Dorothea Röschmann

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  • Soprano

About Dorothea

Born in Flensburg, Germany, Dorothea Röschmann was a member of the Ensemble at the Deutsche Staatsoper Berlin where in 2017, having sung over 20 roles at the theatre, she was awarded the title of Kammersängerin. She returned in the 2024/25 season for her role debut as Emilia Marty/ Vec Markropulos in Claus Guth’s iconic production.

Other recent role debuts include the title role of Ariadne auf Naxos at the Edinburgh International Festival with Lothar Koenigs, recorded for Outhere Records (2022), and at Teatro Comunale di Bologna, and Isolde/ Tristan und Isolde at the Opera National de Lorraine, Nancy and last season in concert in Berlin.

She has been a frequent guest at the Salzburg Festival since her debut in 1995 singing Susanna with Nikolaus Harnoncourt. In 2016 she made her role debut as Desdemona/Otello at the Osterfestspiele. At the Wiener Staatsoper, she has appeared as Susanna, Countess Almaviva, Donna Elvira, Marschallin and Jenufa.

Her many roles at the Bayerische Staatsoper, Munich include Zerlina, Susanna, Ännchen, Marzelline, Anne Trulove, Elvira, Rodelinda, her role debut as Alceste in 2019, and this season as Marcellina/ Le nozze di Figaro and Marquise de Berkenfield/ La Fille du Régiment. Elsewhere in Europe she has appeared at the Semperoper Dresden (Elisabeth /Tannhauser, Desdemona/ Otello), La Monnaie, Brussels, the Opéra Bastille Paris, and at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden (Pamina, Fiordiligi, Countess, Donna Elvira and Desdemona). At Teatro alla Scala Milan she has sung Countess Almaviva, Florinda/Fierrabras, and Donna Elvira on tour to the Bolshoi Theatre, Moscow with Daniel Barenboim.

In the U.S. she has appeared many times at the Metropolitan Opera as Susanna, Pamina, Elvira and Ilia, and sang the title roles of Handel’s Theodora and Purcell’s Dido at Carnegie Hall.

A prolific concert artist in the U.S., Asia and in Europe, last season she sang Tove/Gurre-Lieder with both Sir Simon Rattle / Symphonieorchester des Bayerischen Rundfunks and Rafael Payare / Montréal Symphony Orchestra, Schoenberg Erwartung with Patrick Hahn/Wiener Symphoniker and Shostakovich Aus Juedischer Volkspoesie with Patrick Hahn/Munchner Rundfunkorchester. Other recent highlights include Wesendonck Lieder with Karina Canellakis/Orchestre de Paris and with Kristiina Poska/Royal Stockholm Philharmonic; Schumann’s Faustszenen and Marie/ Berg’s Wozzeck with Daniel Harding/Berliner Philharmoniker. She has performed Strauss’ Vier letzte Lieder with Daniel Barenboim in Berlin, Daniel Harding in Milan, Antonio Pappano in Rome, Yannick Nézet -Séguin in Rotterdam and Zubin Mehta in Valencia.

She is a renowned recitalist and has sung with Daniel Barenboim at the Schiller Theater and Boulez Saal in Berlin, and with Mitsuko Uchida at the Lucerne Festival, on tour in the U.S., culminating in a recital at Carnegie’s Stern Auditorium, and at Wigmore Hall, the live recording of which won the Grammy for the Best Solo Vocal Album in 2017. Recent appearances include Amsterdam’s Het Concertgebouw, the Wiener Konzerthaus and in Antwerp, Lisbon, Madrid, Barcelona, Cologne, Brussels, Oslo, Stockholm, Oxford , and at the Edinburgh, Munich, and Schwarzenberg Festivals.

