Rachel Yakar (3 March 1936 – 24 June 2023) was a French operatic soprano and academic voice teacher. She was known for Mozart roles such as Elvira in Don Giovanni, Baroque opera and contemporary opera. She was a member of the Deutsche Oper am Rhein from 1964 to 1991, and appeared also in Paris, at the Royal Opera House in London and at festivals including Bayreuth and Glyndebourne. She received international attention as Poppea in the 1977 production of Monteverdi's L'incoronazione di Poppea at the Oper Zürich conducted by Nikolaus Harnoncourt, which was recorded and filmed. She made many more recordings reviving Baroque operas in historically informed performance. Her portrayal of Debussy's Mélisande was described as ideal. She was admired not only for her voice and diction but also for her stage presence. After her retirement from the stage she taught at the Paris Conservatoire. Ivan A. Alexandre [fr] from Diapason summarised her performing: "A darling of the Baroque pioneers and a Mozartian at heart and in style, the soprano from Lyon was also the intimate voice of Strauss, Debussy and Messiaen."[1]
Life and career
Yakar was born in Lyon on 3 March 1936 to a family of Greek-Turkish origin. She first trained to be a fashion designer.[2] She then studied voice at the Paris Conservatoire, and further for four years with Germaine Lubin.[2] In 1963, she made her debut at the Strasbourg opera.[2][3]
Yakar was married to tenor Michel Lecocq who was active at the Strasbourg Opera.[15] After retiring from her teaching post, they lived in Loix on the Île de Ré.[1][14]
Yakar died in La Rochelle[16] after a long struggle with illness[14]
on 24 June 2023, aged 87.[4][12] Looking at her contributions, Minkowski expressed thankfulness for her portrayals of Poppea with Harnoncourt and Ponnelle, Ilia, Aricie, and Jenůfa, for her perfect style, exemplary diction, and her both angelic and sensual lyricism.[12]
Recordings
In 1973, Yakar participated in the first recording of Rameau's Les Indes galantes, conducted by Jean-Claude Malgoire, as Emílie.[1][17] In a 2012 comparison of recordings of L'incoronazione di Poppea, a reviewer noted her velvety seductive singing portraying Poppaea Sabina, with passion in a duet with Eric Tappy as Nero in Act 3; he found the final love duet "perfectly paced and beautifully sung".[18] Joseph McLellan from the Washington Post observed that during the final duet, Nero caresses her but she in turn caresses the new crown, turning her back to him.[19]
She recorded works by André Campra, André Grétry, and Rameau's Pygmalion with Gustav Leonhardt. She was part of the first recording of a Handel opera with period instruments, Admeto conducted by Alan Curtis. Yakar was Fiordiligi in the first recording of the cycle of Mozart's Da Ponte operas with period instruments conducted by Harnoncourt, performed at the Drottningholm festival.[1]
Rachel Yakar has a wider range of tone-colours and gives the words a sharper flavour ... [She] shows a flexibility with words, a way of lightening syllables and giving more conversational ease to the utterance.[20]