May 15, 2009

Vale Heather Begg

Heather Begg
1933 - 12 May 2009
New Zealand mezzo soprano Heather Begg died in Sydney at the age of 76. Born in Nelson, Begg moved to Australia and studied at the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and joined the National Opera Company of Australia making her professional debut with them in 1954, sharing the role of Azucena in Verdi's Il Trovatore with (the recently deceased) Margeta Elkins and singing the role when the National Opera of Australia toured to New Zealand. In 1955 she won the Sydney Sun Aria contest and in 1957 travelled to London to study at the National School of Opera.

Begg joined the Royal Opera at Covent Garden in 1959, her debut role in Die Walkure and was made a resident principal in 1972 until she returned to Australia in 1976. In Australia she sang with The Australian Opera regularly and sang her last role with them, in 2006 as Grandmother Buryjovka in Janacek's Jenufa.

She married a Canadian, Johnnie King, in 1964. King died in 1979 a few weeks before Begg, now a widow in real-life, undertook the role of the widow Popova in William Walton's opera of Chekhov's play The Bear. Although she was mostly cast in comic roles - the operatic equivalents of Margaret Dumont in any Marx Brothers movie - Begg also played the occasional heavy dramatic parts including the Princess in Cilea's Adriana Lecouvreur and Mother Marie in Poulenc's harrowing Dialogues of the Carmelites.

Heather Begg was awarded the OBE in 1978 and in 2000 became a Distinguished Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for services to opera.
The Government decided in March to restore the titles of knights and dames to the honours system and Begg was awarded the title Dame last month.

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