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Raina
Kabaivanska
is a
Bulgarian
opera
singer,
one
of
the
most
renowned
sopranos
in
the
second
half
of
the
20th
century.
Born
in
Burgas
under
the
name
Raina
Yakimova,
she
graduated
Opera
Singing
and
Piano
from
the
Bulgarian
State
Academy
of
Music.
Kabaivanska
made
her
debut
at
the
Bulgarian
National
Opera
in
Sofia
as
Tatjana
in
Tchaikovsky’s
Eugene
Onegin
in
1957.
Two
years
later
she
made
a
breaktrhough
in
Italy
as
Nedda
in
Leoncavallo’s
Bajazzo
although
it
was
not
until
1961
when
Kabaivanska
staged
her
first
performance
at
Milan’s
La
Scala,
that
international
renown
came.
Between
the
1960s
and
the
1980s
Kabaivanska
toured
most
major
opera
theatres
in
the
world,
including
La
Scala,
Metropolitan
Opera
and
Carnegie
Hall
in
New
York,
Covent
Garden
in
London,
Bolshoi
Theatre
in
Moscow
and
Teatro
Colon
in
Buenos
Aires.
Her
repertory
has
included
works
by
Verdi
(Don
Carlo,
Otello,
Falstaff,
La
Traviata,
Il
Trovatore,
La
Forza
del
Destino,
I
Vespri
Siciliani,
Ernani,
Requiem),
Puccini
(as
Madame
Butterfly,
Tosca,
Manon
Lescaut),
Wagner
(Rienzi),
Cilea
(Adriana
Lecouvreur),
Donizetti
(Roberto
Devereux),
Leoncavallo
(Pagliacci),
Gounod
(Faustus),
Massenet
(Manon),
Catallani
(La
Wally),
Tchaikovsky
(Queen
of
Spades,
Eugene
Onegin),
Strauss
(Capriccio),
Zandonai
(Francesca
de
Rimini),
Spontini
(La
Vestalle),
Gluck
(Armide),
Leoš
Janácek
(The
Macropolus
Case),
Lehar
(La
Vedova
Allegra).

Kabaivanska
has
received
the
following
international
opera
awards:
Bellini
(1965),
Viotti
d'Oro
(1970),
Puccini
(1978),
Illica
(1979),
Monteverdi
(1980),
the
Award
of
Academia
'Medicci'
-
Lorenzo
di
Magnifico,
Florence
(1990),
the
Grand
Prix
'A
Life,
Dedicated
to
the
Music',
Venice
(2000).
At
present,
Kabaivanska
is a
professor
at
the
'Chigiana'
Academy
of
Music,
Italy.
She
has
a
Master
Class
for
performers
of
Puccini's
works,
as
well
as
master
classes
in
Spain,
Italy
and
France.
She
is
also
a
jury
member
for
many
prestigious
competitions
all
over
the
world.
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