- Florence Koppleff, Ernst Haefliger, George Szell, Sara Endich, Ezio Flagello, The Cleveland Orchestra
- Robert Nagy, Zinka Milanov, The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, Giorgio Tozzi, Frank Guarrera, Ezio Flagello, Dimitri Mitropoulos, Norman Scott, Marie Janger, Carlo Bergonzi
- Hermann Uhde, Paul Franke, The Metropolitan Opera Orchestra, Karl Böhm, Eleanor Steber, Charles Anthony, Kurt Baum, Karl Dönch
- Luisa Malagrida, Coro Accademia Filarmonica, Ochestra Sinfonica di Roma, Ezio Flagello, Mariano Caruso, Richard Karp, Pierre Duval, Enzo Sordello
- Richard Cassilly, Ezio Flagello, Orchestra of the American Opera Society, Arnold Gamson, Laurel Hurley, Giulietta Simionato
- Júlia Hamari, Erich Leinsdorf, Daniel Guss, Mario Sereni, RCA Italiana Opera Orchestra, Giorgio Tozzi, Ezio Flagello, Arturo Basile, Hartje Mueller, Carlo Bergonzi, Laura Londi, Corinne Vozza, Reri Grist, Thomas Schippers, Robert El Hage, Shirley Verrett, Robert Merrill, John Newton, Orchestra of the Rome Opera House, Oliviero de Fabritiis, Leontyne Price, Fernando Iacopucci, Francesco Molinari-Pradelli
Ezio Flagello
Biography
Ezio Flagello was a colorful and popular American bass from the mid-'50s to 1987, the year of his retirement. His fame owed much, of course, to his many successful performances on the world's operatic stages, but he also appeared on several popular television shows and in the 1974 Academy Award-winning film The Godfather Part II playing the Impresario. Flagello sang with the Metropolitan Opera for 27 years and was a favorite with audiences there. His range of repertory was uncommonly broad, taking in disparate roles in the works of Mozart (Leporello), Bellini (Rodolfo), Verdi (Sparafucile) , Wagner (Pogner), Puccini (the Jailer), Barber (Enobarbus), and many others. He made numerous recordings, of which a good many are still widely available from labels that include Decca, Citadel, Myto, and Gala. Among his most highly praised recordings are of La Sonnambula and Don Giovanni. Flagello was born in New York City on January 28, 1931. His older brother was famed composer Nicolas Flagello. Ezio followed his brother's lead in choosing to study music at the Manhattan School of Music. His most important voice teachers there were John Brownlee and Friedrich Schorr. Flagello's biographies will state that his official debut was at the 1955 Empire State Festival, where he sang Dulcamara in Donizetti's L'elisir d'amore. True enough, but a more important debut took place the previous year when he appeared on the television show Ed Sullivan's The Toast of the Town (June 6) with other notables that included Victor Borge. Flagello debuted at the Met in 1957 as the Jailer in Puccini's Tosca. He appeared in numerous important roles at the Met over the years (528 performances), singing for the last time there on December 17, 1984, in Rossini's The Barber of Seville as Dr. Bartolo. He also appeared on many of the Met radio broadcasts during this period. Because of Flagello's portly appearance and good-natured personality, he was not only a good fit physically -- not to mention vocally -- for many buffo roles in opera, but a colorful character for potential crossover audiences, like that of the Tonight Show, with Johnny Carson, on which he appeared on March 29, 1971. Among Flagello's last appearances in concert was the 1987 Rossini Stabat Mater, presented in Jacksonville, FL. His more memorable recordings include the song cycle The Land, a work written by his brother and conducted by him, available on Citadel Records.