Tourangeau, (Marie Jeannine) Huguette
Tourangeau, (Marie Jeannine) Huguette
Tourangeau, (Marie Jeannine) Huguette, Canadian mezzo-soprano; b. Montreal, Aug. 12, 1940. She studied voice at the Montreal Cons. with Ruzena Herlinger, repertoire with Otto-Werner Mueller, and declamation with Roy Royal. In 1962 she made her debut in Monteverdi’s Vespro della Beata Virgine at the Montreal Festival; her operatic debut followed as Mercedes in Carmen in Montreal in 1964. She toured in the U.S. as a member of the Metropolitan Opera National Co. (1964-65); then appeared in Seattle, London, San Francisco, and Hamburg. On Nov. 28, 1973, she made her formal Metropolitan Opera debut in N.Y. as Nick-lausse in Les Contes d’Hoffmann, and returned in later seasons as a guest artist. In 1974 she sang at the Sydney Opera and made her debut at London’s Covent Garden as Elisabetta in Maria Stuarda in 1977. Her repertory included roles from French, German, and Italian operas.
—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire