Haizinger, Anton

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Haizinger, Anton

Haizinger, Anton, esteemed Austrian tenor; b. Wilfersdorf, March 14, 1796; d. Karlsruhe, Dec. 31, 1869. He studied harmony with Wölkert and voice with Mozzati in Vienna, and later was a student of Salieri. In 1821 he made his operatic debut as Gianetto in La gazza ladra at the Theater an der Wien. Weber chose him to create the role of Adolar in Euryanthe (Vienna, Oct. 25, 1823). After engagements in Prague, Pressburg, Frankfurt am Main, Mannheim, and Stuttgart, he was a member of the Théâtre-Italien in Paris (1829–30) and of Covent Garden in London (1832–33). Following appearances in St. Petersburg (1835) and Vienna (1838), he settled in Karlsruhe and ran his own singing school. He was the author of a manual on singing. Haizinger’s most distinguished roles were Mozart’s Tamino, Beethoven’s Florestan, and Weber’s Max.

—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire