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October 8-November 26, 2003

Caruso:
The Life and Work of an Opera Legend


October 8-November 26
Hours 10 am- 4 pm and by appointment


Like an Easter Lily, Caruso rose from obscurity to international success. Enrico Caruso (1873-1921) was born in a working class neighborhood of Naples, Italy. He was the 3rd of 7 children, and the first to survive to adulthood. This early persistence foreshadowed his great destiny.

Caruso's first big break came when he was conscripted for military service. The Baron Costa found his voice so extraordinary that he arranged for Caruso's dismissal from service, because he felt Caruso was wasting his time. Soon after, he premiered "Fedora" in Milan at the Opera Lirico. This performance launched his career. "After that night, the contracts descended onme like a heavy rainstorm," Caruso would later say.

Then in 1903, Caruso debuted at the temple of American opera: the Metropolitan Opera House.

The Metropolitan stood north of the port of entry for millions of immigrants from Italy. To Italian immigrants, Caruso symbolized that "America could be made". He personified the lily: that one could be born into the working class, but still flower. In gratitude to his fellow countrymen, he often performed for immigrant workers for free. And in return, the voice of Caruso filled the homes and streets of America's Little Italies.





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