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Lina Bruna Rasa : ウィキペディア英語版
Lina Bruna Rasa

Lina Bruna Rasa (24 September 1907 – October 1984) was an Italian operatic soprano. She was particularly noted for her performances in the verismo repertoire and was a favourite of Pietro Mascagni who considered her the ideal Santuzza. Bruna Rasa created the roles of Atte in Mascagni's ''Nerone'', Cecilia Sagredo in Franco Vittadini's ''La Sagredo'' and Saint Clare in Licinio Refice's 1926 oratorio, ''Trittico Francescano''. She also sang the role of Tsaritsa Militrisa in the Italian premiere of Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's ''The Tale of Tsar Saltan''.
==Biography==
Lina Bruna Rasa was born at Padua and began her music studies at age 14, studying with Guido Palumbo and Italiano Tabarin in her native Padua, and later in Milan with Manlio Bavagnoli. Her appearance in a 1925 concert at the Teatro La Fenice singing the "Suicidio" aria from ''La Gioconda'' created a sensation. By the end of that year, at the age of 18 she made her operatic debut singing the role of Elena in Boito's ''Mefistofele'' at the Teatro Politeama in Genoa. She made her debut at the Teatro Regio in Turin in the same role on 21 February 1926 and was engaged by Toscanini to sing Elena for the opening of the 1927 season at La Scala where she made her debut on 16 November 1927. She went on to sing in many notable performances there including the world premieres of Mascagni's ''Nerone'', Franco Vittadini's ''La Sagredo'', the Italian premiere of Rimsky-Korsakov's ''The Tale of Tsar Saltan'' and some of the earliest performances Wolf-Ferrari's ''Sly'', Vincenzo Michetti's ''La Maddalena'', and Respighi's ''La campana sommersa''. In a departure from her usual repertoire, she sang Mathilde for La Scala's celebration of the 100th anniversary of Rossini's ''William Tell''.
In the years between 1926 and 1933 Bruna Rasa sang throughout Italy as well as in Montecarlo, Nice, Lausanne and Barcelona where she sang ''Aida'' at the city's Gran Teatre del Liceu. Further afield, she travelled to Egypt in 1927 where she sang in ''Aida'' and ''Omòniza'' in Cairo's Teatro Reale. In 1929, she was engaged by the theatrical impresario, Faustino Da Rosa, for a series of performances in South America. She made her debut at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires on 14 June 1929 as Maddalena de Coigny in ''Andrea Chénier'' with Georges Thill as Chénier. She also sang there in ''Cavalleria Rusticana'', ''Tosca'', and ''La campana sommersa'' in its South American premiere. In August, Da Rosa's singers went on to Uruguay where she sang ''Andrea Chénier'' (again with Thill) and ''Tosca'' at the Teatro Solis in Montevideo.
Bruna Rasa's earliest assumptions of Santuzza in ''Cavalleria rusticana'', the role for which she is best remembered today, were in 1927 in Lausanne and Bari. The opera's composer, Pietro Mascagni, and Bruna Rasa met for the first time in Venice in July 1928 when he conducted a performance of ''Cavalleria Rusticana'' in the Piazza San Marco before a crowd of 35,000 people. Mascagni was struck by her dramatic intensity and her powerful yet beautiful voice. She was to become his favourite Santuzza. He subsequently conducted many of her performances in the role both in Italy and abroad and chose her for the 1940 recording of ''Cavalleria rusticana'' which marked the 50th anniversary of its premiere. It is the only full-length studio recording of the work which is conducted by Mascagni himself.
In the early 1930s Bruna Rasa had begun showing signs of the mental illness which was to cause her premature retirement from the stage. This worsened with the death of her mother in 1935. She suffered a severe breakdown which led to her spending increasingly longer periods away from the stage, often in sanatoriums. Gino Bechi who sang with her on the 1940 ''Cavalleria rusticana'' recording recalled that during the recording sessions she would insistently ask him if he had noticed the white horses in the wings that she believed were waiting to take her away, but would become completely lucid when the music began.〔Dryden (2004)〕 The tenor Giovanni Breviario who sang with her in Lecco in 1941 recalled:
"Her marvelous voice came to life as soon as she began her scenes. This happened only onstage. We were all very affectionate toward her, but when not on the stage, she was passive, apathetic, would not speak and remained doggedly clinging to her handbag."〔Innaurato (2000)〕
On 20 July 1942, she sang in ''Cavalleria rusticana'' at the outdoor arena in Pesaro. It was to be her final performance in a staged opera. Lina Bruna Rasa spent the last 36 years of her life in a mental hospital in Milan, where she died.

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