Victor DeRenzi

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Victor DeRenzi (born 1949) [1] is an American and Italian conductor. He is currently the artistic director and principal conductor of the Sarasota Opera.

Contents

Early life

Victor DeRenzi was born and raised in the New York City borough of Staten Island. His father, Nicholas, was a dock worker; his mother, Maria, was a housewife. While in elementary school, encouraged by one of his teachers, DeRenzi saw his first opera, La forza del destino at a small company on Staten Island. [2] DeRenzi was immediately taken with the art form. Following that performance of Forza, he appeared as a supernumerary, sang in the local opera chorus and conducted the offstage music for a performance of Tosca in the New York area.[ citation needed ]

DeRenzi graduated from Curtis High School on Staten Island where he played the bassoon and double bass. He continued onto Queen's College in New York and majored in music theory. [2]

Career

Beginnings

DeRenzi made his professional debut in New York City in 1969, where he conducted performances of Lucia di Lammermoor and various other operas. [3] In a short period of time, he became an established musical name in New York City; conducting opera, choral music and symphonic works. He made his New York City Opera debut at Lincoln Center in 1978 where he conducted six productions as well as being associated with the Lyric Opera of Chicago, New Orleans Opera, and Opera Theatre of St. Louis, among others. Internationally, he was a guest conductor in the Canary Islands and Hong Kong as well as in Nice, Edmonton, Quebec City, Winnipeg, Hamilton, and L'Opera du Montreal, before dedicating his career to building Sarasota Opera. [4] [5]

Sarasota Opera

In 1982, he assumed the position of Artistic Director and Principal Conductor of the Sarasota Opera, conducting performances of Orpheus in the Underworld and The Turn of the Screw in his first season. During his leadership at Sarasota Opera, he supervised more than 1,500 performances of 122 different operas and conducted 900 of those performances. He is also currently the longest-serving artistic director of an opera company in the United States. Having conducted more than 80 different operas his repertoire including operas by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Igor Stravinsky, Leoš Janáček, as well as various 20th century operas, in addition to most major Italian operas. [5]

"The Verdi Cycle"

In 1989, with a production of Rigoletto , DeRenzi started a project to perform all of Verdi's available music that would take the next 27 years to come to completion. [6] This undertaking was known as "The Verdi Cycle". During this time, he became recognized as one of the world's leading conductors of Giuseppe Verdi. [7] DeRenzi ended up conducting not only every opera of Giuseppe Verdi (including revised editions), but every note by the composer that has been made available. He is the only conductor in history to have accomplished this feat, and thereby, Sarasota Opera is the only organization to have completed this achievement. [6]

Literature

DeRenzi has consulted on several books, including works by the renowned Verdi scholar George Martin, Verdi in America and Opera at the Bandstand. [8] He also consulted on numerous critical editions of operas such as Pagliacci , Otello and I due Foscari for the University of Chicago Press and Bärenreiter. He conducted the first performances of the critical edition of Un giorno di regno in 2013. [9] He has been a member of the Advisory Board for the American Institute for Verdi Studies and has compiled and edited two volumes of Verdi songs.

Personal life

DeRenzi is married to Stephanie Sundine, a former soprano, now stage director. Together they have a daughter. [10]

Recognitions

DeRenzi has been the recipient of many honors including Sarasota Mayor's Citation (2007), Leadership Award "Arts Champion" from the Sarasota Arts Alliance (2016), and One World Award from the Sarasota Sister Cities Association (2021). [11] He has advised on many publications and was listed as one of "Sarasota's 100 Most Powerful People". In 2016 he was made a Order of the Star of Italy for his contribution to Italian culture. [5] [11] [12]

References

  1. Stamets, Russell (November 13, 1989). "Seeing is believing: Conductor Victor DeRenzi goes from pit to podium with orchestra series" . St. Petersburg Times . p. 2D. Retrieved October 9, 2025.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. 1 2 "Victor Victorious". Sarasota Magazine. Retrieved 2025-10-06.
  3. "2019 Sarasota Opera LIBRETTO". Issuu. 2019-09-01. Retrieved 2025-10-06.
  4. ""Opera: De Renzi Leads 'Traviata'"". The New York Times. April 24, 1978. pp. Section C, Page 20. Retrieved October 6, 2025.
  5. 1 2 3 "Leadership". Sarasota Opera. Retrieved 2025-10-06.
  6. 1 2 "The Verdi Cycle". verdi. Retrieved 2025-10-06.
  7. "The Classical Review: Sarasota Opera soars with Verdi's underrated "I Lombardi"". theclassicalreview.com. Retrieved 2025-10-06.
  8. Martin, George W. (2011). Verdi in America: Oberto through Rigoletto. University of Rochester Press. pp. xxi. ISBN   978-1-58046-388-1.
  9. "South Florida Classical Review:di's delightful "Un giorno" fit for a king at Sarasota Opera". southfloridaclassicalreview.com. Retrieved 2025-10-06.
  10. "Francesca DeRenzi, Peter MacBeth (Published 2009)". 2009-10-31. Archived from the original on 2022-06-17. Retrieved 2025-10-06.
  11. 1 2 Scene, Sarasota (2021-08-17). "Sarasota Opera and Artistic Director Victor DeRenzi Receive One World Award - Sarasota Scene Magazine" . Retrieved 2025-10-06.
  12. Friedman, Nick (2016-06-14). "Victor DeRenzi knighted by Italian government". Your Observer. Retrieved 2025-10-06.