Marie-Nicole Lemieux | The Canadian Encyclopedia

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Marie-Nicole Lemieux

Marie-Nicole, a singer with great versatility and an extensive range, began her career as a mezzo soprano, but later settled as a contralto.
Marie-Nicole Lemieux
(Photo Manuel Cohen, courtesy Marie Nicole Lemieux)

Marie-Nicole Lemieux

Marie-Nicole Lemieux. Contralto. Born Dolbeau-Mistassini, Que 26, June 1975; Voice graduate CMQ; hon. LLD. (Université de Québec à Chicoutimi), 2010.

Education

Marie-Nicole, a singer with great versatility and an extensive range, began her career as a mezzo soprano, but later settled as a contralto. Beginning in 1994, she studied voice with Rosaire Simard at the Conservatoire de musique à Saguenay in Chicoutimi, and after graduating at the highest level available at the time, she continued her musical studies under Marie Daveluy, initially at the Conservatoire de musique in Montréal and then privately.

Awards

Ironically Lemieux's early competition experience was not successful: in the 1999 CBC Competition for Young Performers she did not even advance to the final round. Then, in 2000, within three weeks, she won as many prizes: the prix Joseph Rouleau (first prize) and the Bourse Richard Verreau at the Jeunesses Musicales du Canada national competition; the Queen Fabiola (first) prize at the prestigious Queen Elizabeth International Music Competition (Brussels) in opera; and the Special Prize for Lieder at the same competition.

In 2001, she won the Canada Council's Virginia Moore prize (now the Virginia Parker prize). Other honours have included numerous Opus awards from the Conseil québecois de la musique (2001, 2003, 2005, 2011); the George Solti Prize (France, 2006); and a prize as Best Opera singer from the Académie Charles-Cros (France, 2010).

Opera

Lemieux made her Canadian opera debut as Cornelia in Handel's Giulio Cesare with the Canadian Opera Company in 2002, - awarded without audition after her Queen Elizabeth victory. She has also performed frequently with the Opéra de Montréal.

Lemieux has sung in most major opera houses in Europe including Berlin, Rotterdam, Geneva, Paris, Toulouse, Vienna, Frankfurt, and the Edinburgh and Glyndebourne Festivals. Her extensive roles range from Handel's Giulio Cesare and Vivaldi's Orlando Furioso (title roles in both); to Flosshilde in Wagner's Götterdämmerung, and Catherine in Honneger's Jeanne d'Arc au bucher. She has portrayed Miss Quickly in Verdi's Falstaff; Anna in Berlioz' Les Troyens, Geneviève in Pelléas and Méllisande, and many other roles.

Musical Collaborations

Lemieux has appeared frequently as soloist with orchestra and collaborated with the Orchestre Symphonique de Montréal (Kent Nagano, Charles Dutoit); I Musici de Montreal (Jean-Marie Zeitouni); Les Violons du Roy (Bernard Labadie) - their Mozart Requiem won a 2003 Juno for Classical album of the year; the Orchestre de la Francophonie in Québec City; the Ensemble Mateus (Jean Christophe Spinosi) which won best recording at the Victoire de la Music (Paris, 2005). She has appeared with conductors Bernard Haitink, Franz Paul Decker, Peter Oundjian, Richard Bradshaw, Sir Neville Mariner and others in repertoire the includes Bach, Beethoven, Brahms, Duparc, Elgar and Mahler.

Lemieux has performed extensively as recitalist in Canada and abroad, and has even demonstrated a natural flair for humour in specific concert performances. Among her musical collaborators have been harpsichordist Luc Beauséjour, pianist Michael MacMahon, and acclaimed French countertenor Phillipe Jaroussky. She has recorded for the labels Dorian, Analekta, Naïve (France), Deutsche Grammophon, and Virgin Classics.

Marie-Nicole Lemieux was named a Chevalier (Knight) in the Ordre de la Pléiade in 2012.

Further Reading

External Links