Top 10 similar words or synonyms for guleghina

sintow    0.822420

baltsa    0.815820

damrau    0.811950

tomowa    0.811719

mingardo    0.806965

migenes    0.803077

kalaniemi    0.802800

karnilova    0.802369

netrebko    0.800828

toczyska    0.797133

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for guleghina

Article Example
Maria Guleghina Her international debut came in 1987 as Amelia (opposite Luciano Pavarotti's Riccardo) in a production of "Un ballo in maschera" at La Scala. Leading roles in "I due Foscari", "Manon Lescaut", and "Tosca" followed, and soon she was engaged to perform in Vienna, Munich, Hamburg, London, and other major European opera houses. She made her debut at the Paris Opéra in 1995, in the killer-role of Abigaille in "Nabucco".
Maria Guleghina Guleghina has received numerous prizes and awards, she is an Honorary Board member of the International Paralympic Committee as well as a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador.
Maria Guleghina Guleghina has also performed in Japan many times (twice as a part of La Scala's tours of Japan) and has a fan base there. She is considered by most as one of the leading dramatic sopranos of her generation. Though her technique is inconsistent, she is largely admired for her warm and rich voice, strong stage presence, and absolute dramatic commitment to her roles on the stage. She sang the opening aria (Aida) at the official opening of the new National Opera House in Oslo. Throughout November 2009, she starred as Turandot in the opera "Turandot" at the Met in New York. She represented Russia by singing during the closing ceremony of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver during the handover of the Olympic flag. Ms Guleghina also opened the 2014 Paralympic Games in Sochi, singing on top of an Icebreaker that carried her though the Fischt Stadium.
Maria Guleghina She is a member of the Honorary Board of the International Paralympic Committee. She sang during the 2014 Winter Paralympics opening ceremony.
Maria Guleghina Maria Guleghina was born in Odessa, Ukraine (during the Soviet Era), to an Armenian father and a Ukrainian mother, where she studied voice at the Music Conservatory with Evgeny Nikolaevich Ivanov (under whose tutorship she remained even after graduation).