By Michael Tanner

Published: Tuesday, 27 February 2024 at 16:40 PM


She dominates the story of opera in the 20th century, and won legions of admirers for her captivatingly committed performances. Maria Callas’s life was marked by immense highs and lows: she was the world’s most renowned and influential opera singer, but she also had to live with constant speculation – intense scrutiny over her weight, an affair and marriage to shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis and, most cruelly of all, increasing comment over the ‘decline’ of her voice. But how do we separate the facts from the mythology, and just how seminal was she to opera in the 20th century? Just who was Maria Callas?

Who was Maria Callas?

For many people, Maria Callas was the greatest singer of whom we have record or records. Not for nothing did we place her top in our list of the greatest sopranos of all time.

For some others she is overrated, had an ugly voice. She went into decline very shortly after her brief period of glory. And as an actress was mannered, even grotesque.

Everything about her is controversial. To try to produce a balanced account of her, as an artist or woman, is to misunderstand what kind of phenomenon she was, and remains today.

Early in her career she was considered a heavy-voiced artist. She went on to perform Isolde, Brünnhilde in Die Walküre, and Kundry in Parsifal. All in Italian, though often with partners singing in other languages: ‘Geliebte!’ ‘Carissimo!’ is the kind of exchange you’d hear between lovers.

But the elderly conductor Tullio Serafin, that great nurturer of talent, persuaded her to learn and perform the role of Elvira in Bellini’s I puritani when the original soprano fell ill. Callas did it, alternating one of the great bel canto roles with Brünnhilde, an unheard-of feat.

Soon Callas’s extraordinary timbre, the flexibility of her voice and the fanatical dedication of her performances were creating a sensation. This happily coincided with the arrival of long-playing records, which made the recording of operas under ideal studio conditions possible.

What was Maria Callas best known for?

The number of complete operas that Callas recorded for EMI in the 1950s and early 1960s is prodigious. And, until the last ones, they were under the omnipotent control of the great producer Walter Legge. He, incidentally, described Callas as having ‘a superhuman inferiority complex.’

Her energy during the next few years was prodigious. 1955, for example, her annus mirabilis, began with six performances of Giordano’s Andrea Chénier at La Scala Milan, interspersed with four of Cherubini’s Medea in Rome. She then went on to ten La Sonnambulas (Bernstein’s debut as operatic conductor). Those, plus five performances of Rossini’s Il turco in Italia – all were new roles for her.

What were Maria Callas’s most famous roles?

Then at the end of May she gave some of her most stupendous performances in La traviata. Conducted by Giulini and directed by Visconti, this was a landmark in operatic production. During the summer she made a recital record and classic studio recordings of Madama Butterfly, Aida and Rigoletto, with a radio broadcast of Bellini’s Norma, her favourite and most performed opera. And the summer closed with two sensational performances in Berlin of Lucia di Lammermoor. These, with Karajan conducting, are fortunately preserved as perhaps the absolute pinnacle of Callas’s art.