- Boris Christoff, Giorgio Algorta, Jonel Perlea, Orchestra del Maggio Musicale Fiorentino, Ettore Bastianini, Oliviero de Fabritiis, David Poleri, Fausto Flamini, Magda Olivero, Marianne Radev
- Magda Olivero, Giulietta Simionato, Orchestra & Chorus of "Teatro di San Carlo", Franco Corelli, Ettore Bastianini
- Luciano Neroni, Adelio Zagonara, Armando Giannotti, Gina Cigna, Magda Olivero, Afro Poli, Francesco Merli, Gino Del Signore, Franco Ghione, Turin Radio Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, Giuseppe Bravura
- Gina Cigna, Gino Del Signore, Magda Olivero, Afro Poli, Francesco Merli, Franco Ghione, Turin Radio Symphony Orchestra & Chorus, Giuseppe Bravura, Luciano Neroni, Adelio Zagonara, Armando Giannotti
- Victor de Sabata, Met Opera Orchestra, Orchestra del Teatro alla Scala di Milano, Fausto Cleva, Mario del Monaco, Monte Carlo National Orchestra, Nicola Rescigno
- Mariano Caruso, Magda Olivero, Francesco Cilea, Giulietta Simionata, Rosanna Zerbini, Augusto Frati, Anna Di Stasio, Antonio Cassinelli, Franco Corelli, Mario Rossi, Ettore Bastianini, Renato Ercolani
- Scipio Colombol, Eugenio Fernandi, Sergio Livi, Vito de Taranto, RAI Chorus, Milan, Emidio Tieri, RAI Symphony Orchestra, Milan, Giovanni Omodei, Oliviero de Fabritiis, Magda Olivero, Giuseppe Albano, Giovanni Bianchini
Magda Olivero
Biography
The essence of verismo, soprano Magda Olivero won an enthusiastic following during her exceedingly long career. Colleagues who found much to criticize in other artists reserved special approval for Olivero, whose art and integrity they valued. Purged of all strength and emotion after each of her stage appearances, the soprano retired in 1941 only to return to opera in 1951 at the request of Francesco Cilèa, who regarded her as his ideal interpreter. Olivero began her career taking unfruitful auditions for Italian radio. Eventually accepted as a pupil by Luigi Gerussi, she finally made her radio debut in 1932 as Mary Magdalene in Cottozzo's rather obscure I Misteri Dolorosi. After further studies in Turin, Olivero made her first stage appearance as Lauretta in Gianni Schicchi at the city's Teatro Victorio Emanuele. A 1934 La Scala debut as Anna in Nabucco was followed by an engagement with a company touring the Italian peninsula. In 1937, she returned to Turin, this time to the Teatro Carignano, and was acclaimed in Monteverdi's Il Combattimento di Trancredi e Clorinda. Word traveled quickly about the gifted young soprano, and that same year she recorded Liu to Gina Cigna's Turandot. Marriage and retirement in 1941 kept her largely away from the public, but when she returned to the stage a decade later, she resumed a performing career that carried her into old age. In addition to such verismo roles as Adrianna, Tosca, Fedora, and even Minnie in La fanciulla del West, she also devoted herself to contemporary works. She appeared in London as Mimi in 1952 during an Italian season at the Stroll Theatre. Her Adrianna at the 1953 Edinburgh Festival brought more warm reviews. When she made her American debut as Cherubini's Medea at Dallas in 1967, audiences who had known her only as a name were transfixed by her singing and acting. A Metropolitan Opera debut came in April 1975, after which Olivero sang the role nine more times in the house and on tour. When in her early eighties, she recorded major scenes from Adrianna Lecouvreur; her always slender, rather reedy voice was reduced in size, but still guided by all the conviction, crystalline diction, and unfaltering legato that were her hallmarks.