology[4] by Martin Rowe, where she talked about her weight loss journey and how she now follows a plant-based diet.

In 2015, she was a contributor to Master Singers: Advice from the Stage which includes interviews from famous opera singers about "analysis and awareness of their technique, art, interpretation and stagecraft".[5]

Early life and education[]

Oropesa was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, and raised in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Her parents emigrated from Cuba.[2]

She originally studied to be a flautist before her mother, a music teacher and former operatic soprano,[2] suggested she audition for the voice faculty at the LSU School of Music at Louisiana State University.[6] Her audition went so well that she joined the voice program with Robert Grayson as her mentor.[7]

Career[]

Beginnings[]

Oropesa was a grand finals winner of the National Council Grand Finals at the Metropolitan Opera in 2005 and joined the Met's Lindemann Young Artists Development Program, from which she graduated in 2008. She made her Met debut in a small role in Jean-Pierre Ponnelle's production of Idomeneo, conducted by James Levine in September 2006, and then sang First Lay-Sister in their new production of Suor Angelica.

As substitute, she sang her first leading role at the Metropolitan Opera, appearing as Susanna in five performances of Sir Jonathan Miller's production of The Marriage of Figaro opposite Erwin Schrott's Figaro in October 2007, which was regarded as a great success.[8]

Work at the Met in New York[]

Lisette Oropesa

In the 2007–08 season, Oropesa was seen in the Met's Hansel and Gretel as the Dew Fairy and, in the 2008–09 season, in the role of Lisette in La rondine, opposite Angela Gheorghiu, Roberto Alagna, and Samuel Ramey in Nicolas Joël's production.[9] She also sang the role of the Rhinemaiden, Woglinde, in the Met's 2009 Der Ring des Nibelungen, and additionally sang the off-stage role of the Woodbird in Siegfried.

In September 2010, she reprised her Rhinemaiden in the Met's season-opening production of Das Rheingold, for which she won a Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording in 2013. In May 2011, she sang the part of the god Amor in Mark Morris's production of Orfeo ed Euridice. In December 2011, she created the role of Miranda in the Met's baroque pastiche, The Enchanted Island, singing opposite Plácido Domingo, and conducted by William Christie.

The end of the 2012–13 season culminated with her singing as Gilda in Rigoletto and as the Waldvogel in Siegfried where she was well received in both productions: "Her pure, smooth soprano and alert presence were both endearing"[10] "...including the bright yellow Forest Bird, beautifully sung from offstage by Lisette Oropesa."[11]

The end of 2013 saw a successful opening of a new production of Falstaff at the Met, conducted by Levine. According to The New York Times, "[with the role of Nannetta], the winning soprano Lisette Oropesa, sings with effortless grace and lyrical bloom."[12]

In 2014, she starred alongside Jonas Kaufmann and Sophie Koch in the new production of Werther directed by Richard Eyre. The New York Times noted that "The bright-voiced, impressive soprano Lisette Oropesa is a sunny, winning Sophie."[13]

At the beginning of 2016, Oropesa gave her first NYC solo recital with the Park Avenue Armory. According to Anthony Tommasini of The New York Times, she "gave a rewarding performance" and "brought uncommon freshness to this music".[14]

Lisette returned to the Met in late 2017 as Gretel in Hansel and Gretel in which "she was fully committed to arguably the most demanding of roles in this particular opera".[15]

In 2019, Lisette debuted the title role in Manon which was hailed by the New York Times by saying "Lisette Oropesa’s performance in Massenet’s opera at the Met is alone worth the price of admission."[16]

In 2020, Lisette returned to the Metropolitan Opera for her second title role of the season, Giuseppe Verdi's La traviata. Her performance was praised in the New York Times, saying the following... "combining exquisite singing, youthful allure, affecting vulnerability and, by the end, bleak intensity, Ms. Oropesa emerged on Wednesday as a major Violetta."[17] On March 1, she hosted the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions and gave a donation of $25,000, ensuring each contestant receives $20,000 and raising the prize money for the first time in over 20 years. [18] She was subsequently named National Advisor to the MONC for her contributions. [19]

Performances elsewhere[]

The soprano has appeared with the Welsh National Opera as Konstanze in Die Entführung aus dem Serail; with the Deutsche Oper am Rhein in Il turco in Italia; at the Tanglewood Music Festival as Konstanze; at the Ravinia Festival as Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro, conducted by James Conlon; for Opera New Jersey as Lucia in Lucia di Lammermoor; at Arizona Opera as Gilda in Rigoletto, again as Lucia; and at the New Orleans Opera as Gilda and as Leïla in Les pêcheurs de perles.

