Vera Janacópulos


Vera Janacópulos was a Brazilian soprano singer, popular in the first half of the 20th century.

Life and career

Vera Janacópulos was born in Petrópolis, in a family of Greek descent. She was niece of the politician Pandiá Calógeras. After the death of her mother, Vera was taken to Paris with her sister Adriana, who became a sculptor. In Paris, Janacópulos studied violin with Romanian composer George Enescu, but stopped playing it to dedicate herself to singing.
In 1914, Janacópulos performed for the first time in a singing recital, along with Madalena Tagliaferro. The soprano has had a successful career performing in several countries in Europe, North America and South America and Asia. She performed works by Igor Stravinsky, Sergei Prokofiev, Darius Milhaud, Manuel de Falla and Heitor Villa-Lobos, helping to disseminate the work of the Brazilian composer abroad.
Janacópulos returned to Brazil in 1940, establishing herself in São Paulo, where she presented a classical music program for Radio Gazeta for eight years. She was also a singing teacher, where she lectured at the University of São Paulo's Escola de Arte Dramática.

Death

Janacópulos died in Rio de Janeiro, on 5 December 1955.

Homages

A bust of the singer was sculpted by her sister Adriana, in 1958.The sculpture is located at Praça Paris in Rio de Janeiro. Janacópulos' archives are collected in the Federal University of the State of Rio de Janeiro Center of Language and Arts library; an auditorium at the institution is also named after her.