Music
Verdi and/or Wagner by Peter Conrad & Great Wagner Conductors by Jonathan Brown
Women of Note: The rise of Australian women composers by Rosalind Appleby
Out of Time: The Vexed Life of Georg Tintner by Tanya Buchdahl Tintner
My husband is proud to claim that in the 1950s, when they were both employed at Covent Garden, he was paid a larger salary than Joan Sutherland was. Fresh from Sydney, she had joined the company in 1952, and was soon appearing in small roles, including Clotilde, opposite Maria Callas’s Norma. This was followed by several years of steady progress and major roles (Agathe, Antonia, Micaela), but no great public success. My husband watched Joan’s progress from the beginning of her time and realised, as did others, that here was a great singer in the making. Then, in February 1959, Sutherland, directed by Franco Zeffirelli, made her triumphant début as Lucia di Lammermoor, and everything changed dramatically, including her fees.
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