In April and May 2012, Oropesa appeared with the Pittsburgh Opera as Konstanze in a production of Die Entführung aus dem Serail set on the Orient Express in the Pasha's private train car.[20] In October 2012, she again performed the role of Lucia with the Arizona Opera to success.[21] In November, she continued her success by performing the role of Cleopatra in Michigan Opera Theatre's Giulio Cesare to acclaim.[22][23]

In 2013, the soprano sang the role of Pamina in The Magic Flute at Florida Grand Opera and reviews were universally positive, as noted in several: "Oropesa was beyond fantastic in her portrayal of Pamina."[24] "Her aria 'Ach, ich fühl’s', sung as she believes Tamino no longer loves her, was genuinely moving ..."[25]

That summer resulted in Oropesa's continued operatic triumphs as Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro at the Santa Fe Opera: "Nothing in the evening surpassed her rendition of "Deh vieni, non tardar" in act 4, in which she spun strands of magic in the evening air" noted critic James Keller.[26] Later in 2013, she sang the role of Amalia at the Washington Concert Opera for Verdi's I Masnadieri in which she "achieved total triumph as Amalia, the trill-filled part created for Jenny Lind."[27] She was also called in as a last minute replacement for Nannetta in San Francisco Opera's Falstaff.[28]

After her performances at the Met in early 2014, Oropesa's summer schedule included many concerts. These included Haydn's The Creation in New York and in Cleveland;[29] the St Matthew Passion in Chicago;[30] Die Entführung aus dem Serail in Bellingham, Washington; and a reprise of her 2010 performance in The Marriage of Figaro at Ravinia Festival.[31]

Opera engagements included Nannetta at the Dutch National Opera;[32] Gilda at Grand Théâtre de Genève;[33] and Konstanze at the Bavarian State Opera.[34] Her last performance of 2014 was her debut at the Los Angeles Opera as Rosalba in Daniel Catán's Florencia en el Amazonas.[35]

In 2015, she started the year at the Paris Opera as Konstanze with success. According to Lorenzo De Vecchi, she sung "Marten aller Arten" with "incisive accents and passionate acting".[36] Her next performance was at the Concertgebouw where she received a standing ovation for her rendition of "Caro Nome" in a recorded radio performance of Rigoletto.[37][38] She returned home to New Orleans to be acclaimed as Susanna. According to The New Orleans Advocate, she "offered a fine display of vocal versatility, from the lilting coloratura of a young woman in love to the confusion and anger of the object of the lascivious intentions of her overlord, Count Almaviva".[39] She then went on to a highly successful role debut in La fille du régiment at Pittsburgh Opera. "Oropesa’s Marie lacked neither virtuosity nor personality. With solid high notes, accurate coloratura and an endless supply of golden-age trills (I stopped counting after five), this endearing artist ran a vocal marathon that might have paralleled the physical feat she was preparing to run in Pittsburgh Marathon the next morning".[40] Her next engagement was with the San Francisco Opera in The Marriage of Figaro. A review wrote, "Oropesa is a charming Susanna. Her voice has a gorgeous delicate quality to it but still has volume. Her "Deh vieni, non tardar" was unstrained and she managed to do a perfect martial arts flip of Figaro when she loses her temper with him later in the act".[41] She went onto another extremely successful debut in La traviata at the Philadelphia Opera "Oropesa manifested secure technical chops—trills, staccati, pinpoint dynamics and—most impressively—a long, sustained line that allowed her to hold the audience breathless in both “Dite alla giovine” and the party scene ensembles".[42] In November, she was brought in for nearly back to back performances of Rigoletto and Die Entführung aus dem Serail with the Bavarian State Opera due to cancellations.[43] She then finished the year with a performance of Rigoletto with the Teatro Real in Madrid in which she was a "Triumph".[44]