Her extensive discography includes Pamina and Nannetta with Abbado; Strauss Vier letze Lieder with Nézet - Séguin; Brahms Ein deutsches Requiem with Rattle (winner of a Grammy and Gramophone Award); Mahler Symphony No.4 with Harding; Handel's Neun Deutsche Arien with the Akademie für Alte Musik Berlin; Handel’s Messiah with McCreesh; Pergolesi’s Stabat Mater with David Daniels and Fabio Biondi and a disc of Schumann songs with Ian Bostridge and Graham Johnson. She has released two acclaimed CDs on the Sony C lassical label; in 2014, her debut recital album ‘Portraits’ with Malcolm Martineau, and in 2015, a greatly anticipated Mozart arias disc with Daniel Harding and the Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra.

Dorothea is based in Hamburg

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Contact

Representation

General management with Askonas Holt

 Partner Managers: Machreich Artists Management (concerts in Austria)

Follow Dorothea

Season Highlights

Oct 2025 - Oct 2025
Bayerische Staatsoper, Munich
Mozart: Le nozze di Figaro (Marcellina) Stefano Montanari (conductor)
Nov 2025 - Nov 2025
Wigmore Hall, London
Works by Schubert, Brahms, Berg and Schönberg Joseph Middleton (piano)
Nov 2025 - Nov 2025
Bayerische Staatsoper, Munich
Donizetti: La Fille du régiment (La Marquise de Berkenfield) Antonino Fogliani (conductor)

Audio

  • Arnold Schoenberg - Erwartung
    Credit: Wiener Symphoniker Recorded: 05 June 2024
  • Robert Schumann - Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt
    Credit: Sony Music Classical
  • Robert Schumann - Kennst du das Land
    Credit: Nur wer die Sehnsucht kennt
  • Richard Strauss - Morgen
    Credit: Sony Music Classical

Selected Repertoire

Donizetti

La fille du régiment (Marquis de Berkenfield)

Gluck

Alceste

Janáček

The Makropulos Affair (Emilia Marty)

Mozart

The Marriage of Figaro (Marcellina)   •   Cosi fan tutte (Despina)   •   Le Nozze di Figaro (Marcellina)

Strauss

Ariadne auf Naxos (Ariadne)

Wagner

Tannhäuser (Elisabeth)   •   Tristan und Isolde (Isolde)

News

Press

  • Intonations Festival

    Kühlhaus Berlin
    Jun 2025 - Jun 2025
    • Anyone who has heard Dorothea Röschmann here in the Kühlhaus won’t be able to forget it any time soon. Her soprano tone literally spirals upwards, interweaving itself with the acoustics of the hall, seemingly entering into a blend with the masonry. It is an experience of tremendous, almost physical intensity.

  • JANACEK: The Makropoulos Case

    Staatsoper Unter den Linden, Berlin
    Oct 2024 - Oct 2024
    • ...she embodied the role to perfection – her voice thrillingly-produced, while she injected the character with a fervid dramatic intensity. Her performance also managed to capture the character’s cold and manipulative nature, making Emilia an aloof figure from the very start. Röschmann’s secure and expressive voice soared in Janáček’s testing vocal lines, producing a stream of steady, well controlled tone throughout the evening. Her final scene was emotionally devastating. Not surprisingly she was rewarded with a huge ovation at the close, and rightly so, as this was an accomplished interpretation that ranks among the very best.

    • Dorothea Röschmann has been appointed to the role of Emilia. She is the first to be heard, like a magnet attracting the audience’s attention and the orchestra’s thunderbolt. Isn’t Emilia Marty a singer? A diva perhaps? That’s exactly what’s needed for a performer as complete as this peerless Mozartean – it’s almost astonishing to see her in this role, but the challenge is quickly met: sharp as a tack when she needs to be, with very clear and accurate articulation, and a projection perfectly adapted to the acoustic characteristics of the Staatsoper Unter den Linden. A character of maturity (many others have taken on Emilia after building a solid career, such as Anja Silja, Libuše Prylová and Elisabeth Söderström, the reference in the discography currently available), Dorothea Röschmann is capable of providing everything necessary to ensure that the magnetism that reigns from Emilia Marty’s first appearance is assured on stage, in full view of us all, with a dramatic, strong, expressive, imperious soprano voice that takes the role in its stride. She is at times a shrew, a raven, but also a wounded woman, perfectly aware of the effects of the passage of time. The timbre is beautiful, very fleshy, shaped by a faultless career, with a voice that is sometimes insidious, with devastating high notes.

