Sara Braga Simões (born 1975 in
Braga) is a
Portuguese operatic
soprano who has sung in the world premieres of seven 21st century
operas:
Carlos Azevedo's Mumadona, Nuno Côrte-Real's Banksters, Pedro Amaral's O Sonho, Jose Eduardo Rocha's Os fugitivos, Sofia Sousa Rocha's Inês Morre. Luís Soldado's Fado Olissiponense and
Luís Tinoco's Evil Machines.
Career
After receiving her diploma in singing from the Escola Superior de Música in
Porto, Sara Braga Simões trained for four years with the Estúdio de Ópera da Casa da Música in Porto. She made her operatic debut as Volpino in
Haydn's Lo speziale with the Orquestra de Câmara Musicare, conducted by Bertrand Broder.[1] In March 2004 she sang the leading role of Marta in the world premiere of José Eduardo Rocha's opera Os fugitivos (
Lisbon,
Teatro da Trindade), which was later broadcast on Portuguese television.[2] The following year, she won second prize in the 2005 Concurso Nacional de Canto
Luísa Todi singing competition.[3] Simões made her debut at the
Teatro Nacional de São Carlos as Lady-in-waiting in
Verdi's Macbeth in June 2007 and has since returned to the opera house as Pamina in a special young people's version of Mozart's The Magic Flute[4] and as a soloist in the concert inaugurating the theatre's 2007/2008 season.[5] The summer of 2007 also saw Simões singing in the premiere as a "work-in-progress" of Pedro Amaral's opera O sonho at the Culturgest arts centre in Porto.[6] On 12 January 2008, Simões sang in the world premiere of Evil Machines, an
opera composed by Luís Tinoco to a
libretto by
Terry Jones (Lisbon, São Luiz Municipal Theatre).[7] In 2010, she made the world debut of Pedro Amaral's opera 'O Sonho' in london, with London Sinfonietta. In the same year, she made her debut as Donna Elvira in Mozart's Don Giovanni. In 2011 she played the female leading role in Nuno Côrte-Real's opera 'Banskters' in Teatro Nacional de São Carlos, the Lisbon Opera House.
Recordings
In October 2008 Sara Braga Simões and pianist Luís Pipa recorded a CD of the complete works for voice and piano by 20th-century Portuguese composer,
Eurico Thomaz de Lima, to be released later in the year.[8] Simões also appears in Ópera aberta, a documentary film by Leonor Areal on the 2004 world premiere of Os fugitivos.[9]
Operatic roles
Pamina (Die Zauberflöte, Mozart) - Lisbon, Teatro Nacional de São Carlos
Susanna (Le mozze di Figaro, Mozart)
Zerlina (Don Giovanni, Mozart) -
Faro, Teatro Municipal de Faro
Gretel (Hänsel und Gretel, Humperdink)
Despina (Così fan tutte, Mozart)
The Governess (The Turn of the Screw, Britten)
Zerlina, (Don Giovanni, Mozart)
La Princesse (L'enfant e les sortilèges, Ravel)
Rowan (The Little Sweep, Britten)
Lauretta (La donna di génio volubile, Marcos Portugal)