Skip to main content
Home
  • Artists
    • Young Talent
    • Sports
    • Fashion
    • VIP
    • Agents
  • Competitions
    • About Competitions
  • Videos
    • Videos
  • Reelfocus Mission
    • About Mission
    • Reelfocus Mission
    • Mission Blog

Search form

  • Login
  • Register
Not a member? Join now
Forgot password?

Primary tabs

  • My Focus
  • Videos
  • Images
  • Instagram(active tab)
  • Delia Noble began singing in Iasi (Romania) and continued her studies at the National Conservatory in Paris with Michelle How. She has sung in front of audiences including, amongst others, Mady Mesple in Toulon as well as Iris and Al
    bert Lance in Antibes. Furthermore, she has appeared before Marianne Gabriel Bacquier Lossco for the Contest of the Academy of Music in Monte Carlo. She received three gold medals in unanimity followed by L’Anterne D’Argent in Genève. She took master classes with Ileana Cotrubas, Monserrat Caballe and Jannine Reiss. After her debut in The Marriage of Figaro as Susanna, she won The Grand Prize of Interpretation with the Orchestre Philharmonique de Monte Carlo. She projected her career with numerous concerts in Europe and the United States (Miami, New York). In Monte Carlo, Delia sang with Andrea Bocelli in La Boheme as Mimi. She interpreted Missia Palmieri in The Merry Widow and Lisa in The Land of Smiles by F. Lehar in Nice. She also played in La Traviata in Monte Carlo with the baritone Franck Ferrari and French tenor Ignacio Encinas. She continued as Marguerite in Gounod’s Faust next to the baritone Davide Damiani. In London, she recorded a baroque music CD with the Philharmonic Orchestra under the direction of Simon Hell. A series of contracts brought her to the Opera of Toulon, Opéra de Marseille, in Montpellier as a soloist with the Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Herve Niquet and under the musical direction of Rene Koering. She also performed in a world creation, Foreign Affair by Valentin Villenave, in a duet with the great mezzo-soprano Viorica Cortez then with Nicolas Courjal under the artistic direction of John Samuel. She interpreted the role of Venus in Orpheus in the Underworld by Offenbach under the baton of Herve Niquet. She played the role of Mireille in the eponymous oeuvre by Gounod at Music Festival Banned in Marseille Opera together with Jean-Philippe Laffont and Jean-Luc Vialla, directed by Antoine Marguier and Cyril Dietrich. In 2012, she will perform in concert at the New Theatre of Sillo in Marseille and at the Opera Festival in Vienna, Austria with extracts of Musetta from La Boheme and Manon of J.Massenet. In 2013 she will participate at the Opera Festival of Verona, Italy with excerpts from La Traviata, for Michaella in Carmen and Manon by Jules Massenet to Katar. Often invited on television and radio stations in Romania she was recently the star of the program Une Femme Formidable by Radio France. Her love for her own country, Romania and her adopted country France, led her to found the association Les Voix Nobles, which intended to promote young artists through cultural exchanges between France and Romania with the exceptional support of the Embassy of Romania in Paris, the Consulate General of Romania in Marseille and the French personalities as J.P. Foucault, Janine Reiss and various singers and Romanian personalities as Leontina Vaduva and Viorica Cortes Currently, Delia is advised by Lawrence Foster, Jean-Philippe Laffont and Paticia Fernandez. In May 2012 she recorded a rock opera with the chorus of Marseille Opera that is going to develop in Europe. In full possession of her art, Delia Noble’s original project of concerts are dedicated to the Dream of Children association, UNICEF and often to the benefit of sick children of the Paoli Calmettes Institute in collaboration with the Lions Club and Rotary Club, continuing her career as a lyric soprano with the generosity, the charm of her voice and the originality of her repertoire.
    See full Bio...
Monaco
FacebookWebsite
  • FAQs
  • Sponsors
Copyright © Reel Focus 2025 All Rights Reserved

 

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+