Regina Vicarino | |
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Regina Vicarino, from a 1921 print advertisement.
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Background information | |
Born |
New York City |
August 23, 1885
Died | 1957 |
Genres | opera |
Instruments | soprano |
Regina Vicarino (August 23, 1885 — 1957) was an American soprano opera singer.
Reine Annette Vicarino was born in New York City, the daughter of Edouard Joseph Vicarino and Leontine Camille Serre Vicarino. Her father was born in Switzerland; her mother was born in New York, to French-born parents. Reine (who used the Italian form of her name, Regina) studied voice with Arthur Lawrason in New York.
Vicarino's voice was described as having "all the range and limpidity of an ideal coloratura," in the Los Angeles Herald in 1910; the critic went into further detail, writing that "The upper register is clear and brilliant, and the lower tones are wonderfully vibrant and rich for a coloratura voice." She frequently sang the lead role in Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor, and she was also considered successful as Violetta in La traviata, and as Micaela in Carmen.
She sang with the Bevani Grand Opera Company in San Francisco in 1910. In the 1917-1918 season she toured New England and Canada with the Giuseppe Creatore Grand Opera Company. In 1921, she sang a recital at Carnegie Hall, performed in the summer "Zoo Grand Opera" productions in Cincinnati, Ohio, and she toured cities in the western United States and Canada with the San Carlo Opera Company. In 1922 she appeared in a radio production of Mozart's The Impresario. She made recordings for Lyric Records, and for others under the pseudonym "Josepha Donnelli".
Later in her career, she taught voice privately and at Sullins College, Brenau College, and Arlington Hall. In 1935 and 1937, she appeared at the Mazica Hall in Miami, Florida, giving "operalogues".
Regina Vicarino married businessman George Vest Guyer in 1912. They had a daughter, Regina "Mimi" Vicarino Guyer, born in 1916. George died suddenly in 1922. Regina Vicarino died in 1957, aged 71.