January 13, 1947 Recital, Milton High School Auditorium, Sunbury, Pennsylvania. Lanza received “thunderous” applause at times for his singing, which included arias from Tosca, “Thine Alone,” and “O Sole Mio,” and performed a number of encores. Otto Lehmann accompanied him on the piano. [A review can be read here.]
January 18, 1947 Kiel Auditorium, St. Louis. Joint concert with Frances Yeend and the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra; Vladimir Golschmann conducted. [A review can be read here.]
January 19, 1947. Kiel Auditorium, St. Louis. Second joint concert with Yeend and the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra; Vladimir Golschmann conducted. [A review can be read here.]
March 24, 1947. Recital, Elks Club, Allentown. In this short, mostly song, recital for the Allentown Community Concerts Association, Lanza performed “The House on the Hill,” “Thine Alone,” “Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise,” “Lolita,” “E Lucevan le Stelle” from Tosca, and “I’m Falling in Love with Someone.” Kary Y. Donecker accompanied Lanza on the piano. A review of this very-well received performance can be read here.
April 14, 1947. Recital, State Teachers' College Auditorium, Shippensburg, PA. The pianist was Constantine Callinicos, and this was the first occasion on which the two worked together. Callinicos would later conduct Lanza’s operatic recordings for RCA and his MGM version of The Student Prince, among other things, and also serve as his pianist in his recitals from 1949 to 1951 and again in 1958.
April 28, 1947. Informal recital, Mitchell Inn, Middletown, New York. This was a campaign launch for the Community Concerts Association, whose Eastern Division Manager, concert pianist Lawrence Bernhardt, accompanied Lanza as he performed, among other things, "The House on the Hill," "Tell Me, Oh Blue Blue Sky," "Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise," "Thine Alone," and "E Lucevan le Stelle" from Tosca. The Middletown Times Herald reported the next day that, "Lanza revealed a thrilling and richly rewarding voice" to his delighted audience. [Review here.]
June 24 1947. “Romberg-Herbert Festival.” Concert with soprano Carolyn Long, New Orleans Municipal Auditorium; Emanuel Balaban, conductor.
June 26, 1947. “Romberg-Herbert Festival.” Concert with Carolyn Long, New Orleans Municipal Auditorium; Emanuel Balaban, conductor. [Review here.]
June 27, 1947. “Romberg-Herbert Festival.” Third and final concert with Carolyn Long, New Orleans Municipal Auditorium; Emanuel Balaban, conductor.
July 8, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert with Frances Yeend and bass-baritone George London, “Music Under the Stars” Symphony Orchestra, Washington Park, Milwaukee. Jerzy Bojanowski conducted. [See review here.] This was the first concert of a ten-and-a-half month tour featuring Lanza, Yeend, and London as the Bel Canto Trio. Their mostly operatic program was a demanding one, and Lanza’s contributions included two duets with Yeend (“Parigi, O Cara” from Verdi’s La Traviata and “Nobody Could Love You More” from Lehár’s Paganini); the duet “Ecco il Magico Liquore” from Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’Amore with George London; the arias “E Lucevan le Stelle,” “La Donna è Mobile,” and “M’Apparì” from Puccini’s Tosca, Verdi’s Rigoletto and Von Flotow’s Martha, respectively; trios from Verdi’s I Lombardi (“Qual Voluttà Trascorrere”) and Simon Boccanegra (“Perdon, Perdon, Amelia”), the Prison Scene from Gounod’s Faust, and the Farewell Scene from Mozart’s The Magic Flute.
July 19, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Grant Park, Chicago. Grant Park Symphony Orchestra, Paul Breisach, conductor. An audience of 55,000 attended.
July 20, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Grant Park, Chicago. Grant Park Symphony Orchestra, Paul Breisach, conductor. Word of mouth and a rave review by Claudia Cassidy resulted in 76,000 people attending in spite of rain.
July 28, 1947. Recital, State Teachers' College Auditorium, Shippensburg, PA. Joseph Blatt, pianist. Selections included “Lolita,” “Recondita Armonia,” “A Song of You,” and “Che Gelida Manina.”
