Giorgio Tozzi
Giorgio Tozzi (born January 8, 1923, in Chicago, Illinois) was for many years a leading bass with the Metropolitan Opera, and was seen in leading roles in nearly every major opera house worldwide. Tozzi studied at DePaul University with Rosa Raisa, Giacomo Rimini and John Daggett Howell (although he originally intended to study Biology). He made his professional debut in 1948 the Broadway production of Britten's Rape of Lucretia as Tarquinius. His signature roles included Mozart's Figaro, Phillip II, Hans Sachs, Pogner, and Gounod's Mephistopheles, among others. In 1958 he created the role of The Doctor in Samuel Barber's Vanessa.
In 1960 he was honored with a Grammy award for best opera recording for The Marriage of Figaro with Erich Leinsdorf.
Outside of opera, for many years Tozzi played the role of Emile de Becque in various revivals and road tours of South Pacific. He was also the voice of De Becque in the 1958 film version. In 1980 Tozzi earned a Tony award nomination for best leading actor in a musical for his work as Tony in The Most Happy Fella. He also published a novel in 1992, The Golem of the Golden West.
He is currently a distinguished professor of voice at the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music.
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En contra de lo que muchos pueden imaginar Giorgio Tozzi no es italiano
sino estadounidense ( Chicago, Illinois ), de voz amplia, de timbre acerado que lo acerca a la cuerda de Bajo-barítono, con capacidad para encarnar papeles más allá del repertorio italiano. Recuérdese su Daland junto a G. London y el Orestes junto a I. Borkh y D. Mitropoulos ( interpretación esta realmente sorprendente porque su voz empequeñece a otros grandes cantantes que encarnaron el rol: T. Adam, T. Krause, etc ).