Maureen Guy

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Born
Ruth Maureen Guy

(1932-07-10)10 July 1932
Penclawdd, Wales
Died14 February 2015(2015-02-14) (aged 82)
OccupationSinger
Maureen Guy
Born
Ruth Maureen Guy

(1932-07-10)10 July 1932
Penclawdd, Wales
Died14 February 2015(2015-02-14) (aged 82)
Alma materGuildhall School of Music and Drama
OccupationSinger
Years active1950s–1998
Spouse
(m. 1958; died 2015)
Children2

Ruth Maureen Guy (10 July 1932 – 14 February 2015) was a Welsh mezzo-soprano singer. The youngest of six children of a coal miner, she was influenced by church music in her youth. Guy's debut came at Sadler's Wells Theatre and several of her early engagements were with the London Mozart Players. She became principal mezzo at the Royal Opera House in 1963 and made the first of several appearance at The Proms that same year. In 1969, Guy was selected as one of fifteen soloists to sing at the Investiture of the Prince of Wales and later joined the Opern- und Schauspielhaus Frankfurt in 1972. She took up a teaching position with the Royal Welsh College of Music & Drama which she retired from in 1998 to teach privately at her home in Sageston.

She was born Ruth Maureen Guy on 10 July 1932 in the Welsh village of Penclawdd, west of Swansea.[1][2] She was the youngest of six children of a coal miner, who died while Guy was in her early childhood.[3] Guy attended school in the nearby village of Gowerton. She became influenced in music with church music performed at the nearby Bethel chapel and sang at the National Eisteddfod.[1] At the age of 18, she won a Glamoran Scholarship to study at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama.[3] While at the school, she earned praise from The Times's music critic for her account of the aria "Inflammatus" from Antonín Dvořák's orchestra Stabat Mater in December 1954.[4] Guy focused on her studies,[3] and made the finals of the 1955 Kathleen Ferrier Award.[4] She earned second prize in the competition,[5] and Garry Humphreys of The Independent wrote that her "rich and expressive contralto" gained respect.[4] Guy was awarded the Mary Cantell Oratorio Scholarship, the Hendon Music Prize and the triannual Worshipful Company of Musicians Silver Cup.[6] She graduated in 1957.[2]

Career

Later life and death

References

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