[In the 2/9 Variety, among statements by Academy Award Lifetime Achievement
honorees]
By MARNI NIXON
Marni Nixon was the voice of Natalie Wood's Maria in the film
version of "West Side Story," just as she sang Audrey Hepburn's
parts in "My Fair Lady" and those of Deborah Kerr in "The King
and I." Nixon also has sung with the Seattle Opera and San
Francisco Opera and is appearing with the New York Philharmonic
at Avery Fisher Hall in New York next month. (Callas') recordings
are quite an example of the most dramatic kind of singing. She
was all about meaning in song, meaning in music; she was a
complete performer and a great influence on me.
When I was singing a lot of opera, she was the one person in
that bel canto repertoire, which means really old-style opera,
not necessarily like "La Boheme," but previous periods, Mozart
and Bellini, from the era when there was so much coloratura.
Phrasing "La Traviata," she put a little tremble in it. She made
(the lyrics) personal -- it's not a scale, it's not to show off
pyro-technics, but it was to showcase the emotion coming out.
She made music out of all of the decorative and romantic phrases.
When she sang, it was always related to her guts.
Her operatic repertoire is the bel canto era, which is not what
we have now. We have romantic, or true, opera (verismo). It
isn't stylized, it's more natural. Bel canto is stylized, probably
the way the composer meant it, but no one really did it as well
as she did.
Callas was a dramatic coloratura, she could do big voice, but
lighten up and do all these fast, fantastic runs that a real
heavy voice couldn't do -- like a Wagnerian couldn't do. She
also did the thing that was impressive to me, that was more
important than keeping the beauty of the voice; she would get
so dramatic that it wasn't this gorgeous, round, buttermilk
sound. Sometimes it got more raucous. Now, a lot of singers
won't do that, because it can take away from the beauty of the
voice. Opera is a part of music theater. It has to be about
theater and music; sometimes we forget about that aspect.
The last time I saw her was in Seattle on her farewell tour. She
was not singing in an opera but doing a lot of operatic scenes
and duets. She had changed her vocal category, she was originally
soprano, and in later years she started singing mezzo. It's like
being a flute and then trying to be an alto flute. Tenor sax to
bass sax. She did it very effectively because of her emotional
skills and imagination -- that's where she was really effective.
Janos Gereben/SF
www.sfcv.org
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