Lucy Hall

Lucy Hall
  • Le Nozze di Figaro – Susanna
  • Der Rosenkavalier – Sophie von Faninal

 

Lucy Hall is from Nottinghamshire. She completed her training at the National Opera Studio and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama. Operatic engagements include Konstanze (Die Entführung aus dem Serail) and Mathilde (Elisabetta) with English Touring Opera, Susanna and Barbarina in Le Nozze di Figaro for Scottish Opera, Jen in the award-winning 4.48 Psychosis and Lila in The Firework Maker’s Daughter for the Royal Opera, Galatea (Acis and Galatea) for English National Opera, Sandrina (La Finta Giardiniera) at Opéra de Toulon and Grand Théâtre du Luxembourg, Marzelline (Fidelio) and Morgana (Alcina) for Longborough Festival Opera, Echo (Ariadne auf Naxos) for Scottish Opera and Opera Holland Park, Zerlina (Don Giovanni) for English Touring Opera, Euridice in Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice with Scottish Opera, Susanna (Le Nozze di Figaro) and Micaëla (Carmen) with Diva Opera and Barbarina (Le nozze di Figaro) at the Festival d’Aix. She also created the rôle of Asia in Glyndebourne’s Jerwood Young Artists’ Wakening Shadow, conducted by Vladimir Jurowski.

In concert, Lucy has appeared with many leading orchestras. With the BBC Philharmonic she sang Hadyn’s Die Schöpfung, Rossini’s Petite Messe Solennelle, Marzelline in Fidelio and Schubert’s Einsamkeit under HK Gruber, later reprised with Juanjo Mena. With the London Symphony Orchestra, she sang in Nielsen’s Symphony No 3 conducted by Sir Colin Davis and the Bridesmaid in Der Freischütz. She then returned to sing Flora in The Turn of the Screw in a cast handpicked by the late Sir Colin Davis. She toured Israel performing Bach Cantata’s with the Israel Camerata and sang in the Good Friday Messiah at the Royal Albert Hall with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra.

Lucy has collaborated with the conductors Sir Colin Davis, Leonardo García Alarcón, Juanjo Mena, Richard Farnes, HK Gruber, Vladimir Jurowski, William Christie, Gérard Korsten, Benjamin Pope, Raphaël Pichon, Jérémie Rhorer, Andreas Spering and Takuo Yuasa.