Artists` Bios
Transcription
Artists` Bios
! 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Johann Sebastien Bach: Mass in B minor 2016 - 2017 season Performances: Friday, October 21, 2016 | 8 PM & Sunday, October 23, 2016 | 3 PM 1 ! KIERA DUFFY, soprano - American soprano Kiera Duffy who returns to perform with Boston Baroque after her performance in Messiah in 2014, is recognized for both her gleaming high soprano and insightful musicianship in repertoire that encompasses Handel, Bach, and Mozart to the modern sounds of Berg, Glass and Zorn. Kiera Duffy opened the 2015-2016 Los Angeles Philharmonic season with Gustavo Dudamel in Beethoven’s Egmont Overture as part of their all-Beethoven gala. Ms. Duffy will also debut with the Bergen Philharmonic in Mozart’s Mass in C minor with Nathalie Stutzmann conducting. She will sing the Mozart again with the Jacksonville Philharmonic and perform Ginastera’s Quartet No. 3 with the Miro Quartet at the Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center. Last season, Kiera Duffy was seen at Carnegie Hall in Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaire with James Levine and the MET Chamber Ensemble. She was also seen with the St. Louis Symphony in Barber’s Knoxville: Summer of 1915 and as Le Feu/La Princesse in the Laurent Pelly production of Ravel’s L’enfant et les sortilèges at the Seiji Ozawa Music Academy in Japan under the leadership of Maestro Ozawa. Kiera Duffy’s 2013-14 season included performances of Carmina Burana with the Atlanta Symphony under Robert Spano and her debut with the Detroit Symphony under Leonard Slatkin in the same work. She made her Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra and Boston Baroque debuts as soprano soloist in Handel’s Messiah, and was seen with the Charlotte Symphony 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios in Bach’s St. Matthew Passion. She was seen with Ensemble ACJW in Schoenberg’s 2nd String Quartet at the Juilliard School’s Paul Hall. She makes her Australian debut touring with the Australian Chamber Orchestra in performances of Mahler’s 4th Symphony. An active chamber musician, Duffy performed Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaire at the Bard SummerScape Festival as well as at the Charlottesville Chamber Music Festival in Virginia. She also appeared with the Collaborative Arts Institute of Chicago in programs of Britten and Beethoven. Ms. Duffy began her prolific concert career with her New York Philharmonic debut in Pierre Boulez’s Pli selon pli: “Improvisation II sur Mallarmé” under the baton of Lorin Maazel, then returned as Venus in the critically acclaimed performances of György Ligeti’s Le Grand Macabre under Alan Gilbert. She has gone on to sing György Ligeti’s seminal works, Aventures and Nouvelles Aventures for her first performances with the Los Angeles Philharmonic and has since returned in Pierrot Lunaire and Unsuk Chin’s Cantatrix Sopranica. Ms. Duffy debuted with the San Francisco Symphony in Messiah and returned in Mozart’s Requiem and Feldman's Rothko Chapel, both under Michael Tilson Thomas. She made her London Symphony Orchestra debut singing Cunegonde in Candide under Kristjan Järvi, Atlanta Symphony debut with Mozart’s Coronation Mass under Roberto Abbado, Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra debut in Carmina Burana with Andreas Delfs, and sang Berg’s Lulu Suite with the American Symphony Orchestra under Leon Botstein at Bard Summerscape. Ms. Duffy has appeared with much success at the Tanglewood Festival with the Boston Symphony Orchestra as Despina in Così fan tutte, Tebaldo in Don Carlo, and the US premiere of Elliot Carter’s What Next?, all under the baton of James Levine. In addition to her varied work in modern music, Ms. Duffy excels in baroque music and has worked extensively with the baroque ensemble Apollo’s Fire, most notably for performances and a recording of Handel’s music written for the British monarchy and in Michael Praetorius’s Christmas “Vespers”. Other concert appearances have included engagements with the Mormon Tabernacle Choir, Utah Symphony, Omaha Symphony, Masterwork Chorus and Orchestra for her Carnegie Hall debut, Pacific Symphony Orchestra, Indianapolis Chamber Orchestra, Fort Smith Symphony, Palm Beach Symphony, California Symphony, Reno Philharmonic, and the Metropolis Ensemble at New York’s newest destination: The Times Center. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Kiera Duffy 2 ! JENNIFER RIVERA, soprano - Grammy® nominated artist Jennifer Rivera consistently earns praise for delivering exceptional vocalism, superb musicianship, and a powerful stage presence. She returns for a performance with Boston Baroque after her stunning performance in Il ritorno d'Ulisse in Patria in 2014. Her performance of the title role in Handel's Faramondo with Brisbane Baroque in Australia recently earned her The Helpmann Award for best leading female performer in an opera. Her European debut as Sesto in La clemenza di Tito with the Teatro Regio di Torino directed by Graham Vick and conducted by Roberto Abaddo was followed by her debut with the Berlin Staatsoper as Rosina in Il barbiere di Siviglia, as well as Nerone in a new production of Agrippina conducted by Rene Jacobs. She was then invited to sing Licida in L’Olimpiade by Pergolesi at the Innsbruck Early Music Festival and returned to the Berlin Staatsoper as Rosina, and as Ismene in a new production of Antigone by Traetta conducted by Maestro Jacobs. Recent seasons have found Ms. Rivera singing Faramondo with Brisbane Baroque, Sister Helen in Dead Man Walking with Opera Parallele, Orlofsky in Die Fledermaus with Portland Opera, as well as singing with the Milwaukee Symphony, for Schubert’s Mass No. 6 under Hans Graf; Gotham Chamber Opera, for Baden-Baden 1927; Opera Omaha as Nerone in Agrippina; Boston Baroque, as Penelope in Monteverdi’s Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria; and Central City Opera, to debut the role of Sister Helen Prejean in a new production of Dead Man Walking. Current and future seasons include a return to include a return to Music of the Baroque for Bach Cantatas, a debut 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios with Dallas Opera in the Mark Adamo world premiere Becoming Santa Claus, and Sister Helen in Dead Man Walking with New Orleans Opera. Ms. Rivera will also present a solo recital at Bargemusic to introduce the release of her first solo recording Innocence / Experience released by Roven Records and distributed by Naxos. Ms. Rivera returned to Innsbruck for the title role in La Stellidaura Vendicante during summer of the 2012. The ensuing 2012-2013 season included a return to the Berlin Staatsoper and an appearance at the Salle Pleyel in Paris for Agrippina, Mrs. Williamson in The Difficulty of Crossing a Field with Nashville Opera, and a debut with Central City Opera as Rosina in a new production. 2011 saw the release of two recordings for the mezzo: Nerone in Agrippina for Harmonia Mundi (Grammy® Nomination 2013) and Licida in L’Olimpiade for Sony Music. The 2011-12 season found her engaged as Cherubino with Opera Royal de Wallonie, as Stéphano in Roméo et Juliette for Palm Beach Opera, and with the Columbus Symphony Orchestra. While still a student at Juilliard, Ms. Rivera was invited to join the roster of the New York City Opera, and after winning their prestigious Debut Artist of Year award, went on to sing over 70 performances with the company including Cherubino, Rosina, Lazuli in L’Etoile, Hansel in Hansel and Gretel, and Nerone in Agrippina. Praised repeatedly by the New York Times for her “radiant mezzo soprano” (Elmer Gantry), her “warm dark tone” (Barbiere), and “fresh ready singing”, (Hansel) her voice has also been described by the Times as being “dark, musical, and very agile”(Cenerentola) and possessing “richness, ease, and exactness” (L’Etoile). Previous season’s engagements for Ms. Rivera include Rosina with Opera Pacific, Angelina in La cenerentola with Florida Grand Opera, and Ines in Donizetti’s Maria Padilla with Washington Concert Opera. She also appeared at Avery Fisher Hall with the American Symphony Orchestra singing Varese’s Offrandes and with the Polish National Opera as Orsini in Lucrezia Borgia conducted by Will Crutchfield. Other engagements for the mezzo have included her debut with New Orleans Opera as Stephano in Roméo et Juliette and her return to Portland Opera for Rosina. A favorite among living composers, Ms. Rivera created the starring role of Sharon Falconer in the critically acclaimed World Premiere of Robert Aldridge’s Elmer Gantry, which premiered at Nashville Opera in 2007. Additionally, Ms. Rivera has performed in four productions of Mark Adamo’s very successful opera Little Women (in New York, Tokyo, Cleveland, and Dayton), as well as his newest work Lysistrata. The summer of 2010 found her in the World Premiere of Peter Ash’sThe Golden Ticket as Veruca Salt at Opera Theater of Saint Louis. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Jennifer Rivera 3 ! DAVID DANIELS, countertenor - Mr. Daniels makes his debut with Boston Baroque, this season. The 2014 – 2015 season saw David Daniels in the title role of Theodore Morrison’s Oscar, based on the life of Oscar Wilde, in a company debut and East coast premiere with Opera Philadelphia. Daniels will also make his company debut with the Wiener Staatsoper in the Robert Lepage production of The Tempest as Trinculo, conducted by the composer, Thomas Adès. He will also return to San Francisco Opera to sing the role of Arsace in Paretenope, directed by Chrisopher Alden. Concert performances include the Bach Mass in B Minor with the American Classical Orchestra at Alice Tully Hall, Handel’s Messiah with the University Musical Society in Ann Arbor, and an gala performance with soprano Laura Claycomb and Mercury Houston. Additional appearances include a recital with Martin Katz at the Converse College with the Friends of Petrie School of Music in his home town of Spartanburg, SC. David Daniels’ 2013 – 2014 season was highlighted by a return to a role he originated at The Metropolitan Opera: Prospero in The Enchanted Island opposite Susan Graham and Plácido Domingo. Daniels also sang Lichas in the Peter Sellars production of Hercules with the Canadian Opera Company under the baton of Harry Bicket, opposite Alice Coote and Eric Owens. With Gran Teatre del Liceu, Daniels sang Ottone in David McVicar’s production of Agrippina and with The English Concert he sang Didymus in Handel’s rarely heard Theodora, opposite longtime colleague Dorothea Röschmann, in an 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios international concert tour culminating with a performance at Carnegie Hall. Concert engagements included Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater with conductor Nicholas McGegan and the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra. Recital engagements include appearances with Collaborative Arts Institute of Chicago, the Pushkin Museum in Moscow, Teatro de la Zarzuela in Madrid, as well as a special guest appearance at Marilyn Horne’s 80th Birthday Song Celebration alongside Renée Fleming, Samuel Ramey, and Frederica von Stade, among others. The world premiere of Theodore Morrison’s Oscar, based on the life of Oscar Wilde, also highlighted the same season in a return to the Santa Fe Opera. Daniels’s performance of the piece, which was written for him, was lauded by the New York Times: “Mr. Daniels was superb, not only singing but also acting the role with a savvy Wildean mix of arrogance and vulnerability. His sustained tone was beautiful, and his occasional purposeful flirtations with a baritonal register were amusing.” Other highlights included the title role of Radamisto at Theatre an der Wien as well as an international concert tour of the same opera with The English Concert under the direction of Harry Bicket which included performances in Paris, Birmingham Town, London, Toulouse, Ann Arbor, and culminated with a performance at Carnegie Hall. Highly sought after for the works of Handel, Monteverdi, Gluck, Mozart and Britten, David Daniels has been featured on the great operatic stages of the world to overwhelming critical acclaim. Highlights of recent seasons include multiple appearances at the Metropolitan Opera as the title role of Giulio Cesare in David McVicar’s inventive production, Prospero in the Baroque pastiche The Enchanted Island, and in the title role of Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice in a new production marking Mark Morris’ debut at the Met as a stage director and conducted by music director James Levine. Appearances at the Lyric Opera of Chicago include the title role in Handel’s Rinaldo, Oberon in Britten’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and Lichas in Peter Sellars new production of Handel’s Hercules. Additional appearances include Arsamenes in Handel’s Xerxes and Bertarido in Handel’s Rodelinda with the San Francisco Opera. At Santa Fe Opera his role debut as Roberto in Vivaldi’s Griselda, the work’s first major U.S. production by Peter Sellars, drew rave reviews as did the world premiere of Theodore Morrison’s Oscar, based on the life of Oscar Wilde of which the New York Times lauded “Mr. Daniels was superb, not only singing but also acting the role with a savvy Wildean mix of arrogance and vulnerability. His sustained tone was beautiful, and his occasional purposeful flirtations with a baritonal register were amusing.” Boston Baroque 2016-2017 David Daniels 4 ! AARON SHEEHAM, tenor American tenor Aaron Sheehan has established himself as a first rate singer in many styles. His voice is heard regularly in the United States, South America, and Europe, and he is equally comfortable in repertoire ranging from oratorio and chamber music, to the opera stage. His singing has taken him to many festivals and venues including; Tanglewood, Lincoln Center, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Washington National Cathedral, the early music festivals of Boston, San Francisco, Vancouver, Houston, Tucson, Washington DC, and Madison, as well as the Regensburg Tage Alter Musik. Known especially for his Baroque interpretations, his voice has been described by the Boston Globe as "superb: his tone classy, clear, and refined, encompassing fluid lyricism and ringing force" and the Washington Post praised his "Polished, lovely tone." In the concert world, Aaron has made a name as a first rate interpreter of the oratorios and cantatas of Bach and Handel. The San Diego Classical Voice said, "Tenor Aaron Sheehan performed the role of Evangelist, and sang with assured vocal and linguistic fluency, tasked with telling the audience the story while imparting its drama. In this regard, he was superb." He has appeared in Concert with Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, American Bach Soloists, Handel and Haydn Society, Boston Baroque, North Carolina Symphony, New York Collegium, Charlotte Symphony, Boston Cecilia, Charleston Bach Festival, 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Baltimore Handel Choir, Les Voix Baroque, Pacific Chorale, Boston Early Music Festival, Tempesta di Mare, Aston Magna Festival, Bach Collegium San Diego, Washington National Cathedral, Pacific Music Works, Boston Museum Trio, Magnificat, Tragicomedia, the Folger Consort, and Concerto Palatino. On the opera stage, Aaron made his professional debut in 2005 as Ivan, in the Boston Early Music Festivals world premiere staging of Mattheson's Boris Gudenow, a role in which Opera News praised his voice as "Sinous and supple". He has since worked with the company in leading roles such as L'Amour and Apollon in Lully's Psyché, Actéon in Charpentier's Actéon, and as Acis in Handel's Acis and Galatea. He also has worked on the opera stage with American Opera Theater and Intermezzo Chamber Opera in leading roles of operas by Cavalli, Handel, Weill, and Satie. Aaron also continues to work extensively in the chamber music world. He has sung with Theater of Voices, Blue Heron Choir, Tenet, Fortune's Wheel, La Donna Musicale, Folger Consort, Newberry Consort, Dünya, The Rose Ensemble, and the Pro Arte Singers. Aaron has appeared on many recordings, including the Grammy® nominated operas Thésée and Psyché of Lully, recorded with BEMF on the CPO label. A native of Minnesota, Aaron holds a BA from Luther College and a MM in Early Voice Performance from Indiana University. He is currently on the voice faculties of Boston University, Wellesley College, and Towson University. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Aaron Sheehan 5 ! JESSE BLUMBERG - Baritone Jesse Blumberg returns to perform with Boston Baroque after his concerts with the orchestra in 2013, 2013 and 2015. He is equally at home on opera, concert, and recital stages, performing repertoire from the Renaissance and Baroque to the 20th and 21st centuries. His performances have included the world premiere of The Grapes of Wrath at Minnesota Opera, Niobe, Regina di Tebe with Boston Early Music Festival, Bernstein’s MASS at London’s Royal Festival Hall, and appearances with Atlanta Opera, Pittsburgh Opera, Utah Opera, and Boston Lyric Opera. Recital highlights include appearances with the Marilyn Horne Foundation and New York Festival of Song, and performances of Die schöne Müllerin and Winterreise with pianist Martin Katz. He has performed major works with American Bach Soloists, Los Angeles Master Chorale, Boston Baroque, Oratorio Society of New York, Apollo’s Fire, Charlotte Symphony, TENET/Green Mountain Project, and on Lincoln Center’s American Songbook series. 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios renowned composers as a member of the Mirror Visions Ensemble. Jesse has been featured on a dozen commercial recordings, including the 2014 Grammy-winning Charpentier Chamber Operas with Boston Early Music Festival. He has been recognized in several competitions, and was awarded Third Prize at the 2008 International Robert Schumann Competition in Zwickau, becoming its first American prizewinner in over thirty years. Jesse received a Master of Music degree from the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, and received undergraduate degrees in History and Music from the University of Michigan. Jesse is also the founder and artistic director of Five Boroughs Music Festival, which brings chamber music of many genres to every corner of New York City. His 2014-2015 season included a European concert tour with Boston Early Music Festival, a U.S. concert tour with Apollo’s Fire, and debuts with Atlanta Opera and Hawaii Opera Theatre. In 2013-2014 he debuted with Kentucky Opera and Opera Omnia, and returned to Minnesota Opera as Papageno in The Magic Flute. Jesse has given the world premieres of Ricky Ian Gordon’s Green Sneakers, Lisa Bielawa’s The Lay of the Love and Death, Conrad Cummings’ Positions 1956, and Tom Cipullo’s Excelsior. He also works closely with several other Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Jesse Blumberg 6 ! 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Frideric Handel: The Messiah Artist Bios 2016 - 2017 season Performances: Friday and Saturday, December 9 & 10, 2016 7 ! AMANDA FORSYTHE, soprano - Amanda Forsythe returns to perform with Boston Baroque following her performance in Agrippina in 2015. Amanda Forsythe sang the role of Euridice on the recording of Charpentier’s La descente d'Orphée aux enfers with Boston Early Music Festival which won the 2015 GRAMMY AWARD for Best Opera Recording. She has been praised by Opera News for her “light and luster," “wonderful agility and silvery top notes." She was a winner of the George London Foundation Awards and was sponsored by them in her New York recital début. She also received prizes from the Liederkranz Foundation and the Walter W. Naumburg Foundation. Amanda Forsythe’s operatic repertoire also includes Iris in Semele, Poppea in Agrippina, the title role in Partenope, Amenaide in Rossini’s Tancredi, Bastienne in Bastien und Bastienne, Serpina in La serva padrona, Ninfa/Proserpina in Orfeo (Monteverdi), Amore in Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria, Oberto in Alcina, Dafne in Apollo e Dafne, Atalanta in Xerxes and roles in Les Indes Galantes and The Fairy Queen. Amanda Forsythe created the role of Young Margarta/Nuria in Osvaldo Golijov’s Ainadamar, a role which she later repeated with the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Calgary Philharmonic. She also received high critical acclaim for her début as The Angel in the North American première of Peter Eötvös’ opera, Angels in America. She has also sung world premières by John Austin and Elena Ruher, and recorded songs by the composer Ken Sullivan. 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Ms. Forsythe’s concert engagements in North America have included her recent débuts at the Tanglewood Festival and Lincoln Center in the title role of Teseo with Philharmonia Baroque, and her début with Seattle Symphony in Handel’s Messiah. Other highlights have included Dorinda in Orlando and Handel’s Il trionfo del tempo with Early Music Vancouver, Dafne in Apollo e Dafne with Pacific Musicworks and Haydn and Mozart arias with Apollo’s Fire, Handel arias with Portland Baroque Orchestra, Mozart’s Mass in C Minor with the Handel and Haydn Society and Haydn’s Creation and Messiah with the Charlotte Symphony. Amanda Forsythe recently made her début at Seattle Opera as Iris in Semele which resulted in an immediate invitation to return to sing Pamina Die Zauberflöte in 2017. In the Autumn she returns to the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, as Amour in Gluck’s Orfeo under Sir John Eliot Gardiner, a role she then repeats in concerts with the Monteverdi Choir and Orchestra, before returning to the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia to sing the role of Marzelline in concert performances of Fidelio. She also recently sang Poppea Agrippina for Boston Baroque. She sang Poppea in L'incoronazione di Poppea, Giunone in Il Ritorno d'Ulisse and the Monteverdi's Vespers for the 2015 Boston Early Music Festival. On the concert platform, Amanda Forsythe recently made her début with the Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia in Rome in performances of Bach's Magnificat under Sir Antonio Pappano. In January 2016 she made her début with The Boston Symphony under Andris Nelsons in Mendelssohn’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, following a tour of Mozart Requiem and Mass in C minor with the Monteverdi Choir and Orchestra under Sir John Eliot Gardiner. Other forthcoming concert engagements include Messiah with Philharmonia Baroque and Kansas City Symphony, Bach Cantata 51 and Vivaldi's Gloria with Seattle Symphony, Handel and Vivaldi Concert arias and performances and a recording of Bach St John Passion with Apollo’s Fire. Amanda Forsythe’s recordings include the 2015 Grammywinning CD of Charpentier’s La déscente d'Orphée aux enfers, as well as Venus in Venus and Adonis, Aglaure Lully’s Psyché, and La Grande Pretresse in Lully’s Thésée with Boston Early Music Festival (all for CPO), Manto Steffani’s Niobe with BEMF (Erato), the title role in Handel’s Teseo with Philharmonia Baroque (PBO’s own label), Mozart’s Lucio Silla: In un istante Parto, m'affretto and Messiah with Apollo’s Fire (Avie), Minerve Dorinda Handel’s Orlando with Early Music Vancouver (ATMA) and Haydn’s Creation with Boston Baroque (Linn). She also sings on the DVD recordings of the Pesaro productions of L'equivoco stravagante and Guillaume Tell as well as Manto in the Royal Opera production of Steffani’s Niobe (Opus Arte). In Autumn 2015 her début solo recording of Handel arias with Apollo’s Fire was released on the Avie label. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Amanda Forsythe 8 ! ANN MCMAHON QUINTERO, mezzo-soprano - Praised for her “crème caramel tones,” Ann McMahon has been recognized as a “warm and ingratiating mezzo” in Albuquerque Journal. Her complex portrayal as Azuceno in Il Trovatore was described as “loving and sensitive, fierce and provocative, hypersensitive but generous” in Le Soir. In her 2014-15 season Ms. Quintero toured Poland as soloist in Messiah with Boston Baroque. She sang Ulrica in Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera with Austin Lyric Opera, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with Buffalo Philharmonic under JoAnn Falletta, and Verdi’s Requiem with the Defiant Requiem Foundation at New York’s Avery Fisher Hall. In summer of 2015 Ms. Quintero was soloist in Dvořàk’s Stabat Mater in a return to Berkshire Choral Festival and in the 2015-16 season she debuts with Musica Viva as Azucena in Il trovatore at Hong Kong City Hall. Her 2013-14 season included her debut with Virginia Opera as Mistress Quickly in Verdi’s Falstaff, soloist in Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 in a return to Boston Baroque, and in Verdi’s Requiem with the Defiant Requiem Foundation at Strathmore, under Murry Sidlin. In summer 2013 she was mezzo soloist in Britten’s Spring Symphony and Vivaldi’s Gloria with the Berkshire Choral Festival. In the 2012-13 season she made her debut with the Spoleto Festival USA as Suor Pazienza in Giordano’s Mese Mariano, sang Mary in Der fliegende Holländer in a return to Boston Lyric Opera, Amneris in Aida with Annapolis Opera and soloist in Messiah with Boston Baroque under Martin Pearlman. 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Recent highlights include Azucena in Il trovatore with Opéra Royal de Wallonie, Mistress Quickly in Falstaff with Opéra de Lausanne and the Old Lady in Candide with Portland Opera. At the Virginia Arts Festival Ms. Quintero was soloist in Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 as Mulier Samaritana under JoAnn Falleta, and she sang selections from Les Pêcheurs de perles, La Rondine, and Aida at the Berkshire Choral Festival. Other recent engagements include performances of Hippolyta in A Midsummer Night’s Dream with Boston Lyric Opera, singing as soloist in Verdi’s Requiem with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, Verdi’s Requiem with the Cathedral Choral Society at Washington National Cathedral, a return to Boston Baroque for Handel’s Messiah, to Washington National Opera as Auntie in Peter Grimes, and to Boston Baroque for Michael Haydn’s Requiem. She also sang as Mistress Quickly in excerpts of Falstaff at the National Endowment for the Arts Opera Honors Inaugural Awards Concert at the Kennedy Center. Her successes include her international operatic debut with New Israeli Opera as La Haine in Gluck’s Armide and a return to the company as Marquise Melibea in Il viaggio a Reims. She also sang Baba the Turk in The Rake’s Progress with Angers Nantes Opera and joined Teatro alla Scala for its production of Maazel’s 1984. Previously with Washington National Opera she sang Tisbe in La cenerentola and Third Lady in Die Zauberflöte. She joined Opera Theatre of Saint Louis as Olga Olsen in Street Scene and the company’s production of Hänsel und Gretel, Palm Beach Opera as Isabella in L’italiana in Algeri, and Toledo Opera as Gertrude in Roméo et Juliette. With Santa Fe Opera, she sang Glasa in Kátya Kabanová as well as Teresa in La sonnambula, in addition to scenes of Cornelia in Giulio Cesare and Leonora in La Favorita. An accomplished oratorio soloist, Ms. Quintero has appeared frequently with Boston Baroque where her performances have included the title role in Vivaldi’s Juditha Triumphans and soloist in Messiah. She has also sung Messiah with Charlotte and Alabama symphony orchestras and the National Philharmonic; Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with Columbus Symphony; Haydn’s Paukenmesse at Carnegie Hall; and a concert performance of Guillaume Tell with Opera Orchestra of New York. Ann McMahon Quintero graduated with honors and received her Bachelor of Music from Northwestern University, where her performances included Ravel's Shéhérazade and Bach's Magnificat and Mass in B Minor. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Ann McMahon Quintero 9 ! KEITH JAMESON, tenor Keith Jameson, a native of South Carolina, recently appeared at Lyric Opera of Chicago, as Basilio in a new production of Le nozze di Figaro. He also returned to The Dallas Opera and sang Yab the Elf in the world premier of Becoming Santa Claus by Mark Adamo, which will be released on DVD in 2016. He sang the title role of Candide with Opera di Firenze, Maggio Musicale Fiorentino (production by Francesco Micheli, conducted by John Axelrod), and with the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra (production by Garnett Bruce, conducted by Marin Alsop). Keith made his debut with Central City Opera in 2015 as Sancho Panza in Man of La Mancha. This past year he peformed Alméric in Tchaikovsky’s Iolanta (seen “Live from the Met Opera” in HD in movie theaters worldwide), and Remendado in Carmen at the Metropolitan Opera. Last season he sang Bardolfo in Falstaff at the Saito Kinen Festival in Matsumoto, Japan, conducted by Fabio Luisi, and he debuted with the Orquestra Sinfônica do Estado de São Paulo, Brasil, as Candide, conducted by Marin Alsop. Keith created the role of Henry Snibblesworth in the world premier of The Classical Style: An Opera (of sorts) by Steven Stucky and Jeremy Denk at the Ojai Music Festival in California and in Berkeley, Californa, and in December at Zankel Hall in New York City. He returned to the Los Angeles Opera for the Novice in Billy Budd, and returned to Lyric Opera of Chicago as Monsieur Taupe in Capriccio and made his debut with Seattle Opera as the Four Servants in Offenbach’s Les Contes d’Hoffmann. He sang Bardolfo in Robert Carsen’s new production of Falstaff at the Metropolitan Opera, conducted by James Levine and seen on “Live from The Met in 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios HD”movietheaters around the world. Keith also sang a workshop of a new one-man opera entitled Why Is Eartha Kitt Trying to Kill Me? by Jeffrey Dennis Smith and David Johnston at le Poisson Rouge in New York City, as part of the Opera America New Works Forum and presented by American Lyric Theatre. Keith has sung the Novice in Billy Budd at the Metropolitan Opera, and Osman in Handel’s Almira with NYC’s operamission in the North American premiere staging of the entire opera at the historic Gershwin Hotel. He performed Sancho Panza in Man of La Mancha with Greenwood Community Theatre in his hometown of Greenwood, South Carolina in June 2012. He sang Grandpa Joe in The Golden Ticket with Atlanta Opera, which was released on CD in 2012. During the 2011-2012 season, he was the tenor soloist in Haydn’s The Creation with Boston Baroque and as Nicolas in Britten’s Saint Nicolas with the Greenville Chorale in South Carolina and made his debut with Arizona Opera as Goro in Madama Butterfly. During 2010-2011, he was heard as the Simpleton in Boris Godunov with Dallas Opera, Sky Masterson in Guys and Dolls with the Greenwood Community Theatre and as Triquet in Eugene Onegin with Los Angeles Opera. In the summer of 2011, he debuted with the New York Philharmonic as the Mosquito and Schoolmaster in the critically acclaimed production of The Cunning Little Vixen. Keith is the composer of the children’s opera Petunia, based on the book by Roger Duvoisin. It was premiered by FBN Productions’ Opera for Kids! in Aiken, South Carolina, in January 2014, and toured across South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia, where it was seen by over 11,000 children and adults. Petunia was featured in FBN’s 2015 Tour. He is now completing a Christmas-themed “community” opera and another children’s opera, in addition to chamber works. His Uptown Market Fanfare and Serenade, written for the GreenWood Winds, Emerald Brass and timpani, will be premiered at the Grand Opening of the Uptown Market in Greenwood, SC, in April, 2016. Keith can be heard on the recordings of Haydn’s The Creation and Lord Nelson Mass, both with Boston Baroque, and also on the Opera America Songbook on a song by Conrad Cummings. Keith can also be seen on the DVD of Carmen (production by Richard Eyre, conducted by Yannick Nézet-Séguin) from the Metropolitan Opera and on the upcoming DVD of Falstaff (production by Robert Carsen, conducted by James Levine), also from the Metropolitan Opera. His upcoming engagements include his debut with Houston Grand Opera in Le nozze di Figaro and Rusalka and with Pittsburgh Opera in The Rake’s Progress. Keith also returns to Los Angeles Opera in Madama Butterfly. In addition to his upcoming opera performances, Keith will record his first solo CD featuring new song cycles by Conrad Cummings, Peter Ash, Glen Roven, and Sayo Kosugi. Keith lives in New York City Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Keith Jameson 10 ! ANDREW GARLAND, bass-baritone This season Andrew Garland returns to Seattle Opera as Harlekin in Ariadne auf Naxos. He has performed the role of Dandini with Opera Philadelphia and Fort Worth Opera, Mercurio (La Calisto) and the title role in Galileo Galilei (by Philip Glass) at Cincinnati Opera, Papageno at Boston Lyric Opera and Riolobo (Florencia en el Amazonas) and Schaunard (La Bohème) at Seattle Opera. Garland is widely recognized as a leader in recital work with dozens of performances around the country including Carnegie Hall with Warren Jones and programs of modern American songs all over the Unites States and in Canada. Mr. Jones, Marilyn Horne, Steven Blier and a number of American composers and major music publications all endorse him as a highly communicative singer leading the way for the song recital into the 21st Century. He brings his style to the concert stage with orchestras including the Atlanta Symphony, Boston Baroque, Albany Symphony, Boston Youth Symphony, National Philharmonic, Washington Master Chorale at the Kennedy Center and DCINY Orchestra at Lincoln Center. He is a regular with the New York Festival of Song (NYFOS) and has given multiple recitals at Carnegie Hall, the Ravinia Festival as well as Vocal Arts DC, Marilyn Horne Foundation, The Bard Festival, Andre-Turp Society in Montreal, Voce at Pace, Huntsville Chamber Music Guild, Fort Worth Opera, Seattle 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Opera, Fanfare in Hammond, LA, Cincinnati Matinee Musicale, Tuesday Morning Music Club and dozens of college music series around the country. In 2014 he was the featured recitalist for the NATS National convention where that organization’s president declared him “the next Thomas Hampson.” His latest solo CD American Portraits (with Donna Loewy, piano) went to #1 on Amazon classical. Garland also has four other recordings on the Telarc, Naxos, GPR and Azica Labels. In past seasons Garland has portrayed Rossini’s Figaro with Dayton Opera, Knoxville Opera and Cincinnati Opera (cover), Schaunard at Boston Lyric Opera, Opera Saratoga, Atlanta Opera and Dayton Opera; Ping (Turandot) at Arizona Opera, Silvio (I Pagliacci) with Hawaii Opera Theater, Don Giovanni at Opera New Jersey, Mozart’s Count at Dayton Opera, Guglielmo at Opera Saratoga, Mercutio at Lyric Opera of San Antonio and Annapolis Opera, Giuseppe (The Gondoliers) with Utah Opera and Danilo with Sarasota Artist Concert Series. Other concert performances include Handel’s Messiah with Boston Baroque, UMS (Ann Arbor, MI), Dartmouth Handel Society (Helmuth Rilling, conductor) and the Colorado Bach Ensemble. He has also performed Carmina Burana, Ein Deutches Requiem, Five Mystical Songs, Faure Requiem, Durufle Requiem and a number of new and world premiere works for orchestra. Particularly suited for Baroque repertoire, Garland has sung numerous performances with Boston Baroque and the Colorado Bach Ensemble, sang in Cincinnati Opera’s first Baroque production (La Calisto). He has also soloed with Emmanuel Music in Boston. Garland is the winner of the Lavinia Jensen, NATSAA, Washington International, American Traditions, NATS and Opera Columbus Competition and was a prize winner in the Montreal International, Jose Iturbi, Gerda Lissner, McCammon and Palm Beach International Competitions. He was an apprentice at the San Francisco Opera Center and the Seattle Opera and Cincinnati Opera Young Artists programs. He has studied at the Steans Institute and is a graduate of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst and the Cincinnati CollegeConservatory of Music. His teachers and coaches have included Paulina Stark, Jon Humphrey, Oren Brown, William McGraw, Penelope Bitzas, Elizabeth Mannion, Martin Katz, Margo Garrett, Steven Blier, Donna Loewy, Kenneth Griffiths and Terry Lusk. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Andrew Garland 11 ! 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Franz von Bieber: Mystery Sonatas 2015 - 2016 season Performance: Friday, March 10, 2017 12 ! CHRISTINA DAY MARTINSON, concertmaster, Boston Baroque 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios in 2009, recorded this masterwork with Boston Baroque for Telarc Records. Born in Saskatchewan, Canada, baroque violinist Christina Day Martinson has twice been a National Finalist and prize-winner in the Canadian Music Competition. She has performed solo concertos with Boston Baroque, Tempesta di Mare, the UNICAMP Symphony Orchestra in Brazil, the NEC Bach Ensemble and the Symphony Orkest Mozart in Amsterdam. She is also the recipient of the Netherland-America Foundation Grant and Frank Huntington Beebe Award. Ms. Martinson serves as the concertmaster for Boston Baroque, is a tenured member of the Handel and Haydn Society and recently served as concertmaster under Sir Roger Norrington. She was principal second violin of Philadelphia's baroque orchestra Tempeste di Mare from 2003 - 2006 and she is also a member of the award-winning chamber ensemble Musicians of the Old Post Road. Ms. Martinson has been featured twice on WGBH radio's Classics in the Morning with Cathy Fuller, performing Heinrich Biber's Mystery Sonatas with harpsichordist Martin Pearlman. She has given chamber music recitals in Jordan Hall as well as a nationally televised chamber concert in Japan's Ishihara Hall in June 2006. In March 2008, Ms. Martinson performed all of J.S. Bach's Brandenburg Concertos with Joshua Rifkin's Bach Ensemble at the Turingen Bachwonen Festival in Germany. She also performed Vivaldi's Four Seasons with Boston Baroque and Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Christina Day Martinson 13 ! 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios OPERA! Frideric Handel: Giuio Cesare Friday April 21 and Sunday April 23, 2017 14 ! SUSANNA PHILLIPS, soprano - Alabama-born soprano Susanna Phillips, recipient of The Metropolitan Opera’s 2010 Beverly Sills Artist Award, continues to establish herself as one of today’s most sought-after singing actors and recitalists. The 2015-16 season will see Phillips return to the Metropolitan Opera for an eighth consecutive season starring as Roselinda in the Jeremy Sams production of Die Fledermaus conducted for the first time by music director James Levine, as well as a return of her acclaimed Musetta in Puccini’s La Bohème. Phillips will also return to the stage of Lyric Opera of Chicago as Juliet in Gounod’s Romeo and Juliet under the baton of Emmanuel Villaume. A return to Boston Lyric Opera will mark Phillips’ debut in the role of Hanna in a new production of Lehár’s The Merry Widow. 