Jessica Pratt (soprano)

Jessica Pratt (born 20 June 1979) is an operatic soprano. Born in Bristol, England, she has lived in Australia since 1991[1] and is the daughter of a tenor. She began by studying the trumpet for ten years before concentrating her studies on singing.[2]

In 2003 she won the Australian Singing Competition,[1] which brought her to Europe, and she was subsequently invited by Gianluigi Gelmetti to continue her studies at the Rome Opera, and while in Rome, she also studied under Renata Scotto at the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, finally moving to Milan in 2006 to complete her studies with Lella Cuberli. Since that time she has begun to make a career for herself in many of the world's great opera houses.

Career

During the early years of her career, in typical fashion, she sang in many smaller venues, examples being her Lucia in several Italian European houses, including those in Pavia and Cremona (October 2007), Zurich in late 2008, Florence in early 2009, and again in Geneva in March 2010.[3] Other roles taken up during these years included Desdemona in July 2008, Gilda in Como one year later along with others in Rome in July/August 2010. Her Amina in La sonnambula appeared in Como, St. Gallen, Pavia, and Cremona in October/November 2010, followed by a run of Elviras in I puritani in four smaller Italian houses in October 2010/11.[3]

Pratt has also performed in international opera theatres and festivals including the Teatro Alla Scala where she sang in Donizetti's Le convenienze ed inconvenienze teatrali in 2011[4] as part of the Accademia del Teatro alla Scala, a young singers project. Performances elsewhere have included those at the Teatro San Carlo (Lucia in 2011), the Rossini Opera Festival in Pesaro, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, the Teatro La Fenice (with a Lucia in May/June 2011 and some performances as Elvira in May 2012),[3] as well as the Vienna State Opera and Opernhaus Zürich. Other European venues include the Deutsche Oper Berlin and The Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, (as the Queen of the Night) in February 2011 under Colin Davis.[3]

In 2012 she appeared in the international television broadcast of the New Year's Day concert at Teatro La Fenice in Venice.[5]

She has collaborated with conductors such as Daniel Oren, Kent Nagano, Ralf Weikart, Donato Renzetti, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Wayne Marshall, Christian Thielemann, David Parry, Nello Santi.

In May 2013 Jessica Pratt received the Italian award, La Siola d'Oro, for coloratura sopranos in honor of Italian soprano Lina Pagliughi (1907–1980).[6]

Performances in 2014 included Lucia at La Scala (February) followed by the same role in Amsterdam two months later, a Violetta (La traviata) in Melbourne in May, and a Donna Anna (Don Giovanni) at La Fenice (October).[3] 2015 brought a return to the role of Lucia for the Festival Internacional de Opera Alejandro Granda in Lima, Peru.,[7] and at the opera houses of Rome and Florence, her role debut as Semiramide in Marseille and later in Washington DC, her debut at the Arena di Verona as Rosina in Il barbiere di Siviglia and her role debut as Amenaide in Tancredi in Lausanne, among others.

Engagements in 2016 include her debut at the Gran Teatre del Liceu in Barcelona as Desdemona in Rossini's Otello, her debut at the ABAO Bilbao in La sonnambula and at the Metropolitan Opera New York as Queen of the Night in The Magic Flute.

Rossini roles and premieres

In addition to appearances in operas by Rossini such as her 2010 performances as Desdemona in the composer's Otello at the "Rossini in Wildbad" Festival, Pratt has been featured in significant premieres of two of the composer's rarer works. These include the title role in Armida in its United Kingdom premiere in 2010 and, two years later, the United States premiere of Ciro in Babilonia.

