Fact
Goldovsky’s claims do not bear close scrutiny, and arguably stemmed from his deep personal dislike of Lanza, coupled with jealousy over his mentor (Serge Koussevitzky)'s open admiration for the young tenor. (Koussevitzky described Lanza as "Caruso redivivus"—or "Caruso reborn.") Not only did Lanza learn the principal tenor role of Fenton in The Merry Wives of Windsor in little more than a month, but Goldovsky’s assertion that the work had to be shortened to accommodate the tenor is contradicted by the New York Times, whose reviewer, Noel Straus, noted that the opera was performed “in full.” Moreover, at the same time that he was studying the role of Fenton, Lanza learned (and performed) the entire Act III of La Bohème, singing the role of Rodolfo in two performances at the Berkshire Music Festival. Reviewing the second of these performances on 14 August 1942, critic Jay C. Rosenfeld praised Lanza and his Mimì on that occasion, noted Mexican soprano Irma González, for “the beauty of their voices and the vividness of their characterizations.”
While it is true that Lanza—in common with many other famous operatic singers (e.g., Caruso, Pinza, Warren)—never learned to sight-read music properly, what he lacked in musical theory or musicianship, he made up for in terms of sheer musicality. As the highly regarded vocal coach Leila Edwards (1912-2008), with whom Lanza studied the role of Pinkerton for four months in 1947–48, reminisced: “[Lanza was] quick to learn and I never had any problems working with him. . . . [H]e would have me sing the part in my whiskey tenor voice—once, sometimes twice—then he would repeat it perfectly. Mario had an incredible ear for music, and that’s how he learned the role.”
NBC Opera Theatre’s Peter Herman Adler (1899-1990), who worked with Lanza both in concert and on the soundtrack of The Great Caruso, was one of several noted conductors who were similarly impressed by the young tenor’s retentive ear and feeling for the making of music. In 1946 he stated that Lanza possessed “the greatest inherent, instinctive musicality I have ever seen.” The highly respected critic Claudia Cassidy—who heard Lanza in four concerts between 1946 and 1951—also praised the tenor’s musical instincts, noting that he “[possessed] the things almost impossible to learn. He knows the accent that makes a lyric line reach its audience, and he knows why opera is music drama.” [Click here for clippings of further reviews.]
Far from being unable to learn operatic roles, Lanza had in fact acquired at least seven by 1950: Canio (in Pagliacci), Rodolfo (La Bohème), Cavaradossi (Tosca), Chénier (Andrea Chénier), Turiddu (Cavalleria Rusticana), Fenton (The Merry Wives of Windsor), and Pinkerton (Madama Butterfly). He was scheduled to sing the role of Chénier at the San Francisco Opera in October 1950 (opposite Licia Albanese and Robert Weede), but subsequently withdrew because of work and family commitments. At the time of his death, Lanza had verbally agreed to sing the role of Canio at the Rome Opera House in the 1960–61 season.