Kate Royal Explained
Kate Royal (born 1979) is an English lyric soprano.
Royal was born in London and attended Talbot Heath School in Bournemouth, Dorset. She later studied at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama and then the National Opera Studio, graduating in the summer of 2004. In that same year, she won the Kathleen Ferrier Award.[1]
Royal began to attract wider notice as an understudy for the role of Pamina in Mozart's Die Zauberflöte at Glyndebourne Festival Opera in 2004, when she replaced the lead soprano at one performance.[2] With Glyndebourne on Tour, she has sung the Countess in Le nozze di Figaro.[3] She has performed in recital with the pianists Graham Johnson and Roger Vignoles.[4] In 2006 with Glyndebourne on Tour, she sang The Governess in Benjamin Britten's The Turn of the Screw.[5] Later the same year, she signed a recording contract with EMI Classics, and her first disc of songs and arias was released in September 2007.[6] She dedicates five months per year to song recitals.[7]
Royal and her husband, actor and singer Julian Ovenden, have a son and a daughter. The couple married in December 2010, officiated by Ovenden's father, Canon John Ovenden.[8] [9]
Discography
Solo
Other
External links
Notes and References
- News: Rupert Christiansen. Rupert Christiansen. Loneliness of the long-distance singer. https://web.archive.org/web/20080411111303/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2005/09/17/bmitalian17.xml. dead. 11 April 2008. The Daily Telegraph. London. 17 September 2005. 28 October 2007.
- News: Neil Fisher. Kate Royal. The Times. London. 2 January 2006. 28 October 2007.
- News: Laura Barnett. Portrait of the artist: Kate Royal, soprano. The Guardian. 2 October 2007. 28 October 2007.
- News: Hilary Finch. Royal/Vignoles. The Times. London. 15 January 2007. 28 October 2007.
- News: Tim Ashley. The Turn of the Screw. The Guardian. 23 October 2006. 28 October 2007.
- News: Geoff Brown. Kate Royal. The Times. London. 8 September 2007. 28 October 2007.
- News: Carolyn Bartholomew. Self-confident Royal. The Spectator. 9 April 2008. 3 January 2009. https://web.archive.org/web/20081021055303/http://www.spectator.co.uk/the-magazine/arts/600591/selfconfident-royal.thtml. 21 October 2008. dead.
- News: Pomfret . Emma . Kate Royal: the diva in waiting . . en . 2022-04-29 . 0140-0460.
- News: Julian Ovenden: the sweet-singing son of a Queen's chaplain. The Daily Telegraph. London. 15 April 2012. Chrissy Iley.