Roxana Briban was a well-known Romanian operatic soprano committed suicide she was 39,.[1]
Born in Bucharest, Roxana Briban first became interested in music at the age of six, when she began to sing and play the violin, soon becoming a soloist of the Romanian Radio Children's Choir, which supports over 300 concerts in Romania and abroad. She attended the George Enescu Music High School in Bucharest, which she left in 1995. Later graduating from the Bucharest National University of Music, Briban received awards from the Romanian Musical Forum and the Romanian Radio Broadcasting Company (SRR).[2] She made her debut as a soloist with the Romanian National Opera in 2000 as the Contessa in Mozart's The Marriage of Figaro.[3][4]
(28 October 1971 - 20 November 2010)
She made her international debut at the Vienna State Opera in 2003 in Bizet's Carmen[3] as Michaela, and she continued to appear there until her final season in 2009-2010, when she played the roles of Donna Elvira in Don Giovanni, Mimi in La Boheme, Amelia Grimaldi in Simon Boccanegra, Countess in The Marriage of Figaro and Tatiana in Eugene Onegin. She also appeared at the Vienna Volksoper, Deutsche Oper Berlin, the Théâtre du Capitole, the Teatro Municipal de Santiago in Chile and the Muziektheater in Amsterdam.[2].
Briban's lirico-spinto soprano voice allowed her to play a wide variety of roles, from Leila in The Pearl Fishers, Micaela in Carmen, Helena in Mephistopheles, or as the Countess in The Marriage of Figaro, Donna Elvira and Donna Anna in Don Giovanni and Violetta Valery in La Traviata, Alice Ford in Falstaff, Amelia Grimaldi in Simon Boccanegra and Aida in Aida, Elisabetta de Valois in Don Carlo, as well as playing the roles of Mimi in La Boheme and Cio-Cio San in Madama Butterfly.
Also in her repertoire were vocal-symphonic works by Bach, Handel, Beethoven, Brahms, Mendelssohn, Mahler, Shostakovich and Hindemith.
Her last public appearance took place at the Royal Palace in Warsaw in Poland, where she performed in a recital in celebration of Romania's National Day, on 1 December 2009.[5]
She committed suicide, following a period of depression caused (according to her husband Alexandru Briban, whom she married in 1997) by the termination of her contract with the National Opera in June 2009. He stated that she had attempted suicide on other occasions and had been receiving treatment.[2][6]
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