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・ Mark Reeder
・ Mark Reeds
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・ Mark Regan
・ Mark Regev
・ Mark Regnerus
・ Mark Reichel
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・ Mark Reilly (disambiguation)
・ Mark Rein
・ Mark Rein (journalist)
・ Mark Rein (software executive)
・ Mark Rein-Hagen
Mark Reizen
・ Mark Renaud
・ Mark Rendall
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・ Mark Renshaw
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・ Mark Retera
・ Mark Reuss
・ Mark Rey
・ Mark Reynolds
・ Mark Reynolds (baseball)
・ Mark Reynolds (basketball)
・ Mark Reynolds (footballer)
・ Mark Reynolds (sailor)
・ Mark Reynolds/North Mobile County Airport


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Mark Reizen : ウィキペディア英語版
Mark Reizen

Mark Osipovich Reizen, also Reisen or Reyzen ((ロシア語:Марк Осипович Рейзен), born in Zaitsevo village, Ekaterinoslav province, Russian Empire (now Ukraine) – died November 25, 1992 Moscow, Russia) was a leading Soviet opera singer with a beautiful and expansive bass voice.
==Life and career==
Reizen was born into a Jewish family of mine workers in 1895. He had four brothers and a sister, and all were trained in music, playing mandolin, guitar, balalaika and accordion. He served as a soldier in the First World War. He studied engineering at the Kharkiv Politechnic, and also voice at the Kharkiv Conservatory with the Italian professor Federico Bugamelli in 1919-1920. He debuted at the Kharkiv Opera in 1921 as Pimen in Mussorgsky's ''Boris Godunov'', and in 1925 moved to the Mariinsky Theatre in Leningrad. Reizen toured Europe performing in Paris, Berlin, Monte Carlo and London in 1929-1930.
A tall man commanding a strong stage presence, he joined the Bolshoi Theatre in 1930, remaining there as a principal bass until his retirement in 1954. Among his roles were: Ivan Susanin and Ruslan from the Glinka's operas, Don Basilio (''The Barber of Seville'' by Rossini), Mephistopheles (''Faust'' by Gounod), Prince Gremin (''Eugene Onegin'' by Tchaikovsky), Salieri (''Mozart and Salieri''), the Viking merchant (''Sadko'') in operas by Rimsky-Korsakov, the old Gypsy (''Aleko'' by Rachmaninov), Wotan in Wagner's ''Ring of the Nibelungs'', Konchak (''Prince Igor'' by Borodin), Philip II and Procida in Verdi's operas, and so on. He became a particularly memorable interpreter of Boris and Dosifei in the operas of Mussorgsky (''Boris Godunov'' and ''Khovanshchina'', respectively).
Reizen was awarded the Stalin Prize in 1941, 1949, and 1951.
In 1967, he began teaching, and became a professor at the Moscow Gnessin Institute. He gave an important recital for his 80th anniversary, and for his 90th sang Prince Gremin (in ''Eugene Onegin'') at the Bolshoi in Moscow in July 1985. On both occasions his voice proved to be in a remarkable state of preservation.
Reizen died at age 97 of a stroke. He is considered to have been the most illustrious Russian bass since the days of Lev Sibiriakov (1869-1942) and Feodor Chaliapin (1873-1938), and the possessor of one of the very finest voices of its type heard anywhere in the world during the past 100 years. A number of recordings are available on CD and verify his greatness. Film clips of him performing also exist.

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