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 Mattiwilda
Dobbs has sung in virtually every major concert hall in the
United States and abroad, with her sparkling voice thrilling audiences
and astounding critics. She is considered to be one of the great
coloratura sopranos of our time. With a career that has taken
her to every corner of the earth and onto stages of the great
opera houses of the world, including the Bolshoi Opera, the Vienna
State Opera, Glyndebourne, the Paris Opera, and the Stockholm
Royal Opera, she often broke color barriers. Her 1953 debut at
La Scala as Elvira in Rossini's L'Italiana in Algeri marked
the first time a black artist ever sang in that famed opera house.
That same year her great success as Zorbinetta in Ariadne auf
Naxos at Glyndebourne resulted in her first major performance
in New York with the Little Orchestra Society. Dobbs desegregated
the San Francisco Opera Company two years later. The following
year she became the first black soprano to sing at the Metropolitan
Opera House and the first black female to sing regularly under
contract with that house. Her debut as Gilda in Verdi's Rigoletto
followed Marian Anderson's and Robert McFerrin's barrier-breaking
debuts by one year.
Born in
Atlanta, Ms. Dobbs sang her first solo at age six, and began her
musical studies in piano one year later. She began her formal
voice training under the tutelage of Naomi Maise and Willis Laurence
James at Spelman College where she graduated valedictorian. Upon
graduation Ms. Dobbs traveled to New York to study with Lotte
Leonard. While in New York, she was granted a Marian Anderson
Award as well as scholarships to the Mannes Music School and to
the Opera Workshop at the Berkshire Music Center at Tanglewood.
She also won a John Hay Whitney Fellowship and used the grant
to study French repertoire in Paris for two years with Pierre
Bernac, and to coach Spanish repertoire with Lola Rodriques de
Aragon in Spain.
In addition
to these awards, Ms. Dobbs won the coveted first prize at the
International Music Competition in Geneva over hundreds of other
singers from four continents. Shortly afterwards, her international
career took off with her debut in Amsterdam with the Netherlands
Opera, followed by engagements in Paris, London, Vienna, Stockholm,
and Milan. Numerous engagements followed, including and invitation
to sing a command performance before Queen Elizabeth, Prince Philip,
and visiting King Gustave and Queen Louise of Sweden at the Royal
Opera House, Covent Garden. Following the performance she was
decorated with the Order of the North Star by King Gustave. Her
list of festival appearances is also extensive, including the
Edinburgh Festival, Perth (Australia), Auckland (New Zealand),
and the Caramoor, Meadow Brook, and Grant Park Festivals in the
United States. In Russia, Japan, Australia, Israel, South America,
Mexico, Scandinavia, the United States, and all of Europe, she
became a favorite with the opera and concert goers and critics.
Ms. Dobbs
presently makes her home outside of Washington, D.C., where she
served as Professor of Voice at Howard University and as a member
of the National Endowment of the Arts Solo Recital Panel. Her
many recordings can be heard on Columbia Records, Angel, and Deutsche
Gramaphone.
OPERA
MUSIC THEATER INTERNATIONAL
The International Trade Center
1300 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Suite 700
Washington DC 20004
202.204.2525
©2001
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