Teresa Żylis-Gara (23 January 1930[a] – 28 August 2021[4][5][6]) was a Polish operaticsoprano who enjoyed a major international career from the 1950s through the 1990s.
She made her stage debut at the Opera Krakowska in 1958 in the title role of Moniuszko's Halka,[7] and later recorded Chopin's Polish songs and songs by Karol Szymanowski. After achieving 3rd prize at the ARD International Music Competition in 1960, she became an ensemble member of the Oper Dortmund and the Deutsche Oper am Rhein. She was recognised internationally when she appeared at the Glyndebourne Festival in 1965 in the title role of Der Rosenkavalier, alongside Montserrat Caballé, and two years later as Donna Elvira in Mozart's Don Giovanni. From 1970, she was a long-time member of the Metropolitan Opera in New York City, where she appeared in leading roles including Desdemona in Verdi's Otello, and Puccini's Mimì, Liù and Manon Lescaut. She performed a broad repertoire both on stage as in concert and recital, adjusting flexibly to music from different periods.[5] Her unique voice was described as "both bright and substantial, which means that she can convey the intensity of emotion".[8] She was awarded honorary doctorates, the Order of Polonia Restituta, the Legion of Honour, and a sculpture in a public Polish park.
Life and career
Poland
She was born Teresa Żylis[9] in Landwarów,[4][10]Second Polish Republic (now Lentvaris in Lithuania).[11] Her father, Franciszek Żylis, a railwayman, was able to provide the family with a modest but stable existence from a state job. She had five older siblings: Mieczysław, Henryk, Romuald, Zofia and Maria (who died at the age of 14). There was music in her family home. Her brothers played guitar and mandolin. All family members sang. Teresa sang in the church choir as a child.[9] After World War II in 1946, she and her family moved to Łódź. She studied for nine years at the Łódź Music Academy with Olga Felixowna Olgina [pl].[4][b] In 1954, Żylis-Gara won first prize at the Polish Young Vocalists Contest in Warsaw[4][11] which led to engagements to sing on the Polish National Radio and to perform as a soloist with the Kraków Philharmonic. In 1956 she made her professional opera debut with Opera Krakowska in the title role of Moniuszko's Halka. She returned there the following year to portray the title role in Puccini's Madama Butterfly.[1] In 1958 Żylis-Gara won 2nd prize at the International Singing Competition of Toulouse[1] and in 1960 she won 3rd prize at the ARD International Music Competition in Munich.[13][14]
Żylis-Gara's first appeared at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City on 17 December 1968, again as Donna Elvira.[1][28] Irving Kolodin of the Saturday Review wrote of her performance:
Zylis-Gara, who has emerged from her Polish background onto the international operatic stage within the last eight or so years, has unusual attributes for Elvira. Her voice is both bright and substantial, which means that she can convey the intensity of emotion in the role – she is, after all, the only one in the cast who truly loves the Don – without sounding shrewish. The last great Elvira, in a quite different way was Elisabeth Schwarzkopf. Zylis-Gara, an accomplished technician as well as a good-looking woman and capable actress, could well take over both the role and the rank of her distinguished predecessor.[8]
After this performance, Rudolf Bing, general manager of the house, offered her a long-term contract with the company beginning in January 1970 with Pamina in Mozart's The Magic Flute. She remained on the Met roster for the next 14 seasons, portraying such roles as Countess Almaviva in Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro, Amelia in Verdi's Un ballo in maschera, Madame Butterfly,[29] Desdemona in Verdi's Otello, Elisabeth in Wagner's Tannhäuser, Elsa in Lohengrin, Fiordiligi, Leonora in Verdi's Il trovatore, Liù in Puccini's Turandot, Marguerite in Gounod's Faust, Mimì in Puccini's La bohème, Octavian in Der Rosenkavalier, Tatiana in Tchaikovsky's Eugene Onegin, La traviata, and the title roles in Cilea's Adriana Lecouvreur, and Puccini's Suor Angelica and Tosca.[4] She was La traviata again for Robert Merrill's 25th anniversary (31 October 1970), and Amelia in Carlo Bergonzi's 25th anniversary gala on 22 April 1972. She took part in the Gala honoring Rudolf Bing, as Desdemona in the love duet from Otello with Franco Corelli, conducted by Karl Böhm.[4][30] She also joined the Met on tour. In her performances at the Met, numerous artists made their house debuts, including Hildegard Behrens, Neil Shicoff, Kurt Moll, Isola Jones, and Siegfried Jerusalem. A reviewer of Turandot at the Aix-en-Provence Festival wrote that she was "a Liù full of sweetness, whose lovely pianissimi would overcome a heart even colder than that of the cruel princess".[d][31] Her final and 233rd performance at the Metropolitan Opera was Puccini's Manon Lescaut on 31 March 1984, with Vasile Moldoveanu as Des Grieux, Allan Monk as Lescaut, and Nello Santi conducting.[32]
At the beginning of her studies, she got married. Her husband was the engineer Jerzy Gara, after whom she took the double name of Żylis-Gara. While still a student, she gave birth to a son, Jerzy. As a result of a long separation from her husband and son, the family broke up.[9] She lived in Monaco from 1980.[1] She died on 28 August 2021 in Łódź[34] at age 91.[4][35] She was buried on 10 September 2021 in the Alley of Merit at Doły municipal cemetery in Łódź.[36]
Slavic opera arias – Rodolphe Productions – Muza, 1971 OCLC11577120
Szymanowski: Songs, with Jadwiga Gadulanka, Jerzy Marchwiński, Halina Łukomska, Andrzej Bachleda, Jerzy Sulikowksi – Polish Nagrania, 1990 OCLC223500451
^Teresa Zylis-Gara est une Liù pleine de douceur, dont les ravissants pianissimi viendraient à bout d'un cœur plus glacé encore que celui de la cruelle princesse.
Seligman, Paul (1972). Debuts & Farewells : A Two-decade Photographic Chronicle of the Metropolitan Opera. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN978-0-394-47983-5. OCLC600236.
Steiger, Karsten (2008). Opern-Diskographie : Verzeichnis aller Audio- und Video-Gesamtaufnahmen (in German). München: Saur. ISBN978-3-598-11784-8. OCLC226355205.
Synofzik, Thomas (2003). Rheinische Sängerinnen des 20. Jahrhunderts : eine Dokumentation in Wort und Ton (in German). Kassel: Merseburger. ISBN978-3-87537-303-5. OCLC54425623.