In 2016, Oropesa performed many concert works, starting in Rome at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia with Fauré's Requiem, she then went to Baltimore to sing with Eric Owens in the Ein deutsches Requiem.[45] Next, she performed Mahler's Symphony No. 8 with Yannick Nézet-Séguin and the Philadelphia Orchestra.[46] Her next concert was in Cincinnati with James Conlon in his last season with the Cincinnati May Festival.[47] She was then found in Munich performing for the UniCredit Festspielnacht.[48] Her next operatic role was a brand new production of Les Indes galantes with the Bavarian State Opera to which she performed to acclaim. "Makellos die Solisten: Herausragend agieren – in edlen Kantilenen und rasanten Koloraturen – Lisette Oropesa".[49] She then returned stateside to Washington, D.C. where she reprised her role as Susanna for the Washington National Opera in The Marriage of Figaro.[citation needed] With a quick stop to Dallas to sing with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra in Ein deutsches Requiem,[50] she was back in Washington, D.C. to perform as Marie in La fille du régiment again with the Washington National Opera. This time, her stage partner was Supreme Court Justice, Ruth Bader Ginsburg. According to Arnold Saltzman, Oropesa "sang flawless runs and coloratura, acted in the humorous tradition of Carol Burnett, moved like a prima ballerina, and used vocal coloring for best emotional effect. Her pianissimo, crescendo and decrescendo were breathtaking."[51] Oropesa finished off the year, returning to Rome to debut at the Teatro dell'Opera di Roma to perform in Rigoletto.

In 2017, she started her year at the Lausanne Opera, performing her first Ophélie in Hamlet. Jacques Schmitt from ResMusica wrote, "She does not have the stratospheric highs that Natalie Dessay had (who will ever have them?). She does not have her theatrical madness either. And yet, with "her" Ophélie, she offers a voice and theatrical character that is overwhelming with love, despair, ingenuity and authenticity as it is rare to see and hear."[52] She then went to Washington, DC to perform in recital, which was highly praised. "The evening opened with “Ragion nell’alma siede,” an aria from Haydn's opera Il mondo della luna. It was a gutsy move, and Oropesa easily filled the smaller venue with sound. The accuracy during runs was striking, as were the highest notes, all produced with facility. Her tone turned especially limpid on the little cadenza."[53] This performance was recorded on video and was released to YouTube, culminating into the creation of her first album titled Within/Without. Next, she was in Munich for a performance of Die Entführung aus dem Serail with the Bavarian State Opera, making it her fourth year in a row of performing this role there. She then went on to perform a new production of Rigoletto at the Dutch National Opera directed by Damiano Michieletto, in this well-reviewed production, she was noted as being "Slender and graceful, soprano Lisette Oropesa was simply world-class as Gilda, with flawless emission and generous top notes, crystalline up to high E. The long trill at the end of “Caro nome” would have traced a perfect zigzag on a pitch visualiser. Even more stunning than her bravura was the melting glow at the centre of her voice, her morbidezza (softness)."[54] Shortly after, she stepped in for two performances of Rigoletto at the Paris Opera, filling in for an ailing singer.[55] She was reported to have received a standing ovation for her interpretation.[56] She spent the summer debuting the role of Norina in Don Pasquale at Glyndebourne where she received accolades in the role.[57] She was next heard in Paris for a concert of Falstaff with the Orchestre de Paris where she announced it would be the last performance of Nannetta she will sing.[58] She then went on to debut at the Royal Opera House in the title role of Lucia di Lammermoor. She was given universally rave reviews for her interpretation. "Lucia is her first Royal Opera role, and the Cuban-American soprano is sensationally good."[59] She was given a standing ovation for her performance.[60]

