Birth of an Opera: Danielle de Niese on The Barber of Seville is on BBC Four on Sunday 18 December at 7pm – the documentary follows her preparation for the role of Rosina.
Then watch the the opera in full: Il barbiere di Siviglia follows on BBC Four at 8pm
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rohandesilva asks:
Great singing! When I was a kid in Sri Lanka, we were friends with many de Nieses - those I remember, Rex and Louis. I think Rex emigrated to Australia. Related?
LaCoccinelle asks:
I live in SW France and am able to watch operas streamed from the New York Met. at a cinema in Gaillac, so, have been lucky to have seen you. Do you have any plans to sing with them again?
Anbaric asks:
How did it feel taking The Barber of Seville to the Proms this year, and performing to a very different crowd to the Glyndebourne audience?
Brian Stevenson asks:
I first saw you as Cleopatra in 2005 and was completely swept away by you and the production at Glyndebourne. Do you have any plans to perform Cleopatra again? (I’ve seen other singers as Cleopatra and they are nowhere nearly as good as you. ) Can I ask a supplementary? How important is ‘charisma’ for a singer? You certainly have it.
The diva question
Louise Mullineaux asks:
What do you make of the term “diva”? You seem really down to earth – but is that a help or a hindrance in the opera world?
SA001 asks:
As you will know, Glyndebourne started up not just because of the efforts of John Christie, but also because of the input of his wife Audrey Mildmay, starring soprano of the Carl Rosa opera company! How does it feel to be following in this tradition? Does it affect the way you and your husband see your joint work at Glyndebourne?
BeaG32 says:
Not a question, just wanted to say that I really enjoyed all your performances at the Met that I’ve seen. Opera saved me from suicide once, many years ago. I’m sure the opera industry can be tough at times—keep up the good work, you never know what difference you’re making in someone’s life!
Flavione asks:
Ciao! As an Italian teaching Opera in Tokyo, I would like Italians to be more passionately in love with opera. How could that happen?
Flavione continues:
Yes, I meant Italians. In Japan so many youngsters are in love with canto and opera, which happens less and less in my country.
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Poptastic taste
cornerswell asks:
Is it all classical music in your house - do you ever let rip with some soul or Motown?
severnsider61 asks:
Is there any chance of you performing in Handel’s opera Alcina at Glyndebourne in the near future? To see this wonderful work with its memorable soprano roles in an imaginative production - perhaps from David McVicar or Nicholas Hytner - would be a joy.
vastariner asks:
I know nothing about classical music, so how does a conductor or musical director make a difference when it comes to scores which look to me to be pretty fixed? You can do a pop song in, say, a soul, reggae, electro or whatever style, but isn’t a piano concerto basically stuck as being a piano concerto? How is one maestro’s version better than – or even different to – another maestros?
To which Consumer comments:
You’re right that it’s not technically necessary, but it has a function. It’s to keep a human feel interpretation of the music as the bottom line, rather than ink and paper
and StatuaGentilissima says:
Just get two recordings of the same work. You’ll see the difference in a few seconds.
and Tzctguar adds:
Each performer in classical music interprets the written music in different ways according to taste, known scholarship and the mod of the moment. Rush to YouTube and watch Prokofiev 7th Sonata performed by different piano players, the differences become obvious rather quickly.
I'm a Celebrity… metaculture
Scrapper69 asks:
Do you think Scarlet off Gogglebox winning I’m a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here! over the hilarious Adam off Emmerdale was a fix?
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Home sweet home
fetedelopinion asks:
So, Danny, what first prompted you to set up home in an Elizabethan manor with en suite opera house set in the rolling downland backdrop to the summer idyll for thousands of opera lovers?
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GoloMannFan asks:
Is the Jaffa Cake a cake or a biscuit?
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vammyp asks:
How do you interpret the finale of The Sopranos? I’ve had a theory for the last 9 years, but it’d be interesting to get an insider’s opinion.
Marcelo Jordan asks:
I admire your talent and your art. Thanks for enriching our life experience and the world with that. I come from Bolivia and would like to stage an opera on the street in my country of origin. Something for the common people, especially poor people, who would otherwise never have the opportunity to experience opera in their lives. Do you have any recommendations and also suggestions on resources or who/where to approach?
