theleaven.com | vol. 35, no. 9 | october 4, 2013
Grammy Award-winning opera singer Joyce DiDonato is shown above performing exclusively for the students of her alma mater, St. Ann School in Prairie Village. Today the mezzo-soprano is world-renowned and has performed with many of the world’s leading opera companies.
‘Here me roar’
Diva sings for alma mater — St. Ann’s Tigers
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RAIRIE VILLAGE — Imagine a place filled with more than 400 children, yet so quiet you can hear someone breathe. That was the scene at St. Ann School in Prairie Village last week — and the person doing the “breathing” was world-renowned opera star and Grammy Award winner Joyce DiDonato. “The only way I can make my voice travel is if I make it go on my breath,” she told the students gathered for a mini-concert in the church. Her audience was mesmerized as she demonstrated her point by singing a note softly and then adding breath until her voice filled the church from altar to foyer. How did these students rate a private session with one of the world’s greatest
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By Jill Ragar Esfeld opera singers? DiDonato is actually from this area and returned home to star in the Lyric Opera of Kansas City’s production of Bellini’s “Capulets and Montagues.” Visiting St. Ann School was part of her homecoming. DiDonato grew up in St. Ann Parish, attended school there, and went on to graduate from Bishop Miege High School in Roeland Park. The sixth of seven children in a closeknit Catholic family, her older sister is St. Ann music director Amy Hetherington. DiDonato told her audience that when she used to be a cantor at St. Ann and perform in musicals at Bishop Miege, she dreamed of becoming a pop star someday.
“Opera was something I didn’t understand,” she confessed. After high school, DiDonato attended Wichita State University with a more realistic dream of becoming a music teacher. But God had a very different plan. Through her college music classes, DiDonato developed an appreciation for opera that soon turned into a passion and — after lots of hard work — a career. Today, she is a leading mezzo-soprano, which means her voice is lower than a soprano, but higher than a contralto, and can sing what are called “trouser roles” — a female singer playing a male character. For example, in the performance at the Lyric Opera she just concluded, DiDonato played the role of Romeo. “I like opera because I like to >> See “Opera” on page 5