(ANSA) - Rome, September 11 - The 40th anniversary of the
death of the great opera diva Maria Callas is approaching on
September 16, reminding fans of the singer known as "La Divina",
considered by many as the greatest singer of the 20th century.
Her fame derived not only from her voice, but also from her
unique acting ability, which was likely attributed at least in
part to her tormented and passionate life.
Her personal ups and downs made her a much-followed and
beloved figure with the public, especially during the years of
her complicated love story with the billionaire Aristotle
Onassis, and through to her death, which was shrouded in the
mystery of a possible suicide.
Born Cecila Sophia Anna Maria Kalogeropoulos in New York on
December 2, 1923, she first gained fame in Greece in the 1940s,
where her mother had taken her in 1937 after separating from her
father and where Callas began studying music and singing.
"Her voice had no limits," said Italian director and opera
producer Franco Zeffirelli, who worked with Callas on various
occasions.
"She was at the same time a soprano, a mezzo-soprano, and a
contralto, and she had the genius to turn this defect of hers
into a virtue, able to continually astound surprisingly, as if
she had come from another planet," he said.
Upon her return to New York in 1945, she paid for her studies
by babysitting in the home of a friend of Toscanini, who cast
her in Ponchielli's "La Gioconda" in 1947 at the Arena di
Verona.
It was in Verona that she met industrialist Battista
Meneghini, who became her first husband and manager as her
career took off in Florence the year after with Bellini's
"Norma", which she would perform more than 90 times, making the
aria "Casta Diva" her signature.
She met Onassis in America and in 1959 he invited her and
Meneghini on his yacht the "Christina" together with Winston
Churchill, the Prince of Monaco and the Agnellis.
Callas separated from Meneghini less than one year later,
embarking on a tormented 10-year affair with the Greek shipping
magnate that ended when he left her for Jackie Kennedy.
Her last tour, in 1973, was deemed a failure, and she lived
out the final years of her life in Paris, where she died in
1977, provoking rumours of suicide by drug overdose.
Maria Callas's voice still divine
The peaks, troughs, tormented love life of a great diva