| Ileana
Cotrubas
Ileana Cotrubas was born in Romania and made
her first public appearance as
soloist of the Children's Chorus of the Romanian Radio. She
was educated at
the 'Scuola speciala de Musica' and studied at the Bucharest
Conservatory,
where her principal singing teachers were Prof. Eugenia Eliescu
and Prof.
Constantin Stroescu. After making her debut in 1964 as Yniold
at the 'Opera
Romana' in Bucharest and singing there roles like Siebel,
Oscar, Cherubino,
Blondchen and Gilda, the Romanian Ministry of Culture sent
her to the
International Singing Competition 1965 in Hertogenbosch and
the 1966 Munich Radio Competition at both of which she won
the first prize. Before starting her first major engagement
abroad, a 3-years-contract with the Frankfurt Opera, she went
to the Vienna Academy of Music to complete her studies. International
engagements followed soon: the festivals in Salzburg, Glyndebourne
and Florence, and the two opera houses where she appeared
regularly every season, the Royal Opera House Covent Garden,
and the WienerStaatsoper.
At
the Paris Opera she sang a new production of Manon (Massenet),
and in 1975 she made her debut at La Scala Milano, flying
in from London to arrive just in time for the opening performance
of La Bohème. She then sang Mimì at La Scala's
first visit to the USA in 1976, and again in Milan in 1977
and 1979, when the performance was televised worldwide. Mimì
was also the role for debuts in Chicago and San Francisco,
as well as the Metropolitan Opera New York, where she was
invited back for new productions of Rigoletto, La Traviata
(televised live to Europe) and Idomeneo, and revivals of Bohème
and Onegin.
In
Germany her performances of La Traviata at the Bayerische
Staatsoper Munich have been much acclaimed and also been recorded
for Deutsche Grammophon. At the Salzburg Festival she sang
Pamina (1978-84), Konstanze (1980, 81) and recitals and concerts
with orchestra. Her main repertoire included the roles of
Susanna, Zerlina, Pamina, Amina, Norina, Adina, Gilda, Violetta,
Mimi, Micaela, Antonia, Manon (Massenet), Melisande, Tatyana,
Sophie; in a later part of her career she sang also Rosalinde
(Paris 1983), Elisabetta/Don Carlo (Covent Garden 1985), Nedda
(Wien 1985), Marguerite (Hamburg 1985), Amelia/Simone Boccanegra
(Napoli and Wien 1986), Alice (Covent Garden 1987), Desdemona
(Barcelona 1988) and Charlotte (Lisbon and Wien 1990).
In addition to opera, Miss Cobrubas appeared in concerts with
the leading European orchestras; she gave Lieder recitals
in the Musikverein Wien, the Royal Opera House Covent Garden,
La Scala Milano, Carnegie Hall New York, in Paris, Munich,
Salzburg, Zürich, Geneve etc. and concert tours took
her to Tokyo, Buenos Aires, Rio de Janeiro, the Macao Festival
and Taiwan.
Her recordings include Bach cantatas, Mozart masses, Haydn's
Die Jahreszeiten, Brahms Requiem, and complete opera performances
of La Calisto, Rinaldo, Cosi fan tutte, Le Nozze di Figaro,
Die Zauberflöte, L'elisir d'amore. Alzira, La Traviata,
Rigoletto, Les Pecheurs de Perles, Carmen, Manon, Louise,
Hänsel und Gretel, a recital disc with arias by Mozart,
Donizetti, Verdi, Charpentier, Puccini, and Hugo Wolf's Intalienishces
Liederbuch as well as a disc with Lieder by Schubert, Britten,
Fauré, Brahms.
TV-films show her in La Calisto (Glyndebourne), Idomeneo (MET),
Le Nozze di Figaro (Glyndebourne), Die Zauberflöte (Saltzburg
Festival), La Gazza Ladra (Köln), Rigoletto (MET), La
Traviata (MET), Don Carlo (Covent Garden), Les Contes d¹Hoffmann
(Covent Garden), La Bohème (La Scala and Covent Garden),
A
Midsummer Night¹s Dream (Glyndebourne), Die Fledermaus
(Paris), and various concerts, including the Verdi Requiem
(Concertgebouw/Muti).
Ileana Cotrubas was made in 1981 Austrian Kammersängerin,
and in 1991 Honorary Member of the Wiener Staatsoper. In 1990
she received from Portugal the order 'Grande-Oficial de San'Iago
da Espada'. Since 1995 she has been an Honorary Citizen of
Bucharest.
In 1990 she retired from the stage to devote her time to working
with young singers. In 1998 her book 'Opernwahrheiten' (Truth
in Opera) was published, which was called by several opera
magazines 'a pamphlet against Regietheater'. |