In 2018, Lisette returned to the Bavarian State Opera to perform her signature role as Konstanze in Die Entführung aus dem Serail for the fourth year in a row. Next, she gave a recital for the Tucson Desert Song Festival[61] where she performed a brand new recital set and released her first music video "Adieux de l'hôtesse arabe", a Georges Bizet composition based on a poem by Victor Hugo.[62] From this recital, Lisette digitally released her second album entitled, "Aux filles du désert".[63] Next, she performed in a new production of Orfeo ed Euridice by John Neumeier and the Joffrey Ballet at the Los Angeles Opera.[64] Lisette "moved across the stage like a phantom presence" according to LA Weekly.[65] She once again returned to the Los Angeles Opera to perform her signature role as Gilda in Rigoletto, "Her “Caro nome” was a veritable how-to manual on holding an audience enraptured".[66] Lisette then went to the Teatro Real in Madrid to perform in Lucia di Lammermoor where she received "enormous" standing ovations for her interpretation of the role.[67][68] During the summer, she debuted at the Rossini Opera Festival in Rossini's Adina which was also a role debut for her. She was "Considered by many to be this year's revelation of the ROF.".[69] The day before her second performance of Adina, she sang her first ever solo concert with orchestra with the Philharmonic Gioachino Rossini. Her concert was hailed as "One of the most memorable concerts in the 39 year history of the Rossini Opera Festival."[70] In September, Lisette replaced Diana Damrau, who withdrew due to illness, as Marguerite de Valois at the Paris Opera in the company's new production of Les Huguenots[71] where she "comprehensively conquered the hearts of the Paris audience."[72] The day after her final performance of Les Huguenots, she premiered another new role of Adina in L'elisir d'amore with a "Timbre ardent, projection homogène sur toute la tessiture, vocalises agiles, aigus scintillants."[73] She then opened the season at the Teatro dell'Opera di Roma in a new production of Rigoletto.[74] For her performance she was hailed as being "perfetta la Gilda".[75]

In 2019, Lisette returned to her hometown of Baton Rouge, Louisiana to give a concert with Paul Groves called "A Starry Night with Lisette Oropesa" which was recorded for broadcast on Louisiana Public Broadcasting.[76] She then went to Barcelona to perform in Rodelinda. She was lauded for her performances with "sylistic mastery",[77] "technique without weaknesses",[78] and "spectacular coloratura."[79] She went on singing in a concert version of Robert le Diable at La Monnaie in Brussels.[80][81] She then returned to the United States to perform in Don Pasquale with the Pittsburgh Opera to great acclaim, having a voice "So sublimely expressive that they stand out like a Michelangelo fresco in a black and white film."[82] In June, Lisette made her debut at the Teatro alla Scala in a new production of I masnadieri with an "Excellent debut for someone who has long been a guarantee throughout the world" [83] In November, Lisette returned to the Washington Concert Opera to perform Hamlet where she "melded dramatic sensitivity with a clean, pearly soprano."[84]

In 2020, Lisette was set to debut the role of Rosina in The Barber of Seville at the Paris Opera, however, six of her performances were cancelled due to the ongoing 2019–20 French pension reform strike.[85] Once she was able to perform, she was rewarded in the press for a "brilliant voice, the treble easy, the vocalizations are perfectly executed and the line of song decorated with subtlety. An accomplished actress..."[86] After the impasse caused by the COVID-19, she returned to the Teatro Real in Madrid to perform the role of Violetta Valéry in La Traviata.[87] On July 28, she was the first woman at this theatre to perform a solo encore by performing the traditionally cut second verse of the aria "Addio del passato".[88] [89] On August 10, Lisette announced the signing of a five year contract with the San Francisco Classical Recording Company along with a Mozart Concert Aria album with Il Pomo d'Oro (orchestra). [90] On August 14, she returned to the Arena di Verona to perform in a socially distanced Rossini Concert where she was "a triumph of belcanto as an elegance of the line, in a coloratura of supreme abstraction and captivating precision".[91] Lisette returned to the Royal Opera House to perform in a benefit livestream concert that marked the reopening of the ROH for the first time in nearly seven months. [92] In October, she made her debut at the Vienna State Opera in Die Entführung aus dem Serail in a production by Hans Neuenfels. She was regarded as a "World class Konstanze" by the Kurier. [93] At the Teatro alla Scala she was slated to open the season on December 7th in Lucia di Lammermoor, but the performances were canceled due to lockdowns in Italy. [94] She was invited to perform for the opening of La Scala on December 7th in "A riveder le stelle" [95] where she performed "Regnava nel silenzio" from Lucia di Lammermoor in the original key wearing a Giorgio Armani Privé gown. [96] Her last performances of 2020 were at the Liceu in Barcelona in La traviata. [97]

