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*{{Official website|http://www.ugobenelli.com}}
*{{Official website|http://www.ugobenelli.com}}
*[http://www.operanostalgia.be/html/benelli.html A Meeting with Ugo Benelli] – Interview and photographs on ''Opera Nostalgia''
*[http://www.operanostalgia.be/html/benelli.html A Meeting with Ugo Benelli] – Interview and photographs on ''Opera Nostalgia''
*[http://belcantoitaliano.blogspot.com/2015/02/intervista-al-tenore-ugo-benelli.html Interview "Belcanto Italiano intervista il tenore Ugo Benelli, 25 gennaio 2015"]


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{{Authority control}}

Revision as of 19:02, 28 September 2018

Ugo Benelli (born 20 January 1935) is an Italian operatic tenor. Born in Genoa and trained at La Scala, Benelli had an international career singing leading tenore di grazia roles from the early 1960s through the 1980s. In his later years he sang character roles and began a career as a singing teacher.[1] He retired from the stage in 2004.

Life and career

Benelli was born in Genoa where his father and grandfather worked as hat makers. He studied singing in Milan with Pietro Magenta and then won a scholarship to La Scala's training school for young singers where he studied under Giulio Confalonieri and Ettore Campogalliani. He began his singing career in Montevideo in 1958 in Salieri's comic intermezzo Arlecchinata while on a tour of Latin America with the chamber opera company, Opera da Camera di Milano. In 1960 he began singing at the Teatro della Piccola Scala (La Scala's chamber theatre) and then at Barcelona's Gran Teatre del Liceu as Fenton in Verdi's Falstaff which he considers to be his official debut.[2][3] He was then engaged to sing on the main stage at La Scala, first in the small role of Brighella in Ariadne auf Naxos in 1963, and then in the leading role of Giocondo in La pietra del paragone in the 1967 season. He returned to La Scala in 13 more productions between 1967 and 1999 as well as giving a solo concert of bel canto tenor arias in 1976 with Pierluigi Urbini conducting the La Scala Orchestra.[4]

Benelli went on to make house debuts at a number of other major European and North American opera houses and festivals, including the Glyndebourne Festival where he made his debut in 1967 as Nemorino in L'elisir d'amore and returned in subsequent years as Narciso in Il turco in Italia (1970), Count Almaviva in Il barbiere di Siviglia and Trouffaldino in L'Amour des trois oranges (1982), and Don Basilio in Le nozze di Figaro (1984).[5] In addition to his Glyndebourne debut, 1967 saw Benelli's house debuts at La Fenice as Filipeto in I quatro rusteghi and the Teatro San Carlo as Nemorino in L'elisir d'amore.

When Benelli made his debut at London's Royal Opera House singing Ernesto in Don Pasquale in 1974, the English critic Harold Rosenthal wrote, "Mr Benelli's Ernesto was the best I remember in the theatre, and except for the classic Tito Schipa performance on records, the best sung I have ever heard."[6] Benelli had been singing the role from the earliest days of career. He sang it Costa Rica during the 1958 Latin American tour and recorded it for Deutsche Grammophon in 1965.[7]

Benelli's long association with Wexford Festival Opera began in 1965 as Belfiore in La finta giardiniera. He returned the following year to sing the title role in Auber's Fra Diavolo and went on to sing Nencio in L'infedelta delusa (1969), Bertrando in L'inganno felice and Ernesto in Il giovedì grasso (1970), Ecclitico in Il mondo della luna (1978), and a series of celebrity recitals in the 1980s. He returned once more to the festival in 1998 to give the Tom Walsh Memorial Lecture. His subject was the tenore di grazia.[3]

In the mid-1980s Benelli moved to singing character and buffo tenor roles. These included Don Basilio in Le nozze di Figaro which he sang at Glyndebourne, the Salzburg Festival, the Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, and at the Metropolitan Opera for his house debut in 1986; Guillot de Morfontaine in Manon at La Scala and the Teatro Carlo Felice; Sendorf in The Makropulos Affair at the Teatro San Carlo; John Styx in Orphée aux enfers at the Teatro Regio di Torino, and Jack O'Brien in Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny at the Teatro Carlo Felice.[8] Since his retirement from the stage, he has taught singing privately and in master classes. In 2002, Giorgio De Martino's biography of Benelli, Cantanti, vil razza dannata, was published by Zecchini in their series I racconti della musica.[9] His last appearance onstage, in a praised "cameo" as Don Basilio, took place at the Teatro Carlo Felice in his native city in 2004, whe he was about 69.[10]

Roles created

Early in his career Benelli created roles in two 20th century operas:[11]

Recordings

Operas

Masses

References

  1. ^ Forbes, Elizabeth (2001) "Benelli, Ugo". Grove Music Online. Retrieved 16 March 2016 (subscription required for full access).
  2. ^ Iovino, Roberto (28 March 2015). "Benelli, ottant'anni di lirica 'Il canto da sempre nel sangue'". La Repubblica. Retrieved 16 March 2016 Template:It.
  3. ^ a b Irish Times (10 October 1998). "Call me McBenelli". Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  4. ^ La Scala Archives. "Ugo Benelli". Retrieved 16 March 2016 Template:It.
  5. ^ Glyndebourne Festival Opera Archives. Ugo Benelli
  6. ^ Rosenthal, Harold (March 1974). "Don Pasquale. Royal Opera, Covent Garden, January 29", p. 263. Opera. Retrieved 16 March 2016.
  7. ^ Castellón, Gonzalo (20 April 2014). "El renombrado tenor Ugo Benelli debutó en Costa Rica en 1958". La Nación. Retrieved 16 March 2016 Template:Es.
  8. ^ Kutsch, Karl J. and Riemens, Leo (2004). "Benelli, Ugo", pp. 344–345. Großes Sängerlexikon 4th Edition, Vol. 1. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 359844088X Template:De icon
  9. ^ OCLC 51877463
  10. ^ Foletto, Angelo (19 January 2004). "Scene da un matrimonio con signora in rosso". la Repubblica. Retrieved 27 April 2017 Template:It.
  11. ^ Casaglia, Gherardo (2005). "Ugo Benelli". Almanacco Amadeus. Retrieved 16 March 2016 Template:It.