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Antonietta Meneghel (27 June 1893  26 January 1975), better known by her stage name Toti Dal Monte, was a celebrated Italian operatic soprano. She may be best remembered today for her performance as Cio-cio-san in Puccini's Madama Butterfly, having recorded this role complete in 1939 with Beniamino Gigli as Pinkerton.

Toti Dal Monte
Toti Dal Monte

Career


Born in Mogliano Veneto, in the Province of Treviso, Dal Monte studied singing at the Naples Conservatory under Barbara Marchisio. She made her debut at La Scala at the age of 23 as Biancofiore in Zandonai's Francesca da Rimini. She was an immediate success, and her clear "nightingale-like"[quote citation needed] voice came to be highly appreciated throughout the world. Her best-known roles included the bel canto parts of Amina (in Bellini's La sonnambula), Lucia (in Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor) and Gilda (in Verdi's Rigoletto). In 1922 she performed several parts opposite the tenor Carlo Broccardi at the Teatro Massimo in Palermo; including Cio-cio-san, Gilda, and the title heroine in Alfredo Catalani's La Wally.

In 1924, fresh from triumphs in Milan and Paris, but before her debut in London or New York, she was engaged by Dame Nellie Melba to be one of the star singers of an Italian opera company that Melba was organising to make a tour of Australia. She proved a popular and critical success on the tour, and there was no rivalry between the ageing Melba and the much younger Dal Monte. Rather, they threw bouquets after each other's performances. In 1928, on her third visit to Australia, she married tenor Enzo de Muro Lomanto in St Mary's Cathedral, Sydney. The wedding party created international headlines when, according to some sources, it gave the Fascist salute on the cathedral steps.[1]

On 12 January 1929 at La Scala she created the role of Rosalina, in the world premiere of Umberto Giordano's Il re.

She retired from the operatic stage in 1945. However, she continued to work in the theatre (as well as to make the occasional recording) and appeared in a number of films, of which the best known is perhaps her last, Enrico Maria Salerno's Anonimo veneziano, a 1970 story about a musician at La Fenice. She became a singing teacher and coach; her pupils included Dodi Protero, Dolores Wilson, Maaria Eira and Gianna D'Angelo.[citation needed]


Death


Dal Monte died in 1975 at the age of 81, in Pieve di Soligo, as a result of circulatory disorders.[citation needed]


References


  1. "The Melba – JC Williamson Tour of 1928", andrewsopera.blogspot.com, 17 July 2006; accessed 4 June 2015.[better source needed] This was disputed when the original article about the wedding was republished: "From the Archives, 1928: Near riot at opera singers' Sydney wedding", republication of an article from 24 August 1928 in The Sydney Morning Herald, 23 August 2020

Sources



Bibliography



На других языках


- [en] Toti Dal Monte

[es] Toti Dal Monte

Toti Dal Monte (Antonietta Meneghel) (1893 – 1975) fue una célebre soprano lírica de coloratura italiana favorita de Arturo Toscanini y en el papel de Madama Butterfly de Puccini.

[ru] Тоти даль Монте

Тоти даль Монте (итал. Toti dal Monte, сценическое имя; настоящее имя — Антониетта Менегелли, итал. Antonietta Meneghelli; 1893—1975) — итальянская оперная певица (сопрано).



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