Noëmi_Nadelmann

Noëmi Nadelmann

Noëmi Nadelmann

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Noëmi Nadelmann (born 6 March 1962) is a Swiss soprano with a wide repertoire, ranging from Baroque opera to contemporary works.

Noëmi Nadelmann, 2009

Career

Nadelmann was born in Zürich; her mother, Rachel, was an actress, her father, Leo (1913–1998), a pianist and composer. Nadelmann started her singing studies at the Zürich Conservatory, then continued at Indiana University Bloomington.[1] She debuted in 1987 as Musetta in La bohème at La Fenice in Venice.[2]

Engagements at the Vienna Volksoper and various Swiss cities followed. From 1990 until 1994 she was a member of the Staatstheater am Gärtnerplatz in Munich. Subsequent freelance appearances include the Komische Oper Berlin, Zürich Opera House, Bern Theatre, Opéra Bastille in Paris, Hamburg State Opera, Prinzregententheater in Munich, Deutsche Oper Berlin, the Metropolitan Opera in New York, Lyric Opera of Chicago, Cologne Opera, Berlin State Opera, De Nederlandse Opera, and the Bolshoi Theatre.[3]

In Andrzej Żuławskis 1991 film La Note bleue [fr] Nadelmann plays the role of the opera singer Pauline Viardot.[4] She sang Violetta in Götz Friedrich's televised production of La traviata.

She received the Critics' Prize in Berlin in 1996 and the Wolfgang-Amadeus-Mozart-Preis [de] in 1996.[1]

In 2010, Nadelmann entered a competition, Battle of the Choirs, on the Swiss television station SRF with the group she founded, Noëmi Nadelmann und Chor.[5] Nadelmann and the group have then continued to perform concerts.

In January 2014, she announced that she and Lyndon Terracini had resumed a relationship that was interrupted 23 years before and that she would move to Australia.[6] She did, and they married in 2019.[7]

Discography


References

  1. Paul Suter (2005). "Noëmie Nadelmann". In Andreas Kotte (ed.). Theaterlexikon der Schweiz / Dictionnaire du théâtre en Suisse / Dizionario Teatrale Svizzero / Lexicon da teater svizzer [Theater Dictionary of Switzerland]. Vol. 2. Zürich: Chronos. pp. 1305–1306. ISBN 978-3-0340-0715-3. LCCN 2007423414. OCLC 62309181.
  2. "Opernstar in Jury von Music-Star". Neue Zürcher Zeitung (in German). 27 November 2006. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
  3. "Der Opern-Star ist verliebt – und wandert aus!" by NB and Sylvie Kempa, Schweizer Illustrierte, 6 January 2014 (in German)
  4. "Singing for their supper" by Matthew Westwood, The Australian, 30 January 2021 (subscription required)

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