Aron Aronov

Aron Aronov
Born (1937-07-12) 12 July 1937
Dupnica, Bulgaria
Occupation Operetta / opera singer (tenor)

Aron Sabat Aronov is a Bulgarian tenor and vocal pedagogue from a Jewish heritage.

Early years

Aron Aronov was born on 12 July 1937 in Dupnica, Bulgaria. As a student he plays sports, chess and was interested in music. He became a regional champion at 100 meter smooth running for adolescents, came second in the city chess tournament, and second at the adolescents table tennis tournament in Dupnica. As a student in Dupnica he performed in his first operettas, “Zaporozhets za Dunayem” (Dunaevski), “Die Csárdásfürstin” (E. Kalman), and “La belle Hélène” with dirigent Veneta Vitcheva. He graduates from the Bulgarian National Academy of Music with opera singing and master class with the famous vocal pedagogue Hriso Brumbarov (teacher of Gena Dimitrova, Nicolai Ghiaurov, Nikola Ghiuselev, Dimitar Uzunov).

Career

Aron’s first professional debut was in 1965 in Varna’s Opera as Alfredo in “La Traviata”. Then performances in Sofia follow in the Sofia’s Opera as Manrico in “Il trovatore” with Alexandrina Milcheva (mezzo-soprano), Stefka Evstatieva (soprano), and Nikolay Smocievski (baritone), and as Ernani in “Ernani” with Yulia Viner, and Števa Buryja in “Jenůfa”.

During the same time (1965) he became a member of the National Musical Theater “Stefan Makedonski” - Sofia, where he continues the tenor tradition of Lubomir Bodurov and Minko Bosev. He plays all of the main tenor parts.

His predebut is in "My Fair Lady" as Freddie, and his debut part is Ange-Pitou from the French opera "The Daughter of Madame Angot".

In the period from 1965 to 2007, Aron Aronov is a main artist in the National Musical Theater “Stefan Makedonski”.

After the end of his stage career he starts teaching vocals.

Aron Aronov - Tasilo in "Countess Maritza"

Works with:

Aron Aronov in "Orpheus in the Underworld"

Co-stars:

Repertoire

For his forty five years of work Aron Aronov has acted as Edvin from Die Csárdásfürstin 975 times and as Feri von Kerekes from the same play 134 times. There are many other characters he played: Count Danilo from The Merry Widow , Count Tasilo from Countess Maritza, Adam from The Bird Seller, Eisenstein, Falke, Alfred from The Bath, Barinkay and Homonay from The Gypsy Baron; Paris, Achille, and Calchas from La belle Hélène; Paganini from Paganini. Su Chong from The Land of Smiles, became a sensation and was talked about for ages after.

Part of his repertoire are the main roles in Das Veilchen vom Montmartre, The Prince of Madrid, La Périchole, The Beautiful Galatea, Andalusia, Orpheus in the Underworld, Bluebeard, and many others.

He participates in Bulgarian operettes also. He plays Mladen and Minko from "A revolution song" (Georgy Cherkin), Kir Spiridone from "The Knight", llia from "Crazy Gidia" (Parashkev Hadziev), the scientist from "The Shadow" (Victor Raichev).

Torn between his love for operas and operettas, Aron Aronov participates in two premieres in one day, which started at almost the same time. He starts as Shultz from Cabarett in the Musical Theater, and after the final of the play and some running he turns into The priest of Neptune from Idomeneo in National opera of Sofia. For the roles of Spoletta in "Tosca", The Abbe in "Andrea Chenie", Pang in "Turandot", Ruiz in „Il trovatore“, Normanno in „Lucia di Lammermoor“, Ovlur in „Prince Igor“, Third Jew in „Salome“, Aron Aronov is called „The king of the small roles“.

Personal life

Aron Aronov marries Zdravka Pisareva. They have a daughter Sabina, who, despite of her parents’ past, decided to study philology

Aron Aronov in "La Périchole"

Discography

During his active years Aaron makes many audio and video records for the Bulgarian National Radio (BNR) and the Bulgarian National Television (BNT). Because of the copyright laws during the time of the recordings, they are property of BNR and BNT. Part of the recordings have been released on CD, but most of them are part of the two institutions’ collections.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/24/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.