Italian soprano Barbara Frittoli established a major international operatic career in the 1990s and is rated as one of the leading lirico-spinto sopranos of her generation.
The native of Milan studied at that city's Giuseppe Verdi Conservatory of Music, graduating with honors. After winning several international competitions, she began her operatic career in 1989 at the Teatro Communale in Florence in Bucchi's Il Giuoco del Barone. She soon appeared at the Festival Donizetti in Bergamo and at the Carlo Felice Theater in Geneva.
The year 1992 was one of major debuts for Frittoli, during which she appeared in Carmen in Philadelphia, in Naples in La Bohème, at La Scala in Milan in Beatrice di Tenda, and at Santa Cecilia in Rome in a rare production of Schubert's Rosamunde. The next year she played in Carmen (Micaëla) and La Bohème (Mimì) at the Vienna State Opera and made an impression in Baroque opera in Pergolesi's Flaminio at the Teatro San Carlo in Naples.
Mimì and Micaëla were her roles in her first season with the Metropolitan Opera in New York, and she was Micaëla when she sang at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden in London.
She has also appeared in Ferrara, La Monnaie in Brussels, the Opéra Bastille in Paris (as Donna Elvira in Mozart's Don Giovanni), the Teatro Communale of Florence, and the Regio of Turin.
She toured with the Maggio Musicale of Florence as Liù in Puccini's Turandot when it took its spectacular production to China. This included the famous performance known as "Turandot in the Forbidden City," which has been recorded under Zubin Mehta's direction as a compact disc and a DVD on the RCA label.
Other leading operas in her repertory include Le nozze di Figaro (Countess), Così fan tutte (Fiordiligi), La Clemenza di Tito (Vitellia), Otello (Desdemona), Falstaff (Alice Ford), Il Trovatore (Leonora), and Simon Boccanegra (Amelia). She was invited to participate in the opening production of the renovated Royal Opera House in London in 1999 as Alice Ford.
Conductors with whom she has worked in opera and on the concert stage include Claudio Abbado, Lorin Maazel, Sir Charles Mackerras, Riccardo Muti, Georges Prêtre, Daniele Gatti, Antonio Pappano, Sir Colin Davis, Sir Andrew Davis, Semyon Bychkov, and Riccardo Chailly.