Description:Three quarter length portrait. The subject is dressed in an elaborate, dark operatic costume with low-cut bodice, three-quarter puffed sleeves adorned with gold and black bows, a gold trim down the front, and an underskirt showing (matching the ruffle around the bodice) where the over-dress is parted. Both hands are visible; the right appears to be resting on some sort of balustrade and the left on her lap. She has dark hair and is wearing a Spanish-appearing mantilla.
Notes:Sylvia Stahlman (1929-1998) graduated from Ward Belmont in 1948. Stahlman was born in Nashville, Tennessee, and studied at The Juilliard School in New York City. She began her career on Broadway, in 1948-49, in Kurt Weill's Love Life, opposite Nanette Fabray, directed by Elia Kazan. She left for Europe to begin a career in opera, performing first under the name Giulia Bardi. She made her debut at La Monnaie in Brussels, as Elvira in I puritani, in 1951, and remained with that theatre until 1954. She also sang in Amsterdam, Frankfurt, and Vienna, and appeared at the Glyndebourne Festival in 1959, as Ilia in Idomeneo. In America, she appeared at the New York City Opera in the Fall Season of 1956, as Eurydice in Orphée aux enfers, conducted by Erich Leinsdorf, and Gilda in Rigoletto, with Julius Rudel conducting. The soprano also appeared at the San Francisco Opera and the Lyric Opera of Chicago. In San Francisco, she sang Sophie in Der Rosenkavalier, Sister Constance of St Dénis in Dialogues des Carmélites (the United States premiere), Oscar in Un ballo in maschera (to the Amelia of Herva Nelli), Lauretta in Gianni Schicchi, and Dircé in Médée (the Italian version), from 1957 to 1960. She took part, in 1964, in the American premiere of Daphne, at the Santa Fe Opera. Excelling in coloratura and soubrette roles, she can be heard on recordings, in Un ballo in maschera, opposite Birgit Nilsson, Giulietta Simionato, Carlo Bergonzi, and Cornell MacNeil, under Sir Georg Solti (1960-61), and as Lisa in La sonnambula, with Dame Joan Sutherland (1962). In 1964, Stahlman recorded excerpts from Fidelio (as Marzelline), opposite Anja Silja. Stahlman died in St Petersburg, Florida, at the age of sixty-nine. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sylvia_Stahlman Location: Wilson Music Building