Giulietta Simionato


Giulietta Simionato, née, Giulia Simionato was an Italian mezzo-soprano. Her career spanned the period from the 1930s until her retirement in 1966. She famously slapped Maria Callas across the face once, although eventually the two became friends.

Life

As a girl she studied in a boarding school with nuns who sensed her musical qualities and invited her to study singing, which she did against the opposition of the family, especially her mother.  After the latter's death, Giulietta studied first in Rovigo, then in Padua. Her singing debut was in the 1927 musical comedy film, 'Nina, Don't Be Stupid'. The following year she made her operatic debut at Montagnana. In 1933 she won the first "bel canto competition" in Florence against 385 competitors and got an audition at the Teatro alla Scala. The result was positive, but the artistic director Fabbroni found her voice still immature and invited her to return a few years later. Two years later she was put under contract. In 1928, she sang in Verdi's Rigoletto. The first fifteen years of her career were frustrating, it seems because she was not supported by the fascist regime. She was only given minor roles and her career struggled to take off, but by the late 1940s she had attracted growing attention. In 1936, she made her debut at La Scala and appeared there regularly between 1936 and 1966. By then, Simionato was recognised as one of the most respected singers of her generation. She had made her debut at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in 1953, where she likewise appeared regularly between 1963 and 1965.
Simionato made her United States opera debut in 1953 as Charlotte in Jules Massenet's Werther at the San Francisco Opera with Cesare Valletti in the title role. In 1959 she made her debut at the Metropolitan Opera, as Azucena in Il Trovatore, with Carlo Bergonzi, Antonietta Stella, and Leonard Warren. Simionato also appeared at the Edinburgh Festival, the San Francisco Opera, the Teatro Nacional de São Carlos, the Lyric Opera of Chicago, the Vienna State Opera, and the Salzburg Festival.
In 1957, she sang in Anna Bolena with Maria Callas. In 1961, she withdrew from three performances at the Metropolitan Opera, with Trigeminal Neuralgia.
Simionato had a large repertory including Rossini's Rosina and Cinderella, Charlotte in Werther, and Carmen. She also excelled in the Verdian repertoire, as Amneris, Eboli and Azucena, and as Santuzza in Mascagni's Cavalleria rusticana.
She was a major recording artist, and in addition many of her performances gained live radio broadcast or were captured on film. Fono has gathered her recordings on the CD, The Color of a Voice. She retired in 1966, and married Dr. Cesare Frugoni.
She continued to inspire admiration through teaching and various directorial positions, with amazing vitality even in her 90s. She was featured in Daniel Schmid's award-winning 1984 documentary film Il Bacio di Tosca about a home for retired opera singers founded by Giuseppe Verdi. She also appeared in a hilarious interview by Stefan Zucker in Jan Schmidt-Garre's 1999 film, Opera Fanatic.
She died in Rome one week before her 100th birthday.

The slap to Maria Callas

Simionato famously slapped Maria Callas on the face in 1955 in Milan, during an opera rehearsal, after a petty argument. Simionato said that "my slap was very hard; for the rest of the day you could see the imprint of my hand in Maria's face". Callas was shocked by the slap, but eventually the two got along, and even became friends.

Selected recordings

Selected recordings:
YearComposer – Opera
Cast,
Orchestra, Chorus and Conductor
Label
1940Pietro MascagniCavalleria Rusticana
Lina Bruna Rasa, Beniamino Gigli, Gino Bechi
Chorus and Orchestra of Teatro alla Scala
Pietro Mascagni
CD: Pearl GEMM CDS 9288,
Naxos Historical 8.110714-15
1954Georges Bizet – Carmen
Nicolai Gedda, Hilde Güden, Michel Roux
Wiener Symphoniker, Wiener Singerverein
Herbert von Karajan
Recording of a concert performance
CD: Andante
AN 3100
1954Giuseppe Verdi – Rigoletto
Aldo Protti, Hilde Güden, Cesare Siepi
Chorus and Orchestra of Santa Cecilia
Alberto Erede
CD: Decca
440 242-2
1955Giuseppe Verdi – La Forza del Destino
Mario del Monaco, Renata Tebaldi, Ettore Bastianini, Cesare Siepi, Fernando Corena
Chorus and Orchestra of Santa Cecilia
Alberto Erede
CD: Decca Originals
475 8681
1956Giuseppe Verdi – Il Trovatore
Mario del Monaco, Renata Tebaldi, Ugo Savarese
Grand Théâtre de Genève, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino
Alberto Erede
CD: Decca 470 589-2
1957Giuseppe Verdi – La Forza del Destino
Pier Miranda Ferraro, Anita Cerquetti, Aldo Protti, Boris Christoff, Renato Capecchi
Chorus and Orchestra of RAI Roma
Nino Sanzogno
Recording of a performance broadcast on 29 September 1957
CD: Bongiovanni GAO 174–176,
Myto 3MCD 992 203
1959Giuseppe Verdi – Aida
Carlo Bergonzi, Renata Tebaldi, Cornell MacNeil
Wiener Philharmoniker, Wiener Singerverein
Herbert von Karajan
CD: Decca Legends
460 978-2
1960Giuseppe Verdi – La Forza del Destino
Giuseppe di Stefano, Antonietta Stella, Ettore Bastianini, Walter Kreppel, Karl Dönch
Chorus and Orchestra of Wiener Philharmoniker
Dimitri Mitropoulos
Recording of a performance at the Vienna State Opera. The overture is played between Acts 1 and 2.
CD: Myto 2MCD 004 228,
Orfeo C 681 0621
1960Pietro Mascagni – Cavalleria Rusticana
Mario del Monaco, Cornell MacNeil
Chorus and Orchestra of Santa Cecilia
Tullio Serafin
CD: Decca
467 484-2
1962Giuseppe Verdi – Il Trovatore
Franco Corelli, Leontyne Price, Ettore Bastianini
Chorus of the Wiener Staatsoper, Wiener Philharmoniker
Herbert von Karajan
Recording of a performance at Salzburg
CD: DG 447 659-2
1964Giuseppe Verdi – Il Trovatore
Franco Corelli, Gabriella Tucci, Robert Merrill
Chorus and Orchestra of Teatro dell'Opera di Roma
Thomas Schippers
CD: HMV Classics
HMVD 5 73413-2