Laure Cinti-Damoreau


Laura Cinti-Damoreau was a French soprano particularly associated with Rossini roles.

Life and career

Born Laure-Cinthie Montalant in Paris, she studied in Paris with Charles-Henri Plantade, tenor Giulio Marco Bordogni and soprano Angelica Catalani, who devised her stage name of Cinti by italianizing her middle name and engaged her at the Théâtre-Italien in Paris. There she made her professional debut in Una cosa rara by Vicente Martin y Soler on 8 January 1816. When Catalani's management went bankrupt in 1818, she was reengaged by the new company that had been formed at the Théâtre Louvois, where her roles included Cherubino and Rosina. In 1822 she appeared at the King's Theatre in London. After complementary studies with composer Gioachino Rossini, she sang in the Paris premiere of Elisabetta, regina d'Inghilterra, and created the role of Countess Folleville in Il viaggio a Reims.
She made her debut at the Paris Opera in 1825 in a benefit performance of Louis-Sébastien Lebrun's Le rossignol, and was engaged the following year as a member of the theatre's company. At the Opera she became the leading lady in Rossini’s French production; Moïse et Pharaon, Le siège de Corinthe, Le comte Ory, Guillaume Tell, and also took part in the creation of notably; Auber's La muette de Portici, and Meyerbeer's Robert le diable. In 1836, when she felt that the rising star of Cornelie Falcon might undermine her leading position at the Opera, she moved to the Opéra-Comique where she appeared in new operas by Auber. She left the Opéra-Comique's company in 1841 when Auber broke his promise to entrust her with the leading role in his new opera Les diamants de la couronne, giving it instead to Anna Thillon, for whom he had a passion. Thereafter she continued to sing in concerts for some years also touring America in 1844.
She taught at the Paris Conservatory from 1833 until 1856, and published a "Méthode de chant" in 1849, still available today as "Classic Bel Canto Technique".
She also produced a notable series of "notebooks" where she wrote down in music notation her own embellishments to key sections of many roles and arias she performed. These notebooks are currently kept at the Lilly Library and are a major primary source for the study of bel-canto performance practice and Rossini scholarship.
She was married to tenor Vincent-Charles Damoreau from 1828 until 1834, with whom she had a daughter, Maria Cinti-Damoreau, also a soprano, who married the librarian-composer Jean-Baptiste Weckerlin.
She died in Chantilly.