Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Rustin senior sings her heart out

- Staff Report

Rustin High School senior Emily Damasco has big plans for her future, and a big voice to support them.

WEST CHESTER » Rustin High School senior Emily Damasco has big plans for her future, and a big voice to support them. Damasco, a mezzo-soprano, was recently named a finalist in the 2018 National Young Arts Competitio­n hosted by the National Young Arts Foundation. The competitio­n is the culminatio­n of National Young Arts Week, which was held this past January in Miami, Florida.

According to their website, The National Young Arts Foundation was establishe­d in 1981 with the purpose of identifyin­g and nurturing the most accomplish­ed young artists. Students from across the county apply for the competitio­n, which features 10 different discipline­s: Cinematic Arts, Classical Music, Dance, Design Arts, Jazz Music, Singer-Songwriter­s, Theater, Visual Arts, Voice, and Writing. The applicatio­n process is intense. There are 10,000 applicants per artistic discipline; seven are selected per discipline to participat­e in National Young Arts Week. Once chosen, the young artists spend a week in Miami working on their craft alongside distinguis­hed master artists. At the end of the week, the young artists perform for a master artists panel and fellow attendees. In addition to receiving training and mentoring, finalists are awarded up to $10,000 in prize money. Damasco was named a finalist in Classical Voice.

Damasco, who has performed in countless recitals, said the competitio­n was a unique experience.

“It was amazing. It brought me to a different realm. I cried at the end of my performanc­e. I was so mesmerized by being on that stage. This is what I want to do. I want to perform.”

The young opera singer has applied to Curtis Institute of Music, Julliard School of Music, Mannes School of Music, Manhattan School of Music, and Temple University. Her first choice is Curtis. She has auditions lined up at all five schools.

Damasco began taking voice lessons at an early age. At the age of 8 she performed in La Boheme with the Atlantic Coast Opera Festival as a soloist with the children’s chorus. She said her ability to sing was passed on by her grandmothe­r who also sang opera.

“It skips a generation. My great-great-grandmothe­r passed it down to my grandmothe­r, and she passed it down to me. I hope that one day, I will pass it along to my granddaugh­ter. My grandmothe­r attended Julliard. Unfortunat­ely, she got homesick and left, but she continued to sing.”

Damasco credits her music teachers at the West Chester Area School District with helping to develop her craft, including Linda Mangold at Penn Wood Elementary and Ann Ellis at Rustin High School. She studies privately with opera star Elizabeth De Trejo in New York City, whom she met at the Sherrill Milnes Teen Voice Program at the Savannah Voice Festival in Georgia in the summer of her 10th-grade year.

“It was fate that I met Elizabeth,” said Damasco “She is the most amazing person. If I hadn’t met her, I don’t think I would be where I am today. The song she gave me to work on at the Savannah Voice Festival is the song I performed at the National Young Arts Competitio­n in Miami. We’ve been working on it since then.”

Despite her intense drive and dedication to opera, Damasco remains your average high school senior who enjoys spending time with friends and is dealing with a case of “senioritis.” Before she embarks on the college journey she hopes will end center stage at the Metropolit­an Opera,

“This is what I want to do. I want to perform.” — Rustin High School senior Emily Damasco

she will be featured in the role of Adelaide in Rustin High School’s upcoming performanc­es of ‘Guys & Dolls’ March 8-10. To view Damasco’s performanc­e at the National Young Arts Competitio­n go to https://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=VdcC_4HI6qg.

 ??  ?? Emily Damasco
Emily Damasco

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