Marie Charles-Rothier
Herman Winklemann
Herman Winklemann
Herman Winklemann
Carl Zeigler
Leon Rains
Vasily Sevastyanov
Premiere Cast of "Zaza" by Leoncavallo
Opera Comique
Charles Gilibert
Barbara Kemp
Sara Anderson
Ernesto Niccolini by Disderi
Enrico Delle Sedie by Erwin
Enrico Delle Sedie By Caldesi
Alexandre Gourdin by Reutlinger
Enrico Delle Sedie by Pierson
Jean Baptiste Faure by Reutlinger
Marie Marimon By Downey
Emile Brulfert by Ogerau with autograph
Giovanni Zucchini by Mayer & Pierson
Juliette Bilbaut-Vauchelet by Disderi Delie Succ
Margaret Von Vahsel by Tiedermann Autographed
Jean De Reszke
Jean De Reszke
Jean De Reszke
Jean De Reszke
Jean De Reszke
Jean De Reszke
Mademoiselle Monrose by Reutlinger
Nina Zottmayr-Hartmann by Breuning
Clarice Sinico-Campobello by Mayall
Vilhelm Herold
Vilhelm Herold
Vilhelm Herold
Vilhelm Herold
Pierre Triadou
Aino Ackte
Aino Ackte
Aino Ackte
Charles Santley by Unknown
Blanche Cole by Elliott & Fry
Henry Albers
Henry Albers
Joseph O'Mara
Jean De Reszke


as Manrico "Il Trovatore" by Verdi
JEAN DE RESZKE
(Jan Mieczyslaw RESZKE )
(14 January 1850 – 3 April 1925),
Polish Tenor
abandoned his legal training and went to Milan in Italy to study voice. The most acclaimed of the pedagogues consulted by the young de Reszke was Antonio Cotogni, an eminent baritone who was a favorite of Giuseppe Verdi's.
In January 1874, he made his debut in Venice as Jan de Reschi (he later changed it to Jean de Reszke), undertaking the baritone part of Alfonso in a production of Donizetti's La favorite . The following April, he sang for the first time in London, performing at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, and a little later in Paris, essaying an array of different baritone roles.
De Reszke displayed limitations as a baritone and he withdrew from the stage to allow for a further period of study, this time with Giovanni Sbriglia in Paris. Under Sbirgilia's tutelage, his voice gained remarkably in the freedom of its upper register. Accordingly, when he made his first operatic reappearance in 1879 (in Madrid), it was as a tenor, scoring a success in the title-role of Meyerbeer's Robert le diable. Indeed, the then 29-year-old de Reszke's immense fame as a singer dates
JEAN DE RESZKE
(Jan Mieczyslaw RESZKE )
(14 January 1850 – 3 April 1925),
Polish Tenor
abandoned his legal training and went to Milan in Italy to study voice. The most acclaimed of the pedagogues consulted by the young de Reszke was Antonio Cotogni, an eminent baritone who was a favorite of Giuseppe Verdi's.
In January 1874, he made his debut in Venice as Jan de Reschi (he later changed it to Jean de Reszke), undertaking the baritone part of Alfonso in a production of Donizetti's La favorite . The following April, he sang for the first time in London, performing at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, and a little later in Paris, essaying an array of different baritone roles.
De Reszke displayed limitations as a baritone and he withdrew from the stage to allow for a further period of study, this time with Giovanni Sbriglia in Paris. Under Sbirgilia's tutelage, his voice gained remarkably in the freedom of its upper register. Accordingly, when he made his first operatic reappearance in 1879 (in Madrid), it was as a tenor, scoring a success in the title-role of Meyerbeer's Robert le diable. Indeed, the then 29-year-old de Reszke's immense fame as a singer dates
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