Lesley Garrett
Lesley Garrett | |
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Born |
Thorne, Doncaster, West Riding of Yorkshire, England | 10 April 1955
Genres | Classical, classical-crossover |
Occupation(s) | Singer–songwriter, musician, broadcaster, media personality |
Years active | 1979–present |
Labels |
Decca Universal Classics and Jazz Universal Music International |
Website | Official site |
Lesley Garrett CBE (born 10 April 1955) is an English soprano singer, musician, broadcaster and media personality. She is noted for being at home in opera and "crossover music".[1]
Early life
Garrett was born in the town of Thorne, near Doncaster, South Yorkshire into a musical family. She attended Thorne Fieldside Infant and Junior Schools and Thorne Grammar School, where she performed in school plays and musicals and passed 10 O-levels and an A-level in music.[2] As she grew up she inherited her family's love of music. Her grandfather Colin Wall was a classical pianist; her father Derek worked as a railway signalman and then as a schoolteacher at Hatfield Woodhouse Primary School, eventually going on to become a headmaster. They lived nearby just south of the village; her mother Margaret (née Wall) was a talented singing seamstress and became the school secretary at Lesley's primary school. She has two sisters, Jill and Kay, one step-sister, Louise, and two step-brothers, Robert and Nicholas. When Lesley was 17 she washed dishes at the officers' mess at nearby RAF Lindholme as a summer job.[3] While a student at the Royal Academy of Music she worked as a life model, something of which she is still proud.[4]
Music
Garrett has had an extensive music career. A graduate of the Royal Academy of Music, she won the Decca Prize of the Kathleen Ferrier Award in 1979, thereby launching her career.[5] Her professional debut, in 1979, was as Amor in Orontea at the music festival in Batignano. She subsequently sang, in 1980, Alice in Le comte Ory at the London Coliseum and Dorinda in Orlando at the Wexford Festival, in 1981, also at Wexford, the title role in Zaide, in 1982 Sophie in Werther with Opera North and in 1984 Damigella in L'incoronazione di Poppea at Glyndebourne.[6] From 1984, as principal soprano at English National Opera, she became well known for her performances in productions of the operas Serse, Le Nozze di Figaro, Così fan tutte and Die Fledermaus.[1]
Garrett has performed across the world, in countries throughout Europe, and also the United States, Australia, Russia, Brazil, Japan, Malaysia, Taiwan and South Korea. She has also sung opera and pop classics with Bryan Ferry, Eurythmics and Mick Hucknall to celebrate the arrival of the new century on Millennium Eve in the grounds at the Royal Observatory and National Maritime Museum.[7]
She played the lead role of Hanna Glawari in the Welsh National Opera's production of The Merry Widow, which toured the United Kingdom in 2005. In 2006 she sang the role of Mother Abbess in Andrew Lloyd Webber's revival of The Sound of Music. In 2008, she joined the cast of Carousel as Nettie Fowler. The production toured the UK and then transferred to the West End's Savoy Theatre. In 2013 she returned to opera with the monodrama La Voix humaine for Opera North.
Garrett is a member of the board of the English National Opera.
In 2002 Garrett was appointed a CBE for her services to music.
Performances at sporting events
Garrett has performed at several FA Cup Finals, including the 2000 Final, the last to be held at the old Wembley Stadium,[1] the 2007 final held at new Wembley Stadium (alongside Sarah Brightman), and the 2008 Final (alongside Katherine Jenkins).
She also sang the British national anthem on the Champs-Élysées in Paris in 2012 after Bradley Wiggins became the first Briton to win the Tour de France, though her performance was not universally appreciated.[8][9]
Television and radio
In 2004 Garrett was one of the participants in the first series of the celebrity talent contest Strictly Come Dancing; she and her dance partner Anton du Beke finished third. In the same year she took part in the BBC's Who Do You Think You Are?, a genealogy documentary series, in which she journeyed through her home town of Thorne in search of her family history. Garrett was delighted to discover that the musical gene stretched far back and had run in her family for several generations.[10] Garrett is a veteran of Dictionary Corner on the Channel 4 game show Countdown and in June 2005 it was thought that she was to become one of the show's rotating guest hosts while Richard Whiteley was recovering from illness. After Whiteley's death, however, the plan for rotating guest hosts was abandoned and Des Lynam took the role for the next fifteen months. Garrett did not appear on Countdown again until October 2009.
On Christmas Day 2004 BBC Two broadcast Lesley Garrett – Music from the Movies, co-starring her with Ruthie Henshall, Michael McCarthy with the backing of the Opera North orchestra.[11] The programme was recorded at the Opera In The Park concert which had taken place in the grounds of Temple Newsam, West Yorkshire on 19 July 2003.[12]
In February 2005 Garrett was selected to be one of the judges for BBC's Comic Relief does Fame Academy, and in May she hosted and sang at the 2005 Classical BRIT Awards at the Royal Albert Hall on ITV. In 2006 Garrett was a regular panellist on the ITV daytime show Loose Women; she featured there again in 2009 and 2010, before returning in May 2014. Garrett also appeared on This Morning and Loose Women in 2007, to perform a song from her latest album When I Fall in Love. She also continued the post as a judge on Comic Relief Does Fame Academy in 2007.[13] Garrett currently presents a show on the British classical radio station Classic FM.
From February 2008 Garrett presented the show Lesley Garrett's 20 Operas to See Before You Die on Sky Arts.[14]
Over four weeks, beginning on 30 November 2008, she presented the Sunday morning BBC1 programme Christmas Voices.[15]
In November 2010 she joined a long line of panellists on Five's The Wright Stuff.
Along with Larry Lamb, Garrett presented a short BBC series entitled When Royals Wed to celebrate the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton in April 2011.
On 30 May 2014 she made her return to the ITV daytime show Loose Women. It was announced on the programme that she would become a regular panellist again.
Personal life
Garrett married in May 1991: her husband, Peter,[16] is a GP in Muswell Hill. They have a son, Jeremy, and a daughter, Chloe. The family lives in North London.
Politically, she is an avid supporter of the Labour Party.[17]
Garrett featured in an episode of the BBC's popular genealogy programme, Who Do You Think You Are?, in which she explored her family's Yorkshire origins. She found out about the musicians in her family: her maternal grandfather made a living playing the piano with a small orchestra that accompanied silent films at cinemas in and around Sheffield. A great-grandfather was a travelling musician, who travelled across Northern England in the 19th century, playing to workers in pubs and clubs. During World War I he entertained troops on the piano.[18]
Discography
As a recording artist, Garrett has released eleven solo albums. Many of them have been successful, receiving gold and silver status. Soprano in Red received the Gramophone Award for "Best-selling Classical Artist of the Year". Garrett was also a featured artist on the platinum selling "Perfect Day" single released by the BBC in aid of Children in Need.[7]
Garrett created the role of Cathy in the London studio recording of Bernard J. Taylor's operatic version of Wuthering Heights, which also featured Dave Willetts, Bonnie Langford and other leading singers from the British musical stage. Her rendition of "I Belong to the Earth" was included on two of her solo albums.
Solo albums
- Studio[19]
- A Soprano at the Movies (1991)
- Prima Donna (1992)
- Simple Gifts (1994)
- The Lesley Garrett Album (1994) – UK No. 25
- Soprano in Red (1995) – No. 59
- Soprano in Hollywood (1996) – UK No. 53
- A Soprano Inspired (1997) – UK No. 48
- Lesley Garrett (1998) – UK No. 34
- I Will Wait For You (2000) – UK No. 28
- Travelling Light (2001) – UK No. 75
- The Singer (2002)
- So Deep is the Night (2003)
- When I Fall in Love (2007) – UK No. 11
- Amazing Grace (Lesley Garrett album) (2008) – UK No. 50
- A North Country Lass (2012) – UK No. 66
- Centre Stage: The Musicals Album (2015)
Compilation albums
- The Soprano's Greatest Hits (1997) – UK No. 53
- The Best of Lesley Garrett (2004)
Solo DVDs
- Lesley Garrett (1998)
- I Will Wait For You (2000)
- Notes From The Heart (2003)
- Desert Dreams (2004)
- Lesley Garrett: Music from the Movies (2006)
- Lesley Garrett Live At Christmas (2008)
Bibliography
- Notes From a Small Soprano – 2000
- Lesley Garrett: My Autobiography* – 2000
- Lesley Garrett Song Collection – 2001
* Reprint of Notes From a Small Soprano with few edits. Also the title of some copies of the audiobook.
References
- 1 2 3 "UK | Lesley Garrett: Doncaster's own diva". BBC News. 31 December 2001. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
- ↑ Daily Mail Weekend Interview. 12 May 2012, p6
- ↑ Liz Phillips (13 June 2007). "Lesley Garrett: My money". This is Money. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
- ↑ Paton, Maureen (3 June 2012). "This LIfe, Lesley arrett | Get up and go". Mygetupandgo.co.uk. Retrieved 10 August 2014.
- ↑ "The Kathleen Ferrier Awards – Winners". Retrieved 6 March 2008.
- ↑ Adam, Nicky (ed) (1993). Who's Who in British Opera. Aldershot: Scolar Press. p. 98. ISBN 0-859-67894-6.
- 1 2 Archived 22 October 2006 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Christiansen, Rupert (23 July 2012). "Lesley Garrett's ghastly rendition of the National Anthem at Tour de France ceremony". The Telegraph.
- ↑ Losh, Jack (23 July 2012). "Tour de Farce opera solo leaves Wiggins in pain". The Sun.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are? with Lesley Garrett". Who Do You Think You Are?. 2004-11-30. BBC. BBC Two.
- ↑ Garrett, Lesley; Henshall, Ruthie; McCarthy, Michael (2004). "Lesley Garrett – Music from the Movies". BBC Two. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
- ↑ Garrett, Lesley; Henshall, Ruthie; McCarthy, Michael (2004). Lesley Garrett – Music from the Movies (Media notes). Eagle Rock Entertainment. ASIN B00ERVSFFA. Barcode: 5036369804497.
- ↑ Archived 13 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Archived 19 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Archived 30 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ "Fame & Fortune: Opera singer Lesley Garrett". Telegraph. 24 February 2009. Retrieved 14 May 2012.
- ↑ White, Michael (30 September 2009). "The floor show: Your guide to the Labour conference". The Guardian. Retrieved 9 February 2013.
- ↑ "Who Do You Think You Are?". BBC. Retrieved 7 August 2013.
- ↑ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 222. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
External links
- Lesley Garrett's Official Website
- Official Record Label Website
- Lesley Garrett's section on ClassicalX
- 2006 article on Lesley Garrett on Theatre.com
- Lesley Garrett's page on Classic FM
- Lesley Garrett at the Internet Movie Database
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