- The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, Sir Thomas Beecham, Thelma Votipka, Mack Harrell, George Cehanovsky, Licia Albanese, Lorenzo Alvary, Lily Djanel, Leonard Warren, Alessio De Paolis, Helen Olheim, Raoul Jobin
- Alessio De Paolis, John Brownlee, Dimitri Mitropoulos, Rosalind Elias, Daniele Barioni, Lawrence Davidson, George Cehanovsky, Licia Albanese, Osie Hawkins, Madelaine Chambers, The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra
- Royal Orchestra, Nils Grevillius, Jussi Björling, Robert Merrill, Stockholm Concert Association Orchestra, Licia Albanese, Renato Cellini, RCA Victor Symphony Orchestra, Jonel Perlea, Emil Markow, Orchestra dell Teatro della Roma
- NBC Symphony Orchestra, George Cehanovsky, Licia Albanese, Arthur Newman, John Garris, Jan Peerce, Paul Dennis, Maxine Stellman, Johanne Morland, Arturo Toscanini, Robert Merrill
- Giulio Tomey, Eva Turner, Giovanni Martinelli, London Philharmonic Orchestra, Mafalda Favero, John Barbirolli
- NBC Chorus, Arturo Toscanini, Salvatore Baccaloni, George Cehanovsky, Licia Albanese, Nicola Moscona, Francesco Valentino, Jan Peerce, NBC Symphony Orchestra, Anne McKnight
Licia Albanese
Biography
Albanese was one of the most beloved sopranos in the Italian repertoire, specializing in roles that suited her physical and vocal appearances of vulnerability and delicacy. She specialized in Puccini, and was associated with his Madama Butterfly more than with any other role. Her voice was smallish and not always precise in pitch, and could turn edgy under pressure, but nonetheless, her vocal and dramatic intensity and sense of apt staging made her performances riveting. She first studied piano, but switched her energies to voice, studying with Giuseppina Baldassare-Tedeschi. She won the Italian National Singing Competition in 1933, and her opera debut, as Butterfly, was as a mid-opera last-minute substitute for an ailing colleague at the Teatro Lirico in Milan, in 1934. Her La Scala debut was in 1935 as Lauretta in Puccini's Gianni Schicchi, her Covent Garden debut as Liu in Turandot, and her Met debut was in 1940 as Butterfly, beginning an association with that house that lasted until 1966. She made the occasional forays into heavier repertoire during her career, even experimenting with the role of Elsa in Lohengrin in her early years in Italy, but rarely added such roles to her repertoire, and being careful with her performances of even such medium-weight roles as Tosca, though towards the end of her career, with little to lose, she performed heavier roles such as Aida. After her retirement, she remained active, leading the Puccini Foundation (which she and her husband created), teaching master classes at the Juilliard School of Music and Marymount Manhattan College, and directing operatic scenes. In 1985 and 1987, she made cameo appearances in Steven Sondheim's Follies. In 2000, she received the Handel Medallion. The honor, which was bestowed upon her by Mayor Rudolph W. Giuliani, is a tribute to individuals who have enriched New York City's cultural life.