Armida was given by the Garsington Opera Festival in 2010, where critic Andrew Clark noted that:

what sets the performance alight is Jessica Pratt’s Armida. This young English soprano has a ringing top, good looks, stage temperament and enough vocal agility to make sense of Rossini’s love-struck heroine.[8]

Another critic, Robert Farr, reviewing the same production, notes:

As Armida, hers was the most amazing vocal performance of the evening. The role is one of the several manifestly vocally difficult and demanding ones that Rossini wrote for his mistress, and later wife, Isabella Colbran, one of the most renowned divas of the day. Not only are its vocal demands considerable, but also it is a very big sing too concluding with the final display aria demanded by all singers in Rossini’s time to finish off the performance......[L]ike the rest of the audience, I appreciated the fact that she sang it with musicality, clarity of diction and purity and beauty of tone, all allied to the smooth vocal extension and flexibility evident throughout her whole performance.[9]

Then, in 2012, Pratt sang the role of Amira in Ciro in Babilonia at the Caramoor Belcanto Festival which resulted in The New York Times critic, Anthony Tommasini, noting that "the soprano Jessica Pratt was also outstanding as Amira, singing with gleaming sound, free and easy high notes, agile coloratura runs and lyrical grace."[10] This production went on to be presented by the same cast at the following month's Rossini Opera Festival in Pesaro where it was recorded.

Prior to this, in 2011 at the same Rossini Festival, Pratt had performed the title role in the second staged production of Adelaide di Borgogna since 1825.[11] In another Rossini role, March 2013 was given over to Matilde in Guillaume Tell at Opera Festival Alejandro Granda in Lima, Peru.[3]

Repertoire

Composer Opera Role Composer Opera Role
Bellini I Capuleti e i Montecchi Giulietta Rossini Adelaide di Borgogna Adelaide
Bellini I puritani Elvira Rossini Armida Armida
Bellini La sonnambula Amina Rossini Ciro in Babilonia Amira
Bernstein Candide Cunegonde Rossini Demetrio e Polibio Lisinga
Donizetti Viva la Mamma Daria Rossini Guglielmo Tell Matilde
Donizetti Lucia di Lammermoor Lucia Rossini Otello Desdemona
Gounod Roméo et Juliette Juliette Vaccai La Sposa di Messina Donna Isabella
Halevy La Juive Eudoxie Verdi Giovanna d'Arco Giovanna
Meyerbeer L'Africaine Inès Verdi Rigoletto Gilda
Mozart Don Giovanni Donna Anna
Mozart Il re pastore Aminta
Mozart Die Zauberflöte Die Königin der Nacht[12]

Recordings

Audio

  • Serenade Solo album (Opus Arte)
  • Rossini Otello Wildbad (Naxos)
  • Vaccai La sposa di Messina Wildbad (Naxos)
  • A Guided Tour of the Romantic Era Vol.3 (Naxos)
  • Bel Canto Bully (Naxos)

Video

  • Donizetti Le convenienze ed inconvenienze teatrali Teatro alla Scala (Belair Classiques)[4]
  • Bellini La Sonnambula Teatro La Fenice (Betafilm)
  • Rossini Adelaide di Borgogna Rossini Opera Festival (Arthaus Musik)[11]
  • Rossini Ciro in Babilonia Rossini Opera Festival (Opus Arte)
  • Teatro La Fenice New Years Concert 2012 (Arthaus Musik)

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 Winner of the 2003 competition on aussing.org.au
  2. Bonelli, Valentina, "Melodrama queen: Queen of the belcanto, the Australian singer Jessica Pratt bewitched Italian fans with her passionate opera heroines", Vogue Italia (in English), February 2013, p. 144
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Operabase's listing of Pratt's schedule from October 2007 on operabase.com. Retrieved 4 January 2014
  4. 1 2 "Gaetano Donizetti: Le convenienze ed inconvenienze teatrali [Viva la mamma]" Recording of the opera on Harmonia Mundi
  5. La Fenice's announcement of the TV broadcast (In Italian)
  6. Presentation of the 2013 Award on facebook.com. Retrieved 4 January 2013
  7. Festival website announcing the 2015 programme
  8. Clark, Andrew, "Capriccio/Tosca, Grange Park, Hampshire; Armida, Garsington Opera, Oxfordshire", Financial Times (London), 6 June 2010
  9. Farr, Robert, "Seen and Heard UK Opera Review" Garsington's Armida, 7 June 2010
  10. Tommasini, Anthony,"An Ancient War Gets the Silent-Film Treatment via Opera: Ciro in Babilonia by Rossini, in "Bel Canto at Caramoor", The New York Times, 8 July 2012.
  11. 1 2 "Adelaide Di Borgogna", on arthaus-musik.com. (with video excerpts from the production)
  12. Royal Opera House, London on Operbase.com
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