Giovanni Martinelli(1885-1969)
- Actor
- Soundtrack
One of the great voices of the Metropolitan Opera, the tenor Giovanni
Martinelli has one of the longest tenures there of any principal artist
(1913 - 1945) and a popularity with audiences that, at one point, was
exceeded only by that of Enrico Caruso. A specialist in the French and
Italian repertoires, who created the tenor leads in several Met
premiers (Granados' "Goyescas," Tchaikovsky's "Eugene Onegin," Verdi's
"Don Carlo," among many others), his greatest success came in 1937 in
the title role of Verdi's "Otello," opposite Lawrence Tibbett and Helen
Jepson. Although he retired from the company in 1945, he continued to
lead an active, vigorous life almost to the end of his days. A frequent
attendee at Met performances, his entrances received as much applause
as the evening's featured singers, sometimes more so. He was an
attendee at the closing night of the Old Met and the opening night of
the New Met in, both in 1966. In 1967, at the age of eighty-one, he
sang his last performance, as the Emperor in a Seattle Opera
performance of Puccini's "Turandot," proving that his voice had not
failed him. He died, a happy man with a love of music and life that
never faded, two years later, at the age of eighty three.