Her 2021 year started off with a performance with the Bilbao Opera in a recital that was an "unmitigated success".[98] In April, she starred in a movie production of La traviata by the Teatro dell'Opera di Roma which was viewed by over a million people [99] when it was aired on primetime Rai 3 in Italy. She also performed at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia in a bel canto concert performance with Sir Antonio Pappano. [100]

Personal life[]

In 2008, Oropesa reconnected with her high school boyfriend Steven Harris on Facebook. In October 2012, they married in Tucson, Arizona, during performances of Lucia di Lammermoor at the Arizona Opera.[101] In 2019, she acquired Spanish citizenship.[102]

Repertoire[]

Opera[]

Year (debut) Role Composer Opera Location
2007 Susanna Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart The Marriage of Figaro Metropolitan Opera
2008 Gilda Giuseppe Verdi Rigoletto New Orleans Opera
2008 Lisette Giacomo Puccini La rondine Metropolitan Opera
2009 Woglinde Richard Wagner Das Rheingold Metropolitan Opera
2009 Woglinde Richard Wagner Götterdämmerung Metropolitan Opera
2009 Waldvogel Richard Wagner Siegfried Metropolitan Opera
2009 Lucia Gaetano Donizetti Lucia di Lammermoor New Jersey State Opera
2010 Konstanze Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Die Entführung aus dem Serail Welsh National Opera
2010 Nannetta Giuseppe Verdi Falstaff Opera Bilbao
2010 Fiorilla Gioachino Rossini Il turco in Italia Deutsche Oper am Rhein
2011 Leïla Georges Bizet Les pêcheurs de perles New Orleans Opera
2011 Amor Christoph Willibald Gluck Orfeo ed Euridice Metropolitan Opera
2011 Ismene Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Mitridate, re di Ponto Bavarian State Opera
2011 Romilda George Frideric Handel Serse San Francisco Opera
2011 Miranda Jeremy Sams The Enchanted Island Metropolitan Opera
2012 Cleopatra George Frideric Handel Giulio Cesare Michigan Opera Theatre
2013 Pamina Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart The Magic Flute Florida Grand Opera
2013 Amalia Giuseppe Verdi I masnadieri Washington Concert Opera
2014 Sophie Jules Massenet Werther Metropolitan Opera
2014 Rosalba Daniel Catán Florencia en el Amazonas Los Angeles Opera
2015 Marie Gaetano Donizetti La fille du régiment Pittsburgh Opera
2015 Violetta Valéry Giuseppe Verdi La traviata Opera Philadelphia
2016 Hébé / Zima Jean-Philippe Rameau Les Indes galantes Bavarian State Opera
2017 Ophélie Ambroise Thomas Hamlet Lausanne Opera
2017 Norina Gaetano Donizetti Don Pasquale Glyndebourne Festival Opera
2017 Gretel Engelbert Humperdinck Hansel and Gretel Metropolitan Opera
2018 Eurydice Christoph Willibald Gluck Orfeo ed Euridice Los Angeles Opera
2018 Adina Gioachino Rossini Adina Rossini Opera Festival
2018 Marguerite de Valois Giacomo Meyerbeer Les Huguenots Paris Opera
2018 Adina Gaetano Donizetti L'elisir d'amore Paris Opera
2019 Rodelinda George Frederic Handel Rodelinda Gran Teatre del Liceu
2019 Isabelle Giacomo Meyerbeer Robert le diable La Monnaie
2019 Manon Jules Massenet Manon Metropolitan Opera
2020 Rosina Gioachino Rossini The Barber of Seville Paris Opera

Concert[]

Year (debut) Role Composer Piece Location
2006 Soprano I Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Great Mass in C minor
2010 Soloist Carl Orff Carmina Burana Cleveland Orchestra
2011 Soloist George Frideric Handel Messiah
2014 Soloist Joseph Haydn The Creation
2014 Soloist Johann Sebastian Bach St Matthew Passion Soli Deo Gloria
2015 Soloist Johann Sebastian Bach St John Passion Soli Deo Gloria
2016 Soloist Gabriel Fauré Requiem Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia
2016 Soloist Johannes Brahms A German Requiem Baltimore Symphony Orchestra
2016 Soloist Gustav Mahler Symphony No. 8 Philadelphia Orchestra

Recordings[]

Video

  • Puccini: Il trittico (Frittoli, Blythe; Levine, O'Brien, 2007)
  • Humperdinck: Hänsel und Gretel (Schäfer, Coote; Jurowsky, Jones, 2008) EMI
  • Puccini: Manon Lescaut (Mattila, Giordani, Croft; Levine, Heeley 2008) EMI
  • Puccini: La rondine (Gheorghiu, Alagna, Brenciu, Ramey; Armiliato, Joël, 2009) EMI
  • Wagner: Das Rheingold (Blythe, Croft, Terfel, Owens; Levine, Lepage, 2010) EMI
  • Sams: The Enchanted Island (de Niese, DiDonato, Daniels, Domingo, Pisaroni; Christie, McDermott, 2012) Virgin Classics
  • Frömke: Wagner's Dream (Fillion, Gelb, Lepage, Levine, Luisi, Morris, Voight, 2012)
  • Verdi: Falstaff (Maestri, Blythe, Oropesa, Meade, Fanale; Levine, Carsen, 2014)
  • Massenet: Werther (Kaufmann, Koch, Oropesa, Bižić; Altinoglu, Eyre, 2014)
  • Rameau: Les Indes Galantes (Oropesa, Prohaska, Juric, Quintains, Lis; Bolton, Cherkaoui, 2017)
  • Meyerbeer: Les Huguenots (Oropesa, Kang, Jaho, Testé, Deshayes; Mariotti, Kriegenburg, 2018) Paris Opera
  • Donizetti: Lucia di Lammermoor (Oropesa, Camarena, Ruciński; Oren, Alden, 2018) Teatro Real
  • Verdi: I Masnadieri (Oropesa, Sartori, Pertusi, Cavaletti; Mariotti, McVicar, 2019) Teatro alla Scala
  • Massenet: Manon (Oropesa, Fabiano, Ruciński; Benini, Pelly, 2019) Metropolitan Opera
  • Mozart: Die Entführung aus dem Serail (Oropesa, Behle, Juric, Mühlemann, Terne; Manacorda, Neuenfels, 2020) Wiener Staatsoper
  • Verdi: La traviata (Oropesa, Pirgu, Frontali; Gatti, Martone, 2021) Raiplay

Audio

  • Within / Without (Oropesa, Iftinca, 2017)
  • Aux filles du désert (Oropesa, Borowitz, 2018)
  • Ombra Compagna (Oropesa, Manacorda, 2021) PENTATONE

Publications[]

  • Rowe, Martin & Oropesa, Lisette (2014) "Running, Singing and being Vegan" (Ed.), Running, Eating, Thinking: A Vegan Anthology. New York: Lantern Books. ISBN 978-1590563489 (paperback)
  • George, Donald (2015) Master Singers: Advice from the Stage. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199324187 (paperback)

Television[]

  • "30 Rock": Audition Day (Fey, Morgan, Krakowski, Baldwin, Scorsese, Walken; Fey, Hubbard, 2011)

Awards[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Lisette Oropesa: Bio". Lisette Oropesa.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Gazzola, Luiz. "The Exclusive Opera Lively Interview with Lisette Oropesa". Opera Lively.
  3. ^ Camelio, Stephen (October 29, 2013). "I'm a Runner: Lisette Oropesa". Runner's World. Archived from the original on January 12, 2015.
  4. ^ Rowe, Martin (May 20, 2014). Running, Eating, Thinking A Vegan Anthology. Lantern Books. ISBN 9781590563489.
  5. ^ George, Donald (February 12, 2015). Master Singers: Advice from the Stage. Oxford University Press. p. 192. ISBN 978-0199324187.
  6. ^ Salazar, David. "Lisette Oropesa: Born, Raised And Thriving In World Of Opera; Soprano Returns 'Home' To Met For Verdi's 'Rigoletto' and Wagner's 'Siegfried' [Exclusive Interview]". Latinos Post. Retrieved January 2, 2015.
  7. ^ Grove, Oberon. "Interview: Lisette Oropesa". Oberon's Grove.
  8. ^ Alan Kozzin, "A 'Figaro' With Youth, Agility and Eros", The New York Times, October 4, 2007
  9. ^ Anthony Tommasini, "Puccini and Operetta? He Does It His Way" The New York Times, January 2, 2009
  10. ^ Zachary, Woolfe (April 17, 2013). "A Shy Rat Pack, Longer on Volume Than on Vim". The New York Times.
  11. ^ Vivien, Schweitzer (April 22, 2013). "The Way to Slay Wagner's Dragon". The New York Times.
  12. ^ Tommasini, Anthony (December 7, 2013). "In Carsen's 'Falstaff' at the Met, Verdi Through a Postwar Lens". The New York Times.
  13. ^ Tommasini, Anthony (February 20, 2014). "Things End Badly for a Poet, but Quite Well for the Tenor". The New York Times.
  14. ^ Tommasini, Anthony (January 13, 2016). "Review: Lisette Oropesa Scales Down Her Voice but Not Her Presence". The New York Times.
  15. ^ Salazar, David (December 23, 2017). "Metropolitan Opera 2017–18 Review – Hansel and Gretel: Lisette Oropesa & Co. Deliver One of Season's Finest Performances". Opera Wire.
  16. ^ Barone, Joshua. "Review: In 'Manon,' a Soprano Charms Her Way to the Top". New York Times.
  17. ^ Tommasini, Anthony. "Review: Lisette Oropesa Makes 'La Traviata' Her Own". New York Times.
  18. ^ Opera, News. "Five Singers Named as Winners of Metropolitan Opera's 2020 National Council Auditions". Opera News.
  19. ^ "Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions". www.facebook.com. Retrieved June 30, 2020.
  20. ^ Mark Kanny, "Agile singing, clever staging, comedy keep 'Seraglio' on Track", Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, April 29, 2012.
  21. ^ Cathalena E. Burch, "Review: Lucia star stuns Tucson audience", Arizona Daily Star, October 21, 2012
  22. ^ Stryker, Mark (November 11, 2011). "'Julius Caesar' moves from ancient Egypt to a Hollywood back lot in inspired update". Detroit Free Press.
  23. ^ Margolin, Michael (November 11, 2012). "Roll out the superlatives: 'Caesar' is in town". Encore Michigan. Archived from the original on November 28, 2012.
  24. ^ Jack Gardner, The Magic Flute, on edgeftlauderdale.com, January 28, 2013
  25. ^ David Fleshler,"FGO serves up an entertaining and spectacular "Magic Flute", on southfloridaclassicalreview.com, January 2013
  26. ^ Keller, James (July 1, 2013). "Opera Review: SFO spins Mozart's magic in 'Le nozze di Figaro'". Santa Fe New Mexican.
  27. ^ Shengold, David (October 28, 2013). "Opera's Birthday Boys". Gay City News.
  28. ^ "Lisette Oropesa to Sing Role of Nannetta in October 15 Performance of Falstaff". San Francisco Opera. Archived from the original on November 4, 2013.
  29. ^ Hautzinger, Daniel. "Review: John Nelson Leads the Credo Festival Orchestra and Chorus in Haydn's The Creation (July 19)". Cleveland Classical.
  30. ^ Rhein, John Von. "St. Matthew Passion treated as a music drama for today" (PDF). Chicago Tribune.
  31. ^ Delacoma, Wynne. "Ravinia's intimate Mozart magic remains with Conlon's well-cast "Figaro"". Chicago Classical Review.
  32. ^ Camilleri, Jenny. "Food, Glorious Food: Falstaff at the Holland Festival is a Feast for the Eyes and Ears". Bachtrack.
  33. ^ Schmitt, Jacques. "A Genève, Rigoletto ou la Défaite de la Femme". ResMusica.
  34. ^ Walder-Biesanz, Ilana. "A colorful, fantastical Entführung at the Bayerische Staatsoper". Bachtrack.
  35. ^ Swed, Mark. "Review "Florencia en el Amazonas a culture clash solved by orchestra"". Los Angeles Times.
  36. ^ De Vecchi, Lorenzo. "Parigi – Opéra Garnier: Il ratto dal serraglio". Opera Click. ...seguita da Marten aller Arten, cantata con accenti incisivi e appassionata recitazione.
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