Don Giovanni news
Austerby says:
I do dislike that you can’t edit posts once made. Are there any particular roles that you are interested in?
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Bacon78 asks:
I love you singing Vide Cor Meum, would you give me call and blast it out for me, I’m very bored at work!
highfits asks:
Do you have a preference in performing opera/oratorio with a period instrument orchestra?
Making opera affordable
gormless2 asks:
The first opera I ever saw was Giulio Cesare in 2005 at Glyndebourne. (I was given some freebie tickets.) I had no idea what to expect but found it utterly breathtaking and intensely moving. Is there any chance that I’ll ever be able to afford to go to the opera in the future?
Tzctguar adds: Covent Garden has offers for £35 in the balcony for Il Trovatore this winter, Opera Holland Park always has many tickets for less than £20, during the Proms you can watch semi-staged operas for a tenner or less.
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Tzctguar asks:
Who are your opera heroes?
j4cky0 asks:
Which is your favourite opera house - apart from Glyndebourne...) - and why? And which do you like least?
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OleksandrOK asks:
There are many operatic pop solo singers and groups nowadays. What do you think about the future of the opera (performance art which combines music and drama)?
Opera for all
CarlBr0wn asks:
Me and my peers go to galleries, theatre, modern dance, even ballet – yet opera still seems just that little bit too inaccessible. The thought of people picnicking on the lawn at Glyndebourne is like a vision from a completely different society/country. Will opera ever become something for the general public, or do the people who enjoy it actually like keeping it a rarefied art form? Would it lose something by being more democratic?
In short, is it just something for rich people to say that they’ve been to see, or an artform that can have meaning for everyone??
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Gabi Stranska asks:
I have been fortunate this year to see you perform (Glyndebourne, Strasbourg, London, now have tickets for yet another sold-out event in Birmingham, btw. Congratulations on the sellouts, amazing) but my question is on behalf of the less fortunate: any plans for a new CD? Would be really cool... Good luck with all you do, the world is a better place because of role models like you!
RiggerTony asks:
After the birth of your son, you said your voice changed. Do you think this may allow you to tackle some mezzo roles in the future, for example Carmen. I think I might actually kill to see that!
Quiet Loud asks:
Your amazing success in winning an Emmy Award at the age of 16 is really well-publicised. But there seems to be no official record of you ever winning one … what’s the story there?
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Post your questions for Danielle de Niese
After a whirlwind early start in LA, winning an Emmy for TV presenting while still in her teens, the soprano Danielle de Niese has brought vigour and freshness to the global opera scene.
At the age of 19, she was already singing alongside Bryn Terfel and Cecilia Bartoli at New York’s Met Opera. Productions at Glyndebourne led to her meeting her husband, the opera house’s director Gus Christie, and she now lives in the Sussex country house, where she recently performed in The Barber of Seville.
With Danielle presenting a behind-the-scenes look at Glyndebourne for BBC4 on Sunday 18 December, before a screening of the opera, she is joining us to answer your questions in a live webchat. Post them in the comments below, and follow the chat live from 12pm GMT on Thursday 8 December.
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Ok guys! So they're chucking me out of the Guardian office now. Actually it's the webchat that's expiring shortly... but it's been so great to chat with all of you. Thank you for stopping by. There are a couple of people (DouglasBateman, wryobserver, dhc1970) whose questions I wasn't able to answer directly for two reasons: 1) time constraints, and 2) I actually had already answered the same question in an earlier post. I hope you'll find the answers further down the chat, and... sorry!
Thank you so much for supporting classical music and classical artists through new digital forms, and please please please, if you love classical music and classical artists, tune in to BBC4 on December 18 to watch the premiere of my documentary Birth of an Opera: Danielle De Niese on The Barber of Seville.
It's so important that we show our commitment to classical music programming - ratings success will promote that. So please tell all your friends, spread the word, in any way you can - socials, email, word of mouth. Help these programmes become a success because that's a success for classical music - a success for everybody. Thank you all again for your support in every way - have a wonderful holiday season. Lots of love to you all, Danni xxxxxxx