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1 Operatic sopranos born in the 15th and 16th centuries. ... 1800. Elizabeth Austin (c. 1800 – after 1835) [133] Luigia Boccabadati (1800–1850) [134]
Puerto Rican operatic sopranos (5 P) Pages in category "American operatic sopranos" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 540 total.
Opera portal; Operatic sopranos are women who sing (or sang) soprano roles in operas for opera companies in opera houses. Subcategories. This category has the ...
18th-century Polish–Lithuanian opera singers (4 P) R. 18th-century opera singers from the Russian Empire (2 C) S. 18th-century Spanish opera singers (1 C, 3 P)
Marie Decca was the stage name of Mary Smith (née Johnston; after first marriage, Chrisman; after second marriage, Smith; 1859-unknown), an American lyric soprano operatic singer. [1] She became known as the "Jenny Lind of America". [ 2 ]
The emergence of American opera companies, such as the Academy of Music in New York City (1854) and the Boston Academy of Music (1853), marked a transition towards establishing a domestically nurtured operatic heritage. Opera in the 19th century became a cultural cornerstone, influencing literature, art, and societal norms.
This category is intended for notable American sopranos. There is controversy when the term "soprano" is applied to men. Men who sing in the soprano range are sometimes called "sopranists", "sopranistas", or "male sopranos". At the moment there is no established criteria on which term is used by Wikipedia for categorization purposes.
American operatic mezzo-sopranos (165 P) P. Puerto Rican opera singers (2 C, 4 P) S. American operatic sopranos (1 C, 538 P) T. American operatic tenors (1 C, 223 P)