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Natalie Dessay

CareerIn her youth, Dessay had intended to be a ballet dancer, and then an actress.
She discovered her talent for singing while taking acting classes, and shifted her artistic focus to music.
Dessay was encouraged to study voice at the Conservatoire de Bordeaux and gained experience as a chorister in Toulouse.
At the competition Les Voix Nouvelles, run by France Télécom, she was awarded First Prize (Premier Prix de Concours) followed by a year's study at Paris Opera's Ecole d'Art Lyrique, where she sang "Elisa" in Mozart's Il re pastore.
Also, she entered the International Mozart Competition at Vienna State Opera, winning First Prize.She was quickly approached by a number of theatres, and subsequently sang "Blondchen", "Madame Herz" (in Der Schauspieldirektor), "Zerbinetta" and "Zaïde" at the Opéra National de Lyon and the Opéra Bastille, as well as "Adele" in Die Fledermaus in Geneva.In April and May 1992 at the Opéra Bastille, she sang the role of "Olympia" in The Tales of Hoffmann with José van Dam.
The Roman Polanski production was not well received, but it began the road to stardom for Dessay.
Although she was soon featured in another production of Hoffmann, it would be over ten years before her return to the Paris Opera in the same role.
Soon after her Hoffmann run, Dessay joined the Vienna State Opera as Blondchen in Mozart's Die Entführung aus dem Serail.
In December 1993, she was asked to replace Cheryl Studer in one of the three female roles in a production of Hoffmann at the Vienna State Opera.
Her "Olympia" received acclaim from the Viennese audiences and praise from Plácido Domingo.She attended a performance where Barbara Bonney had sung Sophie in Richard Strauss' Der Rosenkavalier under Carlos Kleiber.
Dessay was cast in the same role with another conductor.
Her hope was to work with Kleiber, but he died before any project came to fruition.
Blondchen in Die Entführung and Zerbinetta in Ariadne auf Naxos became her best-known and most often played roles.In October 1994, Dessay made her Metropolitan Opera debut in New York in the role of Fiakermilli in Strauss's Arabella, and returned there in September 1997 as Zerbinetta and in February 1998 as Olympia.The Vienna State Opera approached Dessay with two operas: Richard Strauss's Die schweigsame Frau, and Alban Berg's Lulu.
Dessay declined the latter, saying the score was too difficult for her.
She admitted that Die schweigsame Frau was already painful to learn.At the Aix-en-Provence Festival, Dessay first performed the role of the Queen of the Night in Mozart's The Magic Flute.
Although she was hesitant to perform the role, saying that she didn't want to play any evil characters, director Robert Carsen convinced her that this Queen would be different, almost a sister to Pamina; Dessay agreed to do the role.During the 2001–2002 season in Vienna, she began to experience vocal difficulties and had to be replaced in almost all of the performances of La sonnambula.
Subsequently, she was forced to cancel several other performances, including the French version of Lucia di Lammermoor in Lyon and a Zerbinetta at the Royal Opera House in London.
She withdrew from the stage and underwent surgery on one of her vocal cords in July 2002.
In February 2003, she returned to live performances in a Paris concert.
Later, she cancelled and had further surgery, but by mid-2005 she was back on stage.In the summer of 2003, Dessay gave her first US recital in Santa Fe.
She was so attracted to New Mexico in general, and to Santa Fe in particular, that the Santa Fe Opera quickly rearranged its schedule to feature her in a new production of La sonnambula during the 2004 season.
She returned to Santa Fe in the 2006 season as Pamina in The Magic Flute and gave her first performance in the role of Violetta in La traviata there on 3 July 2009 in a production staged by Laurent Pelly.
Her husband, Laurent Naouri, appeared as her lover's father, Giorgio Germont.Dessay's 2006/2007 season schedule included Lucia di Lammermoor and La sonnambula in Paris, La fille du régiment directed by Laurent Pelly in London and Vienna, and a Manon in Barcelona.
She appeared in two new productions during the 2007–08 season at the Met: as Lucia on opening night, and in a reprise of the London production of La fille du régiment.
In January 2009 she sang the part of Mélisande in a much acclaimed production of Pelléas et Mélisande by Claude Debussy at the Theater an der Wien, Vienna's second world-class opera house, alongside Laurent Naouri.
On 2 March 2009, Dessay sang the title role in La sonnambula at the New York Metropolitan Opera.
It was the first new production of the opera at the Met since Joan Sutherland sang the title role in 1963.In February 2012, Dessay said in an interview with Le Figaro that she would take a sabbatical from opera performance in 2015.2013 saw the release of Becoming Traviata, a film about Dessay's role as Violetta in a production of La traviata, directed by Jean-François Sivadier, with musical direction by Louis Langrée.
The documentary chronicles the development of the production of Verdi's opera for the Aix-en-Provence Festival in France and subsequently staged for her at the Vienna State Opera.In an interview published in Le Figaro on 4 October 2013, Dessay announced that the final operatic performance of her career would be in the title role of Massenet's Manon at the Théâtre du Capitole in Toulouse on 15 October 2013.
She further stated her intention to continue her performing career as a dramatic actress and chansonnier.AwardsSix Victoires de la MusiqueLaurence Olivier Award (2008)Opera News Award (2008)Prix in honorem pour l'ensemble de sa carrière (Académie Charles Cros, 2008)Kammersängerin (2010)Chevalier of the Legion of Honour (2011)Prix Grand Siècle Laurent-PerrierPersonal lifeDessay is married to the bass-baritone Laurent Naouri, and she converted to his Jewish faith.
The couple has two children.

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