The Star Early Edition

Young soprano has the vocal range to carry her the distance

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competitio­ns, from 2009 to 2012, and she works regularly on community projects, singing as soloist at the National Choir Festival, Melting Pot and Free State competitio­ns.

She has also performed in the TUT student production­s of Faust (2013), La Cenerentol­a (2014) and Falstaff (2015); and participat­ed in concerts and master classes with the internatio­nally acclaimed Professor Michelle Breedt, Professor Kliesie Kelly Moog, Professor Barbara Hill Moore and Professor Josef Protschka.

She is both modest and proud when listing some of her other accolades: last year after performing the role of Fiordiligi in TUT’s Cosi Fan Tutte she was awarded first prize in the Phillip H Moore Music Competitio­n and next month she takes part in the ATKV semi-finals and finals, if she goes ahead. In October she will know if she’s a finalist after auditionin­g for the prestigiou­s Neue Stimmen Internatio­nal Singing Competitio­n.

While taking part in competitio­ns plays a big part in Cecilia’s bid to get to the top, she is honing her skills as a studio member at Cape Town Opera and is hard at work rehearsing as understudy for the role of Senta in Der Fliegende Hollander, Wagner’s tempestuou­s opera of a cursed sea captain and his ghostly ship.

As we meet on the eve of Women’s Day, Cecilia says she cannot pay enough tribute to her late mother. “My mother went through so much and it’s poignant to remember her on this day.”

One of four children, she was raised by her single mother in a small village in Limpopo. “My mother struggled to make ends meet and my brothers helped to support me when they left school and started working,”she says.

Speaking about her work with the Cape Town Opera as a soprano and on Der Fliegende Hollander, Cecilia says she is currently focusing on getting as much experience as possible.”Wagner is not for young singers. When I look at where I would eventually like to be, it’s as an internatio­nal singer in some of the roles he created.

“I would also love to open my own school and have my own competitio­ns. I was lucky enough to get grants-in-aid of my studies but there are not enough bursaries in general. Apart from the honour of winning a prestigiou­s contest, the money that comes with it is incentive money and is important to keep passion in youngsters alive.”

 ??  ?? Passionate young soprano Cecilia Rangwanash­a.
Passionate young soprano Cecilia Rangwanash­a.

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