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Vasyl Slipak

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Template:Eastern Slavic name

Vasyl Slipak
Василь Ярославович Сліпак
On Independence Day of Ukraine (August 24) 2014 in Paris
BornDecember 20, 1974
Lviv, Ukraine
DiedJune 29, 2016 (aged 41)
Luhanske, Ukraine
OccupationOpera singer
Years active1994–2016
Websitewww.wassylslipak.com

Vasyl Yaroslavovych Slipak (Template:Lang-uk, December 20, 1974 – June 29, 2016) was a Ukrainian baritone opera singer. From 1994 he frequently performed in France at such venues as Paris Opera and Opéra Bastille.[1] For his opera performance, Slipak received several awards, including "Best Male Performance" for the Toreador Song.[1]

Opera career

Born in 1974 in Lviv Oblast, Slipak liked to sing since his childhood.[1] At the age of 11, Slipak joined the Lviv children's choir group Dudarik. After that, he continued his education at the Lviv Conservatory. During his education, Slipak participated in a vocal contest in the French city of Clermont, winning the contest. In 1996, Slipak received an invitation to perform at Opéra Bastille in Paris. In 1997 Slipak graduated from the Lysenko Music Academy in Lviv and then was invited to the Paris Opera where he became an opera singer.[2] By 2011, he was at the top of his field, winning the prize for best male performer at the Armel Opera Competition and Festival in Szeged, Hungary, for his rendering of the Toreador Song from the opera Carmen.[3]

Repertoire

  • Escamillo / «Carmen» / Georges Bizet
  • Figaro / «The Marriage of Figaro» / Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  • Ramfis / «Aida» / Giuseppe Verdi
  • Boris Godunov / «Boris Godunov» / Modest Mussorgsky
  • Igor Svyatoslavich / «Prince Igor» / Alexander Borodin
  • Prince Gremin / «Eugene Onegin» / Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky
  • Il Commendatore (Don Pedro), Masetto / «Don Giovanni» / Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  • Lindorf, Dapertutto, Coppélius, Miracle / «The Tales of Hoffmann» / Jacques Offenbach
  • Sparafucile / «Rigoletto» / Giuseppe Verdi
  • Sarastro, Speaker of the temple, Three priests / «The Magic Flute» / Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  • Der Tod (Death) / «Der Kaiser von Atlantis» / Viktor Ullmann
  • Don Giovanni / «Don Giovanni» / Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  • Colline / «La bohème» / Giacomo Puccini
  • Méphistophélès / «Faust» / Charles Gounod
  • Banco / «Macbeth» / Giuseppe Verdi
  • Mainfroid, a Sicilian, adherent of Procida / «Les vêpres siciliennes» / Giuseppe Verdi
  • Philippe II / «Don Carlos» / Giuseppe Verdi
  • Basilio / «The Barber of Seville» / Gioachino Rossini
  • Ralph / «La jolie fille de Perth» / Georges Bizet
  • Count Rodolfo / «La sonnambula» / Vincenzo Bellini
  • Don Alfonso / «Così fan tutte» / Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart
  • Demon / «The Demon» / Anton Rubinstein

Death

Following the outbreak of the pro-Russian insurgency in Donbass, Slipak returned to Ukraine and participated in the 2014 Ukrainian revolution.[1] In 2015, Slipak joined the fights against pro-Russian insurgents as a member of the 7th Battalion of the Volunteer Ukrainian Corps of the Right Sector. He took the military call sign Mif, a reference to his favorite aria of Mephistopheles from the opera Faust.[1] After the war in Donbass, Slipak planned to continue his career in Paris.

On 29 June 2016, at approximately 6 a.m., Slipak was killed by a sniper shot near Luhanske.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Василий Слипак: биография оперного певца, который погиб за Украину" (in Russian). RBC. 29 June 2016. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  2. ^ "Ukrainian Opera Singer Killed While Fighting In Eastern Ukraine". RFERL. June 29, 2016. Retrieved June 29, 2016.
  3. ^ "Wassyl Slipak, Who Left Paris Opera for Ukraine War, Dies at 41", The New York Times