  • JANACEK: The Makropoulos Case

    Brno National Theater
    • Translation: When the main role - Emilia Marty is one of the greatest and most beautiful challenges for a singing actress ever - is interpreted as she will be on November 16, 2024 at the Brno National Theater, you simply have to love this woman. After a few performances in Berlin, Dorothea Röschmann seems to have already internalized the extremely complex role, which represents a summa summarum of all of Janácek's female characters. With total commitment - in terms of acting almost to the point of self-exposure, even self-abandonment, vocally with enormous intensity - she literally throws herself into this role, managing to increase this intensity from act to act, and at the end she dissolves into the role with an almost unbelievable vocal melody. She literally hurls out her confession of love for Pepi Prus – “Ja ho mela rada.” (“Because I really loved him.”) – which is repeated even more forcefully – “Jeho jsem mela rada,” (“Yes, I really loved him.”) – and is then incredibly moving, even touching, with the confession “Ta hroznà samota!” (What a terrible loneliness!”). “I want everyone to love her (Elina Makropulos). … I can’t live without love!” Janácek wrote to his beloved and muse Kamila Stösslová – and Dorothea Röschmann is able to convey this in a simply moving way. Seldom has one experienced such a moving portrayal of a role – devoid of any eroticism, the portrait of an old, lonely, icy, empty, tormented, life-weary, emotionally battered woman. And the way Ms Röschmann lets her bitter, cool, yet sensual soprano flow in the brilliant final scene – probably one of the most gripping, strongest opera endings – and then, as Janácek demanded, really sings and leaves all declamation behind, is truly great opera singing, truly great art.

  • Wagner Wesendonck-Lieder

    Bridgewater Hall, Manchester
    Jun 2024
    • Then the majestic figure of great German soprano Dorothea Röschmann came on stage, for Wagner’s Wesendonck-Lieder, a setting of five poems by the composer’s lover Mathilde Wesendonck. The poetry is full of breathless evocations of the spirit realm which seem as dated as a Victorian boudoir, but in this performance one could actually believe in them. Röschmann has one of those thrilling voices that can dominate an orchestra even in pianissimo. At the end of the final song, as she sang of flowers sinking into the grave, it felt as if we too were being drawn down into delicious oblivion.

  • Recital Dorothea Röschmann & Malcolm Martineau

    Wigmore Hall, London
    Dec 2023
    • what a thrilling sound it was. You could feel the weight in the German words, ... even when her tone was rapt and hushed, as it was in Brahms’s setting of a wonderful Heine poem comparing death to cool night and life to sultry day.

  • Le Nozze de Figaro (Marcellina)

    Bayerische Staatsoper
    Oct 2023 - Oct 2023
    • Dorothea Röschmann als Wonneproppen Marcellina, die mit ihrem mütterlichen Charisma und pompösen Outfits sofort zum Mittelpunkt der Riesenbühne wurde. Dorothea Röschmann as the bundle of joy Marcellina, who immediately became the center of the giant stage with her motherly charisma and pompous outfits.

    • Dorothea Röschmann [was] a delight.

  • Le nozze di Figaro (Marcellina)

    Royal Opera House
    Jul 2023
  • Tristan und Isolde (Isolde)

    Opéra National de Lorraine
    Jan 2023
    • Fraglos an der Spitze steht Dorothea Röschmann als Isolde. War die Norddeutsche über Jahrzehnte eine der führenden Mozart-Ssängerinnen, feiert sie mit diesem Fachwechsel einen Triumph. Ihre Isolde hat einerseits den mädchenhaften Glanz und die berückend schönen Töne einer Lyrischen, andererseits nunmehr das satte, aber nie überstrapazierte mittlere und tiefe Register der Bruststimme. Da denkt man etwa an die Aufnahme mit Margret Price unter Carlos Kleiber zurück. Dorