Arthur Carron
Arthur Carron (12 December 1900 – 10 May 1967) was an English operatic tenor.
Carron was born in Swindon, United Kingdom. In his early career, he was also known as Arthur Cox which was and remained his given legal name.[1]
Arthur Carron studied under Florence Easton and made his operatic debut at the Old Vic as Tannhäuser in 1929. In 1931 he became the Old Vic company's leading tenor when it moved to Sadler's Wells Theatre. His roles at Sadler's Wells included Fra Diavolo, Manrico of Il trovatore, Radames of Aida, Cavaradossi of Tosca, and Otello. In 1936 he made his Metropolitan Opera debut as Canio in Pagliacci. He remained at the Metropolitan until 1946, creating the role of Nolan in Damrosch's The Man Without a Country in 1937. Other roles there included Siegmund of Die Walküre, Tristan of Tristan und Isolde, Florestan of Fidelio, and Herod of Salome. The last six years of his career were spent at Covent Garden where he retired from in 1952.
He married Gladys née Richards, they had two children, Barbara and Byron.
References
Notes
- Wimbush, Roger (July 1967). "Here and There / Obituary". Gramophone. p. 23. Archived from the original on 3 March 2012. Retrieved 28 November 2009.
General
- Today In Classical Music History - 12 December - A website giving various information on events that happened on 12 December in different years, which was Carron's date of birth in 1900. (retrieved on 9 February 2008)