2015-16 orchestra engagements include a return to the San Francisco Symphony with Michael Tilson Thomas conducting Barber’s Knoxville: Summer of 1915, Beethoven’s Missa Solemnis with David Robertson and the Sydney Symphony and Mahler’s Das klagende Lied with Jaap van Zweden and the Dallas Symphony Orchestra. Phillips will also return to the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra for Vivier’s Lonely Child and Mahler's Symphony No. 4 with David Robertson, as well as the Oratorio Society of New York for Filas’ Requiem with music director Kent Tritle. Last season saw Phillips return to the Metropolitan Opera starring as Antonia in Bartlett Sher’s production of Les Contes D’Hoffmann under the baton of James Levine, as well as a reprise of her house debut role of Musetta in La Bohème. 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Additional engagements included her debut at Oper Frankfurt as Donna Anna in Don Giovanni, Arminda in Mozart’s La Finta Giradiniera at Santa Fe Opera conducted by Harry Bicket, Countess in Le Nozze di Figaro with Paul McCreesh and the Gulbenkian Orchestra in Lisbon and the title role in Handel’s Agrippina with Boston Baroque under Martin Pearlman. Phillips’ 2014-15 orchestral engagements were highlighted by a performance of Fauré’s Requiem with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra with Jaap van Zweden and a return to the San Francisco Symphony for Mahler’s Fourth Symphony with Michael Tilson Thomas. Additional performances included Strauss’ Four Last Songs at the opening night gala of the Louisiana Philharmonic’s season and with the Mexico National Symphony Orchestra, a solo concert with Music of the Baroque conducted by Jane Glover, Haydn’s Die Schöpfung with Oratorio Society of New York, and Mendelssohn’s arrangement of Bach’s Matthäus-Passion with the Mendelssohn Club of Philadelphia. Highlights of Phillips’ previous seasons include numerous additional Metropolitan Opera appearances as Fiordiligi in Così fan tutte in what The New York Times called a “breakthrough night,” Rosalinde in Die Fledermaus, Donna Anna in Don Giovanni, Pamina in Julie Taymor’s production of The Magic Flute, Musetta in La Bohème (both in New York and on tour in Japan) and as a featured artist in the Met’s Summer Recital Series in both Central Park and Brooklyn Bridge Park. She also appeared at Carnegie Hall for a special concert performance as Stella in Previn’s A Streetcar Named Desire opposite Reneé Fleming – a role she went on to perform, to rave reviews, at Lyric Opera of Chicago and as Ellen Orford in Peter Grimes with the St. Louis Symphony. She made her Santa Fe Opera debut as Pamina, and subsequently performed a trio of other Mozart roles with the company as Fiordiligi in Così fan tutte, Countess Almaviva in le Nozze di Figaro, and Donna Elvira in Don Giovanni. As a member of the Ryan Opera Center, Phillps sang the female leads in Roméo et Juliette and Die Fledermaus. Additional roles include Elmira in Reinhard Keiser’s The Fortunes of King Croesus, Euridice in Orfeo ed Euridice and the title role in Lucia di Lammermoor, Countess in le Nozze di Figaro and Donna Anna, as well as appearances with the Dallas Opera, Minnesota Opera, Fort Worth Opera Festival, Boston Lyric Opera and Opera Birmingham. Highly in demand by the world’s most prestigious orchestras, Phillips has appeared with the Royal Stockholm Philharmonic under Alan Gilbert, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, San Francisco Orchestra, Philadelphia Orchestra, Oratorio Society of New York, Santa Fe Symphony, Santa Barbara Symphony, St. Louis Symphony, Orchestra of St. Luke’s, and Santa Fe Concert Association. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Susanna Phillips 15 ! LAWRENCE ZAZZO, countertenor The American countertenor Lawrence Zazzo is one of the most outstanding singers of his generation. He makes his debut this season with Boston Baroque. A native of Philadelphia and a graduate in both English and Music from Yale University and King’s College, Cambridge, Lawrence made his operatic debut as Oberon in A Midsummer Night’s Dream to great acclaim while completing his vocal studies at the Royal College of Music, London. He has since appeared in many of the world’s finest opera houses and concert halls. His opera roles include the title role in Giulio Cesare (Metropolitan Opera New York, Paris, London, Brussels, Seville, Bilbao), the title role in Gluck’s Orfeo (Vienna, Toronto, Oslo, Netherlands), Oberon in A Midsummer Night’s Dream (Rome, Lyon, Aix-en-Provence, Toronto), Farnace in Mitridate (Munich), the title role in Radamisto (English National Opera), Arsamene in Serse (Theatre des Champs-Elysees, English National Opera), Goffredo in Rinaldo (Berlin Staatsoper, Zurich, Opéra de Montpellier), Ottone in Agrippina (Brussels, Frankfurt, Theatre des Champs- Elysees), Endimione in La Calisto (Munich, Brussels, Paris), Ottone in L’incoronazione di Poppea (Vienna, Berlin, Brussels, Munich), Ruggiero in Orlando Furioso (Frankfurt), and the title roles in Handel’s Sosarme (Sao Carlos, Lisbon) and Alessandro (Karlsruhe). Lawrence is also a keen advocate of 20th century and contemporary music. He recently sang the premiere performance of Rolf Riehm's Sirenengesang at the Frankfurt 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Opera, and created the role of Trinculo in Thomas Ades’ The Tempest at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden. His Paris Opera debut was as Kreon in Liebermann’s Medea. He has also sung Sciarrino’s Luci mie traditrici in Brussels, New York and Rouen, and is closely associated with the role of Mascha in Peter Eötvos’ Three Sisters which he has performed in several productions in Lyon, Brussels, Edinburgh, Vienna and the Netherlands. He made his BBC Symphony Orchestra debut in their commission of Jonathan Dove’s Hojoki and sang the Refugee in Jonathan Dove’s Flight for the Glyndebourne Festival. He made his Wigmore recital debut with a programme of 20th-century American songs, and recently also premiered there a commissioned song cycle of Shakespeare fool songs by composer Iain Bell. Lawrence has worked with many distinguished conductors in the fields of Baroque and contemporary music, including René Jacobs, William Christie, Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Rinaldo Alessandrini, Christophe Rousset, John Nelson, Ivor Bolton, James Conlon, Alan Curtis, Hervé Niquet, Harry Bicket, Joshua Rifkin, Christopher Hogwood, Peter Eötvos, Jean-Claude Malgoire, Trevor Pinnock, Jordi Savall, Harry Christophers and Paul Goodwin. He was the first western countertenor invited to China to sing Messiah at the Shanghai Opera. His international concert career highlights include: the title roles of Handel’s Lotario and Riccardo Primo with the Kammerorchester Basel in a European tour and recording with Paul Goodwin, Messiah with Rene Jacobs and the Freiburger Barockorchester and in Notre Dame Cathedral with John Nelson and L’ensemble orchestrale de Paris, Bach Lutheran Masses under Joshua Rifkin in Leipzig, the St. Matthew Passion in Ambronay and Köthen with the Akademie für Alte Musik, the title role in Handel’s Amadigi with Christopher Hogwood and the AAM in London and Birmingham, the title role in Mozart’s Ascanio in Alba with the Berliner Symphoniker, Vivaldi’s Nisi Dominus and Gloria with the Israel Camerata, the B Minor Mass with Ivor Bolton in Salzburg, Jephtha in Graz with Nikolaus Harnoncourt, Theodora in Paris and Vienna with Hervé Niquet and Le concert spirituel and Saul in Berlin and Lisbon with René Jacobs and Concerto Köln. An accomplished recitalist, he has given many concerts around Europe, most recently at the Wigmore Hall, the Norwegian Opera, the Festival d’Opera Baroque de Beaune, the Rheinvokal Festival, the MA Festival Bruges and the Vienna Konzerthaus. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Lawrence Zazzo 16 ! JOHN HOLIDAY - Countertenor John Holiday, recent nominee for “Newcomer of the Year,” by the German magazine Opernwelt and a third prize winner at Plácido Domingo’s 2014 Operalia Competition, has established himself as a singer to watch in the opera world. Singing the role of Cesare in the U.S. Premiere of Catone in Utica by Antonio Vivaldi during the 2015 Glimmerglass Festival, Holiday was greeted with standing ovations and outstanding critical praise. “. . . there is a major reason to see this production: the superb young countertenor John Holiday, in the role of Caesar, who displayed an arrestingly powerful, secure, and dramatically high instrument. I had that jolt of excitement once before: exactly 20 years ago, at Glimmerglass, when David Daniels sang the title role in “Tamerlano” and made operatic countertenors something to be reckoned with,” stated Heidi Waleson, of The Wall Street Journal. This fall, Holiday reprised his role as Caesar in Catone in Utica with Opera Lafayette with performances in Washington, D.C. and New York City, also to critical acclaim – “Holiday has it all going. His voice is powerful and agile and has an immense range, with seamless registers top to bottom,” stated The Washington Post. Also during the 2015-2016 season, Holiday will sing a program with Ars Lyrica in Houston, and The Holiday Experience: One Night Only at the Glimmerglass Festival 2016. Holiday will reprise the role of First Male Voice in Huang Ruo's Paradise Interrupted for The Lincoln Center Festival 2016. 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Holiday debuted with the Spoleto Festival USA 2015 in the world premiere of Paradise Interrupted, composed by Huang Ruo with visual design and direction by Jennifer Wen Ma. Holiday also substituted in the role of Zaida in Veremonda, l’amazzone di Aragona by Francesco Cavalli during its U.S. Premiere run at the USA Spoleto Festival. Due to last minute cast needs, he learned the role in only one day. Holiday also debuted in 2014 at the Los Angeles Opera in Barrie Kosky’s acclaimed production of Purcell's Dido and Aeneas as the Sorceress and appeared with the Wolf Trap Opera in June 2014 as Caesar in Handel’s Giulo Cesare. During the 2013-2014 season, he was also seen in the title roles of Radamisto at the Juilliard School with the Juilliard Orchestra in Giya Kancheli’s And Farewell Goes Out Sighing . . . under Anne Manson, and as Sposo in Scarlatti’s La Sposa dei Cantici with Ars Lyrica in Houston. Holiday made his Carnegie Hall debut as a soloist with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra in 2012 in Bernstein’s Chichester Psalms. John also joined the roster of the Metropolitan Opera to cover Nireno in Giulio Cesare under Harry Bicket in David McVicar’s new production and reprised his roles in Philip Glass’s Galileo Galilei at the Cincinnati Opera, having first performed the work at the Portland Opera for his operatic stage debut. He was an apprentice artist at Santa Fe Opera where he covered the role of Corrado in Peter Sellars’s production of Vivaldi’s Griselda and was seen as the Refugee in Jonathan Dove’s Flight for the Apprentice Scenes Program. John’s recital schedule includes engagements in Saint Paul, Minnesota with the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, the Cincinnati Chamber Orchestra, the Chorus of Westerly in Rhode Island, the Nashville Symphony and programs with Ars Lyrica and Mercury Baroque in Houston, Texas. Major competitions and award programs have recognized John’s accomplishments. He is a 2014 recipient of the Catherine Filene Shouse Career Development Grant from the Wolf Trap Foundation for the Performing Arts and is also a recipient of the Richard F. Gold Career Grant from the Shoshana Foundation and first prize from the Richard Tucker Foundation Sara Tucker award. He was awarded first place at both the Gerda Lissner International Vocal Competition for 2013 and the Sullivan Foundation for 2012. John also received a first place win at the Dallas Opera Guild Vocal Competition. In 2007, he was the first place winner in his district of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. In addition to his classical repertoire, Mr. Holiday excels in jazz and gospel music having opened for Grammy award winner Jason Mraz in concert. Mr. Holiday recently released his debut jazz album entitled The Holiday Guide. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 John Holiday 17 ! ANN MCMAHON QUINTERO, mezzo-soprano - Praised for her “crème caramel tones,” Ann McMahon has been recognized as a “warm and ingratiating mezzo” in Albuquerque Journal. Her complex portrayal as Azuceno in Il Trovatore was described as “loving and sensitive, fierce and provocative, hypersensitive but generous” in Le Soir. In her 2014-15 season Ms. Quintero toured Poland as soloist in Messiah with Boston Baroque. She sang Ulrica in Verdi’s Un ballo in maschera with Austin Lyric Opera, Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with Buffalo Philharmonic under JoAnn Falletta, and Verdi’s Requiem with the Defiant Requiem Foundation at New York’s Avery Fisher Hall. In summer of 2015 Ms. Quintero was soloist in Dvořàk’s Stabat Mater in a return to Berkshire Choral Festival and in the 2015-16 season she debuts with Musica Viva as Azucena in Il trovatore at Hong Kong City Hall. Her 2013-14 season included her debut with Virginia Opera as Mistress Quickly in Verdi’s Falstaff, soloist in Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 in a return to Boston Baroque, and in Verdi’s Requiem with the Defiant Requiem Foundation at Strathmore, under Murry Sidlin. In summer 2013 she was mezzo soloist in Britten’s Spring Symphony and Vivaldi’s Gloria with the Berkshire Choral Festival. In the 2012-13 season she made her debut with the Spoleto Festival USA as Suor Pazienza in Giordano’s Mese Mariano, sang Mary in Der fliegende Holländer in a return to Boston Lyric Opera, Amneris in Aida with Annapolis Opera and soloist in Messiah with Boston Baroque under Martin Pearlman. 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios Recent highlights include Azucena in Il trovatore with Opéra Royal de Wallonie, Mistress Quickly in Falstaff with Opéra de Lausanne and the Old Lady in Candide with Portland Opera. At the Virginia Arts Festival Ms. Quintero was soloist in Mahler’s Symphony No. 8 as Mulier Samaritana under JoAnn Falleta, and she sang selections from Les Pêcheurs de perles, La Rondine, and Aida at the Berkshire Choral Festival. Other recent engagements include performances of Hippolyta in A Midsummer Night’s Dream with Boston Lyric Opera, singing as soloist in Verdi’s Requiem with the Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra, Verdi’s Requiem with the Cathedral Choral Society at Washington National Cathedral, a return to Boston Baroque for Handel’s Messiah, to Washington National Opera as Auntie in Peter Grimes, and to Boston Baroque for Michael Haydn’s Requiem. She also sang as Mistress Quickly in excerpts of Falstaff at the National Endowment for the Arts Opera Honors Inaugural Awards Concert at the Kennedy Center. Her successes include her international operatic debut with New Israeli Opera as La Haine in Gluck’s Armide and a return to the company as Marquise Melibea in Il viaggio a Reims. She also sang Baba the Turk in The Rake’s Progress with Angers Nantes Opera and joined Teatro alla Scala for its production of Maazel’s 1984. Previously with Washington National Opera she sang Tisbe in La cenerentola and Third Lady in Die Zauberflöte. She joined Opera Theatre of Saint Louis as Olga Olsen in Street Scene and the company’s production of Hänsel und Gretel, Palm Beach Opera as Isabella in L’italiana in Algeri, and Toledo Opera as Gertrude in Roméo et Juliette. With Santa Fe Opera, she sang Glasa in Kátya Kabanová as well as Teresa in La sonnambula, in addition to scenes of Cornelia in Giulio Cesare and Leonora in La Favorita. An accomplished oratorio soloist, Ms. Quintero has appeared frequently with Boston Baroque where her performances have included the title role in Vivaldi’s Juditha Triumphans and soloist in Messiah. She has also sung Messiah with Charlotte and Alabama symphony orchestras and the National Philharmonic; Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9 with Columbus Symphony; Haydn’s Paukenmesse at Carnegie Hall; and a concert performance of Guillaume Tell with Opera Orchestra of New York. Ann McMahon Quintero graduated with honors and received her Bachelor of Music from Northwestern University, where her performances included Ravel's Shéhérazade and Bach's Magnificat and Mass in B Minor. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Ann McMahon Quintero 18 ! JENNIFER RIVERA, soprano - Grammy® nominated artist Jennifer Rivera consistently earns praise for delivering exceptional vocalism, superb musicianship, and a powerful stage presence. She returns for a performance with Boston Baroque after her stunning performance in Il ritorno d'Ulisse in Patria in 2014. Her performance of the title role in Handel's Faramondo with Brisbane Baroque in Australia recently earned her The Helpmann Award for best leading female performer in an opera. Her European debut as Sesto in La clemenza di Tito with the Teatro Regio di Torino directed by Graham Vick and conducted by Roberto Abaddo was followed by her debut with the Berlin Staatsoper as Rosina in Il barbiere di Siviglia, as well as Nerone in a new production of Agrippina conducted by Rene Jacobs. She was then invited to sing Licida in L’Olimpiade by Pergolesi at the Innsbruck Early Music Festival and returned to the Berlin Staatsoper as Rosina, and as Ismene in a new production of Antigone by Traetta conducted by Maestro Jacobs. Recent seasons have found Ms. Rivera singing Faramondo with Brisbane Baroque, Sister Helen in Dead Man Walking with Opera Parallele, Orlofsky in Die Fledermaus with Portland Opera, as well as singing with the Milwaukee Symphony, for Schubert’s Mass No. 6 under Hans Graf; Gotham Chamber Opera, for Baden-Baden 1927; Opera Omaha as Nerone in Agrippina; Boston Baroque, as Penelope in Monteverdi’s Il ritorno d’Ulisse in patria; and Central City Opera, to debut the role of Sister Helen Prejean in a new production of Dead Man Walking. Current and future seasons include a return to include a return to Music of the Baroque for Bach Cantatas, a debut 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios with Dallas Opera in the Mark Adamo world premiere Becoming Santa Claus, and Sister Helen in Dead Man Walking with New Orleans Opera. Ms. Rivera will also present a solo recital at Bargemusic to introduce the release of her first solo recording Innocence / Experience released by Roven Records and distributed by Naxos. Ms. Rivera returned to Innsbruck for the title role in La Stellidaura Vendicante during summer of the 2012. The ensuing 2012-2013 season included a return to the Berlin Staatsoper and an appearance at the Salle Pleyel in Paris for Agrippina, Mrs. Williamson in The Difficulty of Crossing a Field with Nashville Opera, and a debut with Central City Opera as Rosina in a new production. 2011 saw the release of two recordings for the mezzo: Nerone in Agrippina for Harmonia Mundi (Grammy® Nomination 2013) and Licida in L’Olimpiade for Sony Music. The 2011-12 season found her engaged as Cherubino with Opera Royal de Wallonie, as Stéphano in Roméo et Juliette for Palm Beach Opera, and with the Columbus Symphony Orchestra. While still a student at Juilliard, Ms. Rivera was invited to join the roster of the New York City Opera, and after winning their prestigious Debut Artist of Year award, went on to sing over 70 performances with the company including Cherubino, Rosina, Lazuli in L’Etoile, Hansel in Hansel and Gretel, and Nerone in Agrippina. Praised repeatedly by the New York Times for her “radiant mezzo soprano” (Elmer Gantry), her “warm dark tone” (Barbiere), and “fresh ready singing”, (Hansel) her voice has also been described by the Times as being “dark, musical, and very agile”(Cenerentola) and possessing “richness, ease, and exactness” (L’Etoile). Previous season’s engagements for Ms. Rivera include Rosina with Opera Pacific, Angelina in La cenerentola with Florida Grand Opera, and Ines in Donizetti’s Maria Padilla with Washington Concert Opera. She also appeared at Avery Fisher Hall with the American Symphony Orchestra singing Varese’s Offrandes and with the Polish National Opera as Orsini in Lucrezia Borgia conducted by Will Crutchfield. Other engagements for the mezzo have included her debut with New Orleans Opera as Stephano in Roméo et Juliette and her return to Portland Opera for Rosina. A favorite among living composers, Ms. Rivera created the starring role of Sharon Falconer in the critically acclaimed World Premiere of Robert Aldridge’s Elmer Gantry, which premiered at Nashville Opera in 2007. Additionally, Ms. Rivera has performed in four productions of Mark Adamo’s very successful opera Little Women (in New York, Tokyo, Cleveland, and Dayton), as well as his newest work Lysistrata. The summer of 2010 found her in the World Premiere of Peter Ash’sThe Golden Ticket as Veruca Salt at Opera Theater of Saint Louis. Boston Baroque 2016-2017 Jennifer Rivera 19 ! MARY BIRNBAUM, director Nominated for Best Newcomer of 2015 at the International Opera Awards in London, Mary Birnbaum has been singled out as a young stage director to watch. Passionate about using live performance as a tool to create community as well as full-throttle acting, Birnbaum has directed opera and theater in New York, regionally and internationally. Her recent production of The Rape of Lucretia at Juilliard garnered a rave from Anthony Tommasini at The New York Times who called it “viscerally overwhelming”. Other New York credits include the premiere of Jeremy Denk and Steven Stucky’s The Classical Style at Carnegie Hall in December 2014, and a 9-singer chamber version of Eugene Onegin, also for the Juilliard School, co-led by conductor Matt Aucoin. Regionally and internationally, her work has taken her to Santa Fe, Seattle, Costa Rica, Tel Aviv, Houston, TX, Ojai and Berkeley, CA. Her production of Hänsel und Gretel in Houston was #2 on a list of ‘Best Operas in 2014’, following only the Ring Cycle at HGO. 2015 - 2016 Season Artist Bios as over 40 actors performed scenes all over the park. She has also worked with playwrights to develop new work, most notably in the Soho Rep Writers/Directors Lab and at Ars Nova. Most recently, she co-wrote a feminist pop-concert called Baby No More Times with Melissa Lusk and Caroline V. McGraw. Teaching and coaching is another important part of Ms. Birnbaum’s career. She was invited to teach acting at Juilliard at age 26 and now holds the position of Associate Director of the Artist Diploma Program. In addition, she has worked with singers from the Lindemann program in acting class and scenes programs. Ms. Birnbaum holds an AB in English Language and Literature with a minor in French from Harvard College and a certificate in movement and design from Ecole Jacques Lecoq in Paris. Upcoming gigs include The Magic Flute in Juilliard's Peter Jay Sharpe Theater, Il barbiere di Siviglia at Rice University, Otello at the Taipei Philharmonic, and La Traviata at Opera Columbus. Ms. Birnbaum has produced and developed new plays and theatrical events in New York. From 2009-2012, Birnbaum founded/ran a theater company, Art Party, which produced story-specific events that engaged the audience in creative ways. STARBOX, a performance installation in Bryant Park, involved the audience lining up for a face-to-face meeting with a star. However the real play happened while the audience waited, 20