William Shimell

William Shimell (born Brentwood, Essex, 23 September 1952) is an English baritone who has had an active international career performing in opera[1] and on the concert platform since the 1980s, and more recently has appeared in non-singing roles in films.

Biography

Shimell studied at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and at the National Opera Studio.[2] For his student performance at the Guildhall the Opera critic noted "William Shimells's Figaro stood out from all the others. His is a rich, full-toned baritone voice, and he used it to great musical and dramatic effect."[3]

He joined the chorus of Kent Opera in 1978 and sang an usher in Rigoletto with them in 1980[1] and Venus and Adonis in the UK and Venice. At Sadler's Wells in 1981 he appeared as Young Scrooge in Musgrave's Christmas Carol.[1]

He sang Masetto in Don Giovanni in February 1980 at London Coliseum for English National Opera, going on to sing Gregory in the new production of Romeo and Juliet in March 1981 and a Herald in the new production of Otello in September 1981, and other roles subsequently with the company.

He made his debut at Glyndebourne Opera in May 1984 as Count Almaviva, and at La Scala in 1991 was Baron Dourlinksi in Lodoïska.[1] Other opera companies with which he appeared in the earlier part of his career include San Francisco Opera (1988), Frankfurt Opera (1988), Grand Theatre Geneva (1989), Vienna State Opera (1990), Lyric Opera Chicago (1991).[2]

At Covent Garden he made his debut as Schaunard in La bohème in 1985, going on to sing in Così fan tutte (1986 and 1992 – as Guglielmo), Werther (1987 – Albert), Capriccio (1991 – Olivier), La bohème (1996 – Marcello), The Rake's Progress (2010 - Nick Shadow), Così fan tutte (2010 - Don Alfonso), and Manon (2010 - De Brétigny).[4]

At the Metropolitan Opera in New York Shimell made his debut in La bohème in 1996 as Marcello, continuing with Così fan tutte (1996 and 2010 - Don Alfonso), Madama Butterfly (2000 – Sharpless), Manon (2005 - De Brétigny) and Iphigénie en Tauride (2007 - Thoas).[5]

With major companies has sung the following roles: the title roles in Le nozze di Figaro and Don Giovanni, Papageno, Dandini, and Malatesta.[1]

In 1983 Shimell won the Shell International Opera Prize[2] and he sang at the Last Night of the Proms in 1984.

Since 2010 Shimell has begun to take (non-singing) roles in cinema releases. For Copie conforme (Certified Copy) and Amour these engagements followed an encounter with the director while performing in a staged opera, which led to the film with the same director.[6] Shimell had very little knowledge of the cinema when he was invited to feature in Copie conforme with Iranian director Abbas Kiarostami. As he could speak French and Italian this helped during the filming (the initial script had been translated from Farsi to French to English).[7]

He has appeared on a few audio recordings, including A Sea Symphony by Vaughan Williams, Mass in B minor BWV232 by JS Bach, Summer's last will and testament by Lambert, Funeral cantata on the death of Emperor Joseph II, and Pulcinella.[8]

Cinema

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Forbes, Elizabeth. William Shimell. In: The New Grove Dictionary of Opera. Macmillan, London & New York , 1977.
  2. 1 2 3 Adam, Nicky (ed). William Shimell. In: Who's Who in British Opera. Scolar Press, Aldershot, 1993, p252.
  3. Graham Sheffield. Student Performances - The Marriage of Figaro. Guildhall School of Music, June 6. Opera, August 1978, Vol 29 No 8 p830-831.
  4. Royal Opera House Covent Garden performance database - William Shimell.
  5. Metropolitan Opera database - William Shimell.
  6. What's on stage report, accessed 12 August 2016.
  7. Time Out interviews "Juliette Binoche and William Shimell on Certified Copy" 15 March 2011. accessed 12 August 2016.
  8. World Cat search for William Shimell. accessed 12 August 2016.
  9. William Shimell at the International Movie Data Base, accessed 10 August 2016.
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