Maria Knapik,
who made her soprano debut at the age of three-and-a-half in her
native Poland, made her U.S. debut on March 26, 2002, at New
York's Carnegie Hall in an all-Beethoven program with the New York
Grand Orchestra and a two-hundred-ten-voice chorus conducted by
Vincent La Selva on the 175th anniversary-to-the-day of the
composer's death. At that time she also
sang the title role of Puccini’s “Manon Lescaut” and of Verdi’s
rarely-heard “Alzira.” Most recently she performed with the New
York Grand Opera as Suor Angelica in Suor Angelica and
Nedda in Pagliacci during the 2006 summer season.
Ms. Knapik is the eighth daughter of the celebrated Polish Knapik
family, often compared to Austria’s Von Trapps. From a very early
age, as part of “The Eight Knapik Sisters,” Ms. Knapik performed
throughout
Europe
and the
British Isles. Ms. Knapik graduated from Poland’s Karol
Szymanowski Academy of Vocal and Acting Arts, and went on to win a
scholarship at the Britten-Pears School in Aldeburgh, England. She
also studied voice in
Canada
at the Wilfried Laurier University and in 1996 was named winner of
Montreal’s
National Debut Competition for Young Artists, which led to her
debut on the SRC, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation’s French
Radio Network. With Ottawa’s Opera Lyra, she has been featured in
Mozart’s “Le Nozze di Figaro” and in Verdi’s “La Traviata” and “Rigoletto.”
In 1998 she was named first prize-winner at the Accademia Musicale
de Chigiana in
Siena;
her debut recital in Italy which was televised nationally. In
2000 she made her Czech debut as Musetta in Puccini’s “La Bohème”
and as Euridice in Glück’s “Orfeo ed Euridice.” In 2002, she
performed the title role of a rarely-performed Stanislaw Moniuszko
opera, “The Countess,” broadcast nationwide in her native Poland
by the Polish State Radio from
Warsaw.