August 28, 1947. Concert with Lanza and Yeend, Hollywood Bowl, Los Angeles. Eugene Ormandy conductor. This extremely well-received concert was recorded, and is commercially available. This was the concert that brought Lanza to the attention of M-G-M head Louis B. Mayer, and subsequently led to the former’s decision to sign a seven-year film contract with the Studio.
October 10, 1947. Concert with soprano Agnes Davis, Montcalm Palace, Quebec. Josef Blatt was the pianist.
October 16, 1947. Concert with Carolyn Long in Grinnell, Iowa. Venue unknown; Emmanuel Balaban conducted.
October 17, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Wisconsin Union Theater, Madison, Wisconsin. Josef Blatt, pianist. [Reviews can be read here.]
October 18, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Wisconsin Union Theater, Madison, Wisconsin. Josef Blatt, pianist.
October 22, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Memorial Chapel, Lawrence College, Appleton, Wisconsin. Josef Blatt, pianist. [A review can be read here.]
October 24, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Jacksonville High School, Jacksonville, Illinois. Assisting artist: Josef Blatt, pianist. [A review here refers to Lanza's magnificent singing and "tremendous volume."]
October 26, 1947. Bel Canto Concert, Municipal Auditorium, Oklahoma City. Josef Blatt, pianist. Reviewing the concert the following day in the Daily Oklahoman, music critic Tracy Silvester wrote that Lanza had “the lyric quality of Jussi Bjoerling in his voice, with the fine Italian fire in his interpretations.” Silvester also commented on Lanza’s singing of “La donna e mobile”: “It was evident that he was accustomed to singing the aria . . . in Italian, and when he started singing the aria in English he started mixing the two. He handled the ensuing embarrassment wonderfully well, however, and after a new start thrilled his audience.”
October 31, 1947. Concert with Frances Yeend and the Wichita Symphony Orchestra. The venue was presumably the Century II Concert Hall in downtown Wichita. Orien Dalley, conductor. This performance was part of a Wichita Symphony Society concert series. Among Lanza’s selections were “Una furtiva lagrima,” the Madama Butterfly Love Duet (with Yeend), “Celeste Aida,” and “Parigi, o cara” from La traviata (with Yeend).
November 2, 1947. Concert with Frances Yeend, Tri-City Orchestra, Masonic Temple Auditorium, Davenport, Iowa. Oscar W. Anderson, conductor. [A review can be read here.]
November 10, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, State College Auditorium, Cape Giradeau, Missouri. Josef Blatt, pianist.
November 12, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, University of Arkansas Field House, Fayetteville, Arkansas. Josef Blatt, pianist.
November 15, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Majestic Theatre, San Antonio, Texas, San Antonio Symphony Orchestra, Max Reiter, conductor. Ernest Pratt, writing in the San Antonio Light (16 November, 1947), gave high praise to the Trio (who were a late replacement for an indisposed Helen Traubel) singling out their performance of the trio from I Lombardi.
November 17, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Woodrow Wilson Junior High Auditorium, Port Arthur, Texas. Josef Blatt, pianist. [A review can be read here.]
November 18, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, City Auditorium, Beaumont, Texas. Josef Blatt, pianist. [Review here.]
November 20, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Edinburg Junior College Auditorium, McAllen, Texas. [Note: While no review has materialized, the concert presumably went ahead, as it was still being promoted on the day in the Valley Evening Monitor.]
November 26, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Liberty Hall, El Paso, Texas. Josef Blatt, pianist. (Originally scheduled for November 28.) [A review can be read here.]
November 28, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Chihuahua, Mexico. Josef Blatt, pianist. Note:Originally scheduled for November 27, it seems more likely that this is the actual performance date. (See below.) The concert definitely took place, as it is referred to in a review of the Trio's subsequent Torreón performance.
November 29, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Teatro Royal, Torreón, Mexico. Josef Blatt, pianist. Note: Various newspaper announcements of the Trio's Mexican concert dates make for confusing reading. However, the Trio apparently experienced Immigration difficulties when entering Mexico, and then a misunderstanding caused by the Head Office of Columbia Concerts resulted--incredibly--in the Trio being detained overnight by the Mexican authorities. The Torreón concert itself had first been announced for November 25, then re-scheduled for November 28, before finally occurring on November 29. [A review in Spanish can be read here.]
