Maria Callas was one of the most famous opera-singers of the 20th century
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Maria Callas was one of the most famous opera-singers of the 20th century
Maria Callas born at
Between 1949 and 1959 she was married to a wealthy industrialist Giovanni Battista Meneghini, who began to manage her career.
She had a 9-year love affair with Aristotle Onassis and they were expected to marry, but he married Jackie Kennedy, John F. Kennedy's widow. The affair continued clandestinely until Onassis died in 1975, leaving her heartbroken.
In 1953, determined to look more attractive, and to do justice to the dramatic role she was performing, she lost almost 80 pounds. Some say that it affected the strength of her voice.
Maria Callas was born Sophia Cecelia Kalos on December 2, 1923 to Greek parents, George and Evangelia at Flower Hospital in Manhattan. Her father owned and ran a pharmacy in Manhattan where she spent much of her childhood.
She had a sister Yakinthi; her brother Vassilis died before she was born. Her parents were an incompatible couple as her mother was domineering while her father was a laidback person.
In 1937, Evangelia returned to Athens taking her daughters with her. When Maria’s talent for singing became apparent, she began to unduly pressurize her. She was also made to feel ugly, fat, and clumsy.
Initially tutored by Maria Trivella at the National Conservatoire, she impressed the Spanish soprano Elvira de Hidalgo in an audition, and was instructed by him at the Athens Conservatoire, from 1939.
Maria Callas’s professional debut happened in 1941 as Beatrice in Franz von Suppé's ‘Boccaccio’. The next year, she starred as Tosca, and sang for Marta in ‘Tiefland’, by Eugen d'Albert, at the Olympia Theatre.
In1945, she went back to America where her father planned to re-start her career. Her musical career had already been established with 56 performances and 20 recitals to her credit.
Giovanni Zanatello, the Artistic Director for the 1947 Verona Opera Festival, was in America scouting for fresh talent. Engaged by Zanatello as ‘La Gioconda’, and conducted by Tullio Serafin, she debuted in Italy.
Though her performance was a success, she found work hard to come by. But, after she sang ‘Isolde’ in Italian under Serafin, she began to be engaged for work mostly in Turandot, Italy.
In 1948, she sang ‘Norma’ in Florence. This was the first time she performed the opera. Over her career, she would perform the opera 89 times.
In1944, she performed the role of Leonore in a Greek version of Fidelio, a German opera by Beethoven at the Odeon of Herodes Atticus. German critic Friedrich Herzog considered it her "greatest triumph":
In 1949, chosen as Elvira in ‘I Puritani’ at La Fenice at short notice, her incredible bel canto performance rekindled interest in the neglected operas of Cherubini, Bellini, Donizetti, and Rossini.