Los Angeles Times

Italian singer and director

The accomplish­ed soprano went on to direct as her singing career came to an end.

- BY RONALD BLUM Ronald Blum writes for the Associated Press. AP writer Frances D’Emilio in Rome contribute­d to this report.

Renata Scotto, a soprano of uncommon intensity who became a successful director after her singing career, died Wednesday in her hometown of Savona, Italy. She was 89.

Scotto’s New York-based manager, Robert Lombardo, said he was called by her family and informed of her death. “I had spoken to her several weeks ago and I didn’t get any any indication that anything was going on,” he said.

Scotto maintained homes in Italy and Armonk, N.Y.

“Renata Scotto is a true artist and profound connoisseu­r of voice and repertoire, gifted with technique, musicality, a personalit­y of a rare power, always at the service of the composer, and able to emotionall­y stir the public in all the world in every phase of her long career,” soprano Cecilia Gasdia, superinten­dent of Italy’s Fondazione Arena di Verona, said in a statement.

Scotto made 314 appearance­s at the Metropolit­an Opera, from her debut in Puccini’s “Madama Butterfly” on Oct. 13, 1965, to her finale, also as Cio-Cio-San, on Jan. 18, 1987. She also directed during her final run, and that became her new profession.

“I like to live in the present,” she said in a 2007 interview with the Associated Press. “Of course, I watch my DVDs. I enjoyed every second of my career. Now I live with the young singers. I love them so much.”

Born Feb. 24, 1934, in Savona, Scotto debuted there in 1952 as Violetta in Verdi’s “La Traviata” and sang the role the next day at Milan’s Teatro Nuovo.

She debuted at Milan’s Teatro alla Scala on Dec. 7, 1957, the opening night of the season, in the title role of Catalani’s “La Wally” alongside Mario Del Monaco, with Carlo Maria Giulini conducting.

When Scotto made her Met debut, the New York Times headlined her as a new star.

“She is short, on the plump side, with a round face that is remarkably expressive,” Raymond Ericson wrote. “She is a lyric coloratura, with a relatively small voice that carries in a big auditorium by virtue of its concentrat­ed tone. And she is a complete actress, in voice and movement.”

When Scotto sang the title role in Bellini’s “Norma” on the opening night of the Met’s 1981-82 season, she was booed by Maria Callas fans who were opposed to anyone else singing the role.

She starred alongside Luciano Pavarotti in the first “Live From the Met” telecast in 1977, of Puccini’s “La Bohème.”

As the end of her singing career approached, Scotto turned to directing.

“I love it. It’s completely different, of course,” she told the AP. “There’s more responsibi­lity — you have responsibi­lity for everybody — the stage, the scenery. It’s another perspectiv­e. You see the show differentl­y.”

When soprano Deborah Voigt took on the title role of Puccini’s “Tosca” for the first time, at the Florida Grand Opera in 2001, Scotto was her director.

“The thing that was really most impressive is that she didn’t try to put her stamp on it,”Voigt said. “She led me through it and helped me find my way though the role and my Tosca, which is different from Renata Scotto’s.”

Scotto is survived by daughter Laura Anselmi Miller, son Filippo Anselmi and two grandchild­ren. Lombardo said funeral arrangemen­ts were not yet set. Her husband, Lorenzo, died in 2021.

 ?? RON SCHERL Redferns ?? ‘A TRUE ARTIST’
Renata Scotto plays Charlotte in a mid-1980s San Francisco Opera production of “Werther.”
RON SCHERL Redferns ‘A TRUE ARTIST’ Renata Scotto plays Charlotte in a mid-1980s San Francisco Opera production of “Werther.”

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