Magdalena Krysztoforska-Beucher called Magda Beucher, (born 22 May 1985) is a Polish soprano and composer. [1]
Born in Warsaw, Krysztoforska-Beucher studied singing at the Chopin University of Music and at the Académie lyrique d’Osimo in Italy. [2]
She is married to the French-Polish tenor David Beucher.
Speaking five languages, [2] she tackles composers such as Mozart and Britten, through Verdi, Massenet and Tchaikovsky [3] [4] She also performs in recital, festivals and oratorios.
She is a member of the Magda et David Beucher ensemble.
Magda Olivero, was an Italian operatic soprano. Her career started in 1932 when she was 22, and spanned five decades, establishing her "as an important link between the era of the verismo composers and the modern opera stage". She has been regarded as "one of the greatest singers of the twentieth century".
Magdalena Kožená, Lady Rattle is a Czech mezzo-soprano.
Riccardo Zandonai was an Italian composer and conductor.
Mariana Nicolesco was a Romanian operatic soprano who had an international career after she studied in Rome on a scholarship. She was a regular performer at La Scala in Milan where she performed Baroque opera such as Euridice in Rossi's Orfeo, Mozart roles such as Cinna in Lucio Silla in 1984, and contemporary including the world premiere of Luciano Berio's La Vera Storia in 1982.
Magda László was a Hungarian operatic soprano, particularly associated with 20th-century operas.
Anna Polony is a Polish stage, film and television actress, as well as the stage director and former Prorector of Cracow's Academy of Dramatic Arts. The media dubbed Polony 'the First Lady of Polish Theatre' or 'the Dame of the Polish Theatre".
Barbara Kostrzewska was a Polish singer and theater director. She performed from late 1930s until after the war, when she became involved in managing several theaters. During World War II she worked for Polish resistance Armia Krajowa and took part in the Warsaw Uprising. She starred in the 1951 film Warsaw Premiere.
Aleksandra Kurzak is a Polish operatic soprano who has an international career primarily in Europe and the United States. In her earlier career she was a specialist in lyric and coloratura soprano roles in German and Italian repertoire, and transitioned into heavier roles in 19th-century Romantic and verismo operas.
Sophie Pflanz, also known as Zofia Maria Pflanz-Dróbecka, was a Polish ballet dancer with the Ballets Russes from 1911 to 1917.
Halina Rapacka was a Polish actress who in 1921–1922 and 1923–25 played operettas at the City Theaters in Lwów. In May 1931 Rapacka performed in the Metropolis theater in Poznań.
Julia Kijowska is a Polish actress. Her notable films include In Darkness (2011), The Mighty Angel (2014), and United States of Love (2016). The daughter of the director Janusz Kijowski, she studied acting at the Aleksander Zelwerowicz National Academy of Dramatic Art in Warsaw and began her career in theatre productions.
Karolina Micuła is a Polish singer, songwriter, artist, actress and political activist.
Ryszard Jaśniewicz was a Polish actor, director, playwright, poet and educator. He worked in Polish drama theaters in Wrocław, Bydgoszcz, Słupsk and most of the time with the Wybrzeże Theater in Gdańsk. In 1999, together with his wife, Gabriela Pewińska-Jaśniewicz, he founded Teatr z Polski 6 and staged 17 monodramas. Since 2008, the theater has been working in House of Plague in Gdańsk.
Maria Moscisca was a Polish operatic soprano and voice teacher. She first performed at the Lviv Opera and Warsaw Opera before she entered a career in Italy from 1909. She sang as a guest on major stages in Europe and made a tour of the U.S. in 1913. Back in Warsaw, she was a leading singer to 1932.
Dominika Kluźniak is a Polish theater, film and dubbing actress.
Konrad Ksawery Swinarski – Polish theatrical, television, film and opera director and stage designer.
Janina Korolewicz-Waydowa (1875–1955) was a Polish soprano and opera director, the world's first female opera house director.
Union of Polish Stage Artists(Związek Artystów Scen Polskich ZASP – Stowarzyszenie) is a Polish union established 21 December 1918, during Constitutional Congress in Rozmaitości Theater in Warsaw. First chair was Józef Śliwicki. The statute of the Union was signed, among others, by: Stefan Jaracz, Juliusz Osterwa and Aleksander Zelwerowicz.