McKnight opened the 1952 Fall Season of the New York City Opera, in the title role of Tosca, followed by the name part in Aïda, both conducted by Tullio Serafin. In 1953, the soprano sang there again in Tosca (now led by Julius Rudel), Don Giovanni (as Donna Elvira, opposite Walter Cassel), Aïda again, Der Rosenkavalier (as the Marschallin), and Le nozze di Figaro (as the Contessa).
In 1960, the soprano returned to the City Opera, as Anne McKnight, for the "professional" American premiere of Dallapiccola's Il prigioniero, opposite Norman Treigle and Richard Cassilly, conducted by Leopold Stokowski. Later that season, she sang again the Marschallin with the company.
She continued her international career at Rio de Janeiro (Puccini's Turandot and Tosca), Piacenza, Rovigo, Brussels, Cremona (Fedora), Toulouse (Norma), and, in 1968, Padua (Tosca).
McKnight died on August 29, 2012, at the age of eighty-eight, at her home in Lugano, Switzerland.[1]
The New York City Opera: An American Adventure, by Martin L. Sokol (Annals by George Louis Mayer), Macmillan Publishing Co, Inc, 1981. ISBN0-02-612280-4
Arturo Toscanini: The NBC Years, by Mortimer H. Frank, Amadeus Press, 2002. ISBN1-57467-069-7
Bach Cantatas web-site.
External links
Anne McKnight in the Finale of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony (1948) [1].