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・ Louise Butterworth
・ Louise Byg Kongsholm
・ Louise Bédard
・ Louise Bénédicte de Bourbon
・ Louise C. Bentz House
・ Louise Caire Clark
・ Louise Caldwell Murdock
・ Louise Campbell
・ Louise Camrass
・ Louise Camuto
・ Louise Caroline of Hochberg
・ Louise Carroll
・ Louise Carter
・ Louise Carver
・ Louise Carver (South African singer)
Louise Caselotti
・ Louise Casey
・ Louise Catherine Breslau
・ Louise Cavenaile
・ Louise Chamis
・ Louise Chandler Moulton
・ Louise Charron
・ Louise Chawla
・ Louise Chow
・ Louise Christian
・ Louise Christine of Stolberg-Stolberg-Ortenberg
・ Louise Chéruit
・ Louise Clapp
・ Louise Clark
・ Louise Clarke Pyrnelle


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Louise Caselotti : ウィキペディア英語版
Louise Caselotti

Louise Caselotti (August 23, 1910July 13, 1999) was an American opera singer.
==Biography==

Caselotti was born in Bridgeport, Connecticut, the daughter of voice teacher Guido Caselotti, with whom she studied after the family moved to Los Angeles, California.〔"Louise Caselotti, Opera Singer," ''Los Angeles Times,'' July 19, 1999〕
Caselotti debuted with the San Carlo Opera Company in Los Angeles in 1927 in that city's Philharmonic Auditorium. She was particularly noted for having sung the title role in ''Carmen'' more than four hundred times, and she also appeared notably as the gypsy Azucena in ''Il Trovatore.''〔
She performed in Italian motion pictures in the early 1930s.〔 In the United States she sang on radio and even experimental television broadcasts in the 1930s for CBS. She dubbed the voices of several leading Hollywood actresses in the late 1930s and early 1940s. Later she married attorney Richard "Eddie" Bagarozy and lived in a Riverside Drive apartment in Manhattan. Bagarozy wanted to start his own opera company, but ultimately found the enterprise beyond his abilities. Nevertheless, he planted the seeds for what ultimately became the Lyric Opera of Chicago.
Caselotti and Bagarozy managed the career of a promising Greek-American soprano, Maria Callas, and introduced her to the Metropolitan Opera's general director Edward Johnson. Caselotti was Callas' vocal coach during 1946 and 1947.〔Edwards, Anne (2001). ''Maria Callas: An Intimate Biography'', St. Martin's Press
She died July 13, in Malibu, California, at the age of 88.〔
Caselotti's younger sister, Adriana, was the voice of Snow White in Walt Disney's 1937 Technicolor animated feature.

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