The Daily Telegraph

Teresa Zylis-gara

Versatile and passionate soprano who conquered Glyndebour­ne and was a fixture at the New York Met

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TERESA ZYLIS-GARA, who has died aged 91, was a celebrated Polish soprano with a fullbloode­d and lustrous voice who was capable of extraordin­ary flexibilit­y; while she sang lyrically, such as on an Erato disc of Chopin songs released in 1983, she could also apply herself to the dramatic challenges of operas such as Verdi’s

Il trovatore or Puccini’s Madama Butterfly.

She made her British debut at Glyndebour­ne in 1965 as Octavian in Strauss’s Der Rosenkaval­ier opposite the Marschalli­n of Montserrat Caballé – who had irritated the conductor John Pritchard by arriving a week late for rehearsals and not knowing a note of her part. According to one critic Teresa Zylis-gara was not ideal for this trouser role, “since she exhales strong and voluptuous feminine charm”.

Returning to Glyndebour­ne in 1967, she gave a beautifull­y articulate­d account of Donna Elvira in Mozart’s Don Giovanni, a role she reprised in 1969 with Tito Gobbi at Covent Garden. The previous year she had appeared there as a “touching and altogether attractive” Violetta in La Traviata.

Yet much of Teresa Zylis-gara’s career was spent at the Metropolit­an Opera in New York, where she was first heard in 1968, again as Donna Elvira. Two years later she accepted a long-term contract, appearing there every season until 1984 in repertoire ranging from Mozart and Puccini to Tchaikovsk­y and Wagner.

She did not, however, take every part that was offered, telling the Los Angeles Times that she had once turned down Agathe in Weber’s Der Freischütz. “Agathe is simply too one-sided,” she said. “I do not regard myself as the insipid, Germanic virgin type.”

At a gala concert in 1972 to honour Rudolf Bing, the Met’s general manager, she sang the love duet from Verdi’s Otello with the tenor Franco Corelli, with whom she was rumoured to be having an affair, something that he later appeared to confirm. “People assume that in old age I am hearing Verdi and Puccini in my mind’s ear,” he told his biographer. “No! The music I am hearing and that keeps me going is the sound of Teresa Zylis-gara having orgasms.”

Teresa Zylis-gara was born in Landvarov (now Lentvaris, in Lithuania) on January 23 1930. She studied in what is now Lviv and in 1953 won a national competitio­n for young singers in Warsaw. Work in the opera house was hard to come by at first and she briefly took up dentistry.

She made her debut in Krakow in 1956 as the eponymous heroine in Halka by the Polish composer Stanislaw Moniuszko, though by her own account she was not quite ready for such a role. “What I could offer was a fresh, uncontamin­ated voice with a nice timbre and an incredible amount of enthusiasm and passion for music, and singing in particular,” she said.

The following year she returned to Krakow in Madama Butterfly, a role she took to heart, on one occasion crying on stage at Cio-cio San’s plight: “It was terrible. When you cry you can’t sing,” she told The Atlanta Constituti­on. “I’m a very emotional and sentimenta­l person myself and when I do a role, I try to interpret it as if it were happening to me privately. I try to be very real, very human.”

On another occasion she was singing the part in Detroit when her performanc­e was disrupted by a streaker in the balcony – but “of course I continued to sing”.

Word of her gifts quickly spread and she was soon appearing at opera houses in Berlin, Vienna and

Düsseldorf, where for many years she kept a home.

After joining the Met she made only a handful of further visits to Covent Garden, including another Don Giovanni in 1976; as Countess Almaviva in Mozart’s Le Nozze di Figaro in 1977; and as Desdemona in

Otello in 1980. But she is well represente­d on recordings – ranging from Bach’s St Matthew Passion for EMI to the Composer in Strauss’s

Ariadne auf Naxos.

Teresa Zylis-gara had many ways to keep her voice and skin in top condition, including mixing a mysterious brew of Polish herbs into her bath tub, or blending them with water, honey or egg yolk depending on the kind of facial treatment she needed. These “packages of beauty” were sent by her sister in Poland. “There are not so many chemical things, and I think this is good,” she said, explaining why she preferred them to commercial make-up.

By the early 1980s she was living in Monaco, where in retirement she taught students from around the world. She was married to an engineer and had a son, who was largely brought up by his grandmothe­r in Poland. “It’s impossible to be a wife, mother and artist of internatio­nal fame all at one time,” she declared. “I chose to be the artist.”

Teresa Zylis-gara, born January 23 1930, died August 28 2021

 ?? ?? Teresa Zylis-gara: ‘I’m a very emotional and sentimenta­l person, and when I do a role I try to interpret it as if it were happening to me privately. I try to be very real, very human’
Teresa Zylis-gara: ‘I’m a very emotional and sentimenta­l person, and when I do a role I try to interpret it as if it were happening to me privately. I try to be very real, very human’

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