Alice Zeppilli (28 August 1885 – 14 September 1969) was a French operatic soprano of Italian heritage who had an active international singing career from 1901 to 1930. The pinnacle of her career was in the United States where she enjoyed great popularity between 1906 and 1914; particularly in the cities of Chicago, New York, and Philadelphia. She was popular in Monte Carlo where she performed frequently from 1904–19 and later worked as a singing teacher after her retirement from the stage. She made only one recording, a phonograph cylinder for Columbia Records consisting of the Gavotte from Jules Massenet's Manon and Olympia's Doll Aria from Jacques Offenbach's The Tales of Hoffmann.[1]
^"Zeppilli, Alice". Operissimo (in German). Retrieved 23 September 2020., based on Musik in Geschichte und Gegenwart
AliceZeppilli (28 August 1885 – 14 September 1969) was a French operatic soprano of Italian heritage who had an active international singing career from...
Paris with Alberto de Gorostiaga [es]. She later studied singing with AliceZeppilli in New York. On October 15, 1930, Pons married her first husband, Mesritz...
(1904–09) and then as a private tutor. One of her pupils was soprano AliceZeppilli. She left a few recordings dating from 1903 and 1904, for French Fonotipia...
until she was a teenager. In New York she studied singing with soprano AliceZeppilli. After completing high school, Morrow was cast in the musical Shooting...
Santoliva-Villani. Luisa's mother, a contralto, was the aunt of the famous soprano AliceZeppilli. Villani moved with her parents to Milan, Italy at a young age, and...
Alessandro Bonci, Charles Dalmorès, Giovanni Polese, Maurice Renard, AliceZeppilli, and Nicola Zerola. Many of them made their American debuts for Hammerstein...
Myrna Sharlow, Tarquinia Tarquini, Luisa Tetrazzini, Carolina White, AliceZeppilli, and Nicola Zerola among others. After a season with no performances...