CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

A slimmer soprano Deborah Voigt returns to Royal Opera House

Last Updated: Monday, June 16, 2008 | 12:36 PM ET

Deborah Voigt is back, in black.

The American soprano returns to the Royal Opera House stage on Monday, four years after the company fired her for being too big to fit into the black evening dress chosen for the title character in Richard Strauss's Ariadne auf Naxos.

The decision sparked a ferocious debate about weight discrimination in opera. Now, a slimmer Voigt is back to perform the same role in the same opera — wearing "that" dress.

Deborah Voigt, seen here in 2006, called society's attitude toward heavy people 'the last bastion of open discrimination in our society.'
Deborah Voigt, seen here in 2006, called society's attitude toward heavy people 'the last bastion of open discrimination in our society.' (Stephen Chernin/Associated Press)

"When I got the call from my manager, I have to admit my first reaction was to laugh, because we had come full circle," Voigt said a few days before opening night.

"When that happened, I didn't anticipate ever coming back, because I didn't think they would invite me."

Voigt, one of the world's leading opera singers, had been scheduled to play the lead in the Royal Opera's summer 2004 production of Ariadne. But the casting director decided the titular Greek goddess should wear a black evening dress and believed Voigt would not look right in it.

"I was angry about it at the time and for quite a while afterwards," said Voigt, who once called the attitude toward heavy people "the last bastion of open discrimination in our society."

However, Voigt had gastric bypass surgery in June 2004, three months after the story broke, and subsequently lost 135 pounds. She says she had been considering the surgery on health grounds for years, long before the black dress incident.

"I didn't need the Royal Opera House to tell me I was fat," Voigt said. "I knew I was fat."

She now concedes she wouldn't have been right for the production and thinks opera's increased focus on image is here to stay.

'To assume that one can weigh 300-plus pounds and still be viable on today's opera stage is naive.'—Deborah Voigt

"I think that the face of opera is changing," Voigt said. "To assume that one can weigh 300-plus pounds and still be viable on today's opera stage is naive. I tell that to young singers.

"Opera has changed immensely in my generation, and it is going to change more."

In 2006, the Royal Opera rehired Voigt, announcing she would return to the role of Ariadne in the 2007-2008 season. Beyond that, the company refuses to discuss the incident, saying only that rehearsals have gone well and it is "looking forward with great excitement to Deborah Voigt's performances in Ariadne."

An ebullient Voigt seems to have put the episode squarely behind her. She has nothing but praise for her "warm and welcoming" reception by the Royal Opera and has poked fun at the furour by releasing a YouTube video entitled "The Return of the Little Black Dress," in which she and her slinky nemesis make up.

Voigt, seen performing here with Placido Domingo in March 2004, underwent gastric bypass surgery three months later. She said she had been considering the surgery on health grounds for years.Voigt, seen performing here with Placido Domingo in March 2004, underwent gastric bypass surgery three months later. She said she had been considering the surgery on health grounds for years. (Richard Drew/Associated Press)

"It just seemed at the time that we weren't a good fit," the dress tells the now-svelte singer in the clip. "But times change; people change."

Voigt said in 2004 that she didn't expect to be allowed to sing at the Royal Opera House as long as casting director Peter Katona remained. He's still there, and the pair have reconciled.

"I remember that Mr. Katona said some day we would be able to laugh about this," Voigt said. "And I said, 'Yeah, right.' But he was right.

"There is no point walking around with a chip on your shoulder about it. Life's too short."

At 47, Voigt's career is going strong. Some have detected changes to her voice as a result of the weight loss, and Voigt acknowledges it has been an adjustment.

"Four years on, I am still having to rethink how I sing," she said.

But an Associated Press reviewer thought her recent performance in Tristan und Isolde at the Metropolitan Opera was majestic: "Her voice has lyric beauty as well as steel," the review said.

In 2011, Voigt is due to sing Bruennhilde in the Met's much-anticipated new Ring Cycle. Since her surgery, she has expanded her repertoire, playing Biblical temptress Salome and legendary beauty Helen of Troy.

"It's nice to be able to play the pretty-girl parts," Voigt said. "I never thought I would be able to do that."

Ariadne auf Naxos opens Monday at the Royal Opera House and runs until July 1.

  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

More Music Headlines

Jacksoul lead singer dies
Juno Award-winning artist Haydain Neale of the R&B band Jacksoul died Sunday at Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital after a private, seven-month battle with lung cancer.
Rush, Rita MacNeil win music industry awards
Veteran rockers Rush took the international achievement award and Cape Breton folk singer Rita MacNeil won the national achievement award as the music industry organization SOCAN handed out its awards.
U2 will headline Glastonbury
Irish band U2 will be the top act at the Glastonbury music festival in England next June, organizers say.
Taylor Swift wins 5 American Music Awards
Michael Jackson made history by winning four American Music Awards posthumously, but he couldn't beat Taylor Swift as the year's favourite artist and the evening's top winner.
Plaskett double winner at Canadian Folk Music Awards
Joel Plaskett's triple album Three earned the Halifax singer-songwriter a double win at the Canadian Folk Music Awards on Saturday.

More Arts Headlines

Jacksoul lead singer dies
Juno Award-winning artist Haydain Neale of the R&B band Jacksoul died Sunday at Toronto's Mount Sinai Hospital after a private, seven-month battle with lung cancer.
Rush, Rita MacNeil win music industry awards
Veteran rockers Rush took the international achievement award and Cape Breton folk singer Rita MacNeil won the national achievement award as the music industry organization SOCAN handed out its awards.
Rare artworks spark buzz for Canadian auction
A collection of museum-worthy artworks has drawn both buzz and record numbers of visitors to Heffel's this fall, as the auction house prepares for its annual fall sale of Canadian fine art.
Inuvialuit examine Smithsonian artifacts
A group of about 10 Inuvialuit people has returned from Washington, D.C., after examining 19th-century Northwest Territories artifacts at the Smithsonian Institute.
Thai film tops TIFF list of decade's best
A Thai arthouse film is the most respected movie of the decade, according to a poll of film curators, historians and festival programmers.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Red Cross told late about prisoner transfers Video
Canadian officials delayed telling the Red Cross it had transferred prisoners to Afghan authorities, CBC News has learned, a situation that may have put detainees at greater risk of abuse.
Storm tosses B.C. ferry passengers
BC Ferries passengers were thrown about a ship buffeted by high winds and reported seven- to 10-metre waves on a voyage Prince Rupert to Skidegate in the Queen Charlotte Islands early Monday morning.
Baby cribs recalled after 4 deaths Video
U.S. government safety regulators are recalling more than 2.1 million drop-side cribs made by B.C.-based Stork Craft Manufacturing, the biggest crib recall in U.S. history.
Mother lost grip in child's airport fall: police Video
A 15-month-old Winnipeg-born boy died Sunday night after wriggling out of his mother's arms and falling about 15 metres at Toronto's Pearson International Airport.
4 acquitted in Creba killing Video
Four men accused in the 2005 shooting death of 15-year-old Jane Creba in downtown Toronto were acquitted of manslaughter charges Monday.