December 1, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Blatt Carlisle Gymnasium, Albuquerque, New Mexico. Josef Blatt, pianist. [A review can be read here.]
December 8, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Fenger High School Auditorium, Chicago. Presumed pianist: Josef Blatt. The Chicago Daily Tribune of December 7, 1947 refers to this as “the second in a series of five concerts to be presented by the group.”
December 9, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, La Porte Civic Auditorium, La Porte, Indiana. Josef Blatt, pianist.
December 11, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Eaton Auditorium, Toronto. Josef Blatt, pianist.
December 16, 1947. Bel Canto Trio concert, Middletown, New York. Josef Blatt, pianist. Reviewer Gladys De Freitas of the Middletown Times Herald gave high praise to the Trio, singling out Lanza's and Yeend's "bewitching interpretation" of Franz Lehar's "Nobody Could Love You More."
January 8, 1948. Bel Canto Trio concert, Lyman Hall High School Auditorium, Wallingford, Connecticut. Presumed pianist: Josef Blatt.
January 26, 1948. Bel Canto Trio concert, Van Meter Auditorium, Bowling Green, Kentucky. Josef Blatt, pianist. Music critic and former tenor W.B. Hill wrote in the Park City Daily News: "The surprise of the evening was a young tenor, Mario Lanza, who simply swept the audience off their feet. This young dramatic tenor hailed by press and public as the logical successor to Caruso fully lived up to his advance build-up. […] Critics have said: ‘Lanza was born to sing,’ and everyone in the near capacity audience will tell you the same thing. For Lanza did sing. He sang gloriously, he sang divinely, he sang thrillingly."
January 28, 1948. Bel Canto Trio concert, High School Auditorium, Sylacauga, Alabama. Josef Blatt, pianist.
January 29, 1948. Bel Canto Trio concert, Sheffield High School Auditorium, Florence, Alabama. Presumed pianist: Josef Blatt.
February 2, 1948. Bel Canto Trio concert, Page Auditorium, Women’s College of Duke University, Durham, North Carolina. Pianist: Josef Blatt.
February 14, 1948. Edgar Bergen/Charlie McCarthy Show (Radio). State Fair Auditorium, Dallas. (Broadcast live.) Conductor Ray Noble. Lanza performed “Vesti la giubba.”
February 24, 1948. Bel Canto Trio concert, Scottish Rite Auditorium, Bloomington, Illinois. Josef Blatt, pianist. [A review can be read here.]
February 27, 1948. Bel Canto Trio concert, Washington Gardner High School Auditorium, Albion, Michigan. Josef Blatt, pianist. [A review can be read here.]
February 29, 1948. Presumed Bel Canto Trio concert, Jackson High School Auditorium, Albion, Michigan. Josef Blatt, pianist. [Announced in the Battle Creek Enquirer, 24 Feb. 1948]
March 2, 1948. Bel Canto Trio concert, Akron Armory, Akron, Ohio. Pianist: Josef Blatt.
March 5, 1948. Concert, Massey Hall, Toronto. Toronto Symphony Orchestra; Paul Scherman, conductor. Lanza performed three arias with Scherman (all of them recorded), and later with pianist Leo Barkin sang "Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise," "Thine Alone," and "I'm Falling in Love with Someone."
April 2, 1948. Bel Canto Trio concert, Armory-Auditorium, Charlotte, North Carolina. Pianist: Josef Blatt. Note: The reviewer in the Charlotte Observer of 3 April 1948 states that this was the Trio's 50th concert.
April 8, 1948. Lanza performed the role of Pinkerton in Puccini’s Madama Butterfly for the New Orleans Opera Association at the Municipal Auditorium, New Orleans. Walter Herbert conducted. [Click here for cast details and here for reviews.] This was Lanza’s professional operatic debut.
April 10, 1948. Second performance as Pinkerton in Madama Butterfly, Municipal Auditorium, New Orleans.
April 14, 1948. Concert with the Elks Male Chorus and Paha Sapa All Girl Choir, High School Auditorium, Rapid City, South Dakota. Don Tuttle, conductor. Note: This is the earliest confirmed occasion on which Lanza performed “One Alone” from Romberg’s The Desert Song and the Neapolitan classic "O Sole Mio" in front of a live audience. [Review here.]
April 20, 1948. First of two concerts with the Apollo Male Singers, Oshkosh Theater,Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Lanza performed four numbers (including three songs that he had never sung before; these were: Romberg’s “Auf Wiedersehn,” Mana-Zucca’s “I Love Life,” and Carrie Jacobs-Bond’s “A Perfect Day”) with the Apollo Male singers under the direction of J.A. Breese and accompanist Merrill Lewis, and ten arias and songs accompanied by pianist Josef Blatt. Lanza’s arias included “Una furtiva lagrima,” the Improvviso from Andrea Chénier, and “M’apparì.” [Review here.]
April 21, 1948. Second of two concerts with the Apollo Male Singers, Oshkosh Theater, Oshkosh, Wisconsin. The program was the same as that of the previous evening, with one exception: Lanza performed the aria “La donna è mobile” twice, singing it first in Italian (as he had on April 20) and then again in English. [Review here.]
April 25, 1948. Bel Canto Trio concert, Municipal Auditorium, Burlington, Vermont. Josef Blatt, pianist. [A review can be read here.]
May 27, 1948. Final Bel Canto Trio concert, Moncton, New Brunswick. Venue unknown; the pianist was presumably Josef Blatt.
Note: There were at least 60 Bel Canto Trio concerts between July 1947 and May 1948, according to promotional material released by Lawrence Evans Artists Management in 1948. (Lawrence Evans was one of the founders of Columbia Artists Management, to whom Lanza was under contract.) In fact, there may have been as many as 86 Bel Canto Trio concerts, if Lanza’s mother and various published sources are to be believed. (One wonders, however, if this much-quoted figure also included Lanza's solo concerts during this period, together with his joint concerts with Yeend, Davis, and Long.) Other scheduled Bel Canto Trio concerts not listed here included performances in St. John’s, Newfoundland; Halifax, Nova Scotia; Wheeling, West Virginia; Ames, Iowa; Albion, Michigan; Minot, North Dakota; and Sylacauga, Alabama.
June 18, 1948. New York City. (Technically, not a public performance, but worthy of inclusion here nonetheless.) Successful semi-staged audition (for a proposed series of televised operas) for NBC Head David Sarnoff, NBC Musical Director Samuel Chotzinoff and others of part of Act IV of Puccini’s La Bohème, with Frances Yeend, George London, and two unidentified singers. Pianist Herbert Grossman. [Part of this performance can be heard here.] In a 1960 article for the Meriden Journal (Connecticut), Chotzinoff referred to the occasion, singling out Lanza's "wonderful voice," and praising the "poignancy" of his performance, which he described as "vocally and histrionically, absolutely true."
June 27, 1948. Concert with Metropolitan Opera soprano Dorothy Kirsten, Forest Meadows, Dominican College, San Rafael. Theodore Paxson, pianist. Note: Two years later, Ms. Kirsten would co-star with Lanza in The Great Caruso. [Review here.]
July 24, 1948. Concert with soprano Kathryn Grayson, Hollywood Bowl. Hollywood Bowl Symphony Orchestra; Miklós Rózsa, conductor. With Grayson, Lanza performed the duets “Thine Alone” from Herbert’s Eileen and “O Soave Fanciulla” from Puccini’s La Bohème. He also sang “Agnus Dei” by Bizet and “Nessun Dorma” from Puccini’s Turandot, in addition to performing in Lionel Barrymore’s musically undistinguished Halloween Suite.
September 15, 1948. “Salute to MGM” (Radio). Lanza performed "Vesti la Giubba."
September 22, 1948. “Salute to MGM” (Radio). Lanza performed "Thine Alone."
November 25, 1948. "Elgin Watch Thanksgiving Special” (NBC Radio). Lanza performed “Cosi Cosa,” “E Lucevan le Stelle,” and “Come, Ye Thankful People, Come.” Robert Armbruster, conductor; Elgin Orchestra and Chorus.
December 19, 1948. Edgar Bergen Charlie McCarthy Show. Lanza performed Malotte’s “The Lord's Prayer” (one of only two confirmed occasions when he sang this piece in front of a live audience).