His mother was a soprano and his father was an Opera singer, conductor, director, composer and teacher. He had done some juvenile roles but only decided to pursue a musical career after graduating from Grand Canyon College in Phoenix, Arizona with a degree in graphic arts. At age 21, he enrolled in the music program at Oral Roberts University in Tulsa where his parents were teaching.[2]
Professional career
His first professional experience was at the North Carolina Opera in 1983. In 1986, he was at the San Francisco Opera in a small role in Giuseppe Verdi's Don Carlos. He spent the next three years performing in numerous comprimario roles with the company. After leaving San Francisco, he got work but he received lukewarm reviews that he felt he didn't deserve. He walked out of a job at the Sarasota Opera. The musical director was relieved to see him go: "I've never met a guy who has angered my entire company like this."[2]
Delavan openly admits to having "addictive issues"[3] during this time. In the mid 1990s, his father died,[4] he lost his marriage and wound up taking a janitorial job and sleeping in the back room of the Opera Music Theater International in Newark, New Jersey, where Jerome Hines had invited him to enroll in a young artists' program.
His first big break after that was singing for Frank Corsaro, who said "That's about the best Credo I've ever heard." Delavan was then invited to sing at the New York City Opera where he stayed for the next nine years playing most of the major baritone roles from Verdi, Puccini, Wagner and Richard Strauss.[2] His profile has been rising ever since.
In 2004, the NYCO asked him what he wanted to do and he suggested an Operatic production of Sweeney Todd opposite Elaine Paige for which he received mostly positive reviews for his "hulking presence" and "striking physicality."[5] For Variety, Charles Isherwood wrote: "Delavan’s Sweeney suggested Frankenstein’s monster more than anything else." In TheaterMania, Michael Portantiere declared: "If Delavan does not quite possess the top-notch musical theater acting skills of such Sweeneys as Len Cariou and George Hearn, he's still a force to be reckoned with." [6][7] Others went on to describe Delavan's voice as "extraordinarily deep and resonant".[8]