Name Milagro Vargas | Role Musical Artist | |
Similar People Paul Esswood, Dennis Russell Davies, Sanford Sylvan, Helmuth Rilling |
Uo a couple minutes with milagro vargas
Milagro Vargas (born June 11, 1955) is an American mezzo-soprano known for her distinctive voice and stage presence. She has appeared as an international soloist in operatic, orchestral, chamber music and recital settings.
Contents
- Uo a couple minutes with milagro vargas
- Philip Glass Akhnaten and Nefertiti Paul Esswood Milagro Vargas
- Family Background and Studies
- Career
- Personal life
- Discography
- References

Philip Glass "Akhnaten and Nefertiti" - Paul Esswood, Milagro Vargas
Family Background and Studies
Milagro Vargas was born in New York, the daughter of immigrants from Central America. She had early vocal training on scholarship at the Third Street Music Settlement with Beatrice Rippy and Lucy Shelton. She studied with Helen Hodam at Oberlin Conservatory of Music, receiving a Bachelor of Music in 1977, and with Jan DeGaetani at the Eastman School of Music, receiving a Master of Music in 1981. She had additional vocal training with Paul Sperry, Benita Valente and Anna Renyolds.
Vargas first met DeGaetani when she won a full scholarship to the Aspen Music Festival in 1973, and returned to the festival with opera fellowships in 1980-81. She was also a Marlboro Music Festival Fellow in 1982 and 1984.
Career
DeGaetani would become a major influence on Vargas's singing and approach to music, leading to praise from critics for her vivid but natural performances in traditional styles, and bringing that vocalism to contemporary works.
Vargas was a soloist at the Stuttgart Opera from 1984 to 1992, and worked with conductors including Dennis Russell Davies and Bernhardt Kontarsky, and with stage directors including Götz Friedrich, Achim Freyer and Harry Kupfer. Among her many roles at Stuttgart were Nefertiti in the world premiere and recording of ‘’Akhnaten’’ by Philip Glass, Cherubino in Mozart's ‘’Marriage of Figaro’’, Meg in Verdi's ‘’Falstaff’’, and Orlovsky in Strauss’ ‘’Die Fledermaus’’, Nancy in Britten's ‘’Albert Herring’’ and Tisbe in Rossini's ‘’La Cenerentola’’, Stimme des Waldes in Hans Werner Henze's ‘’König Hirsch’’. She sang Charlotte in Bernd Alois Zimmermann's ‘’Die Soldaten’’, and on the recording which won the Internationalen Schallplattenpreis in 1992. Kupfer brought her to the Komische Oper in Berlin to sing Dorabella in Mozart's ‘’Così fan tutte’’. Other opera engagements include appearances at the Opera de Paris Bastille, Kirov Opera, Bolshoi Opera and the Heidelberg Schlossfestspiele .
Vargas has appeared as a soloist with many orchestras including the Philadelphia Orchestra, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Staatsorchester Stuttgart, Houston Symphony and the Orchestra of St. Luke's. Her performances with conductor Helmuth Rilling include Bach's Mass in B Minor, Beethoven's Missa Solemnis, and the Grammy Award winning recording Krzysztof Penderecki's Credo.
As a recitalist and chamber music vocalist Vargas has appeared with such artists as Gilbert Kalish, Walter Trampler, Eliot Fisk, Sharon Isbin, David Shifrin, David Finkle, and Wu Han.
Personal life
Vargas resides with her husband Tom Manoff in Eugene, Oregon, where she is a professor of voice at the University of Oregon. Among her various interests, she works for pro-diversity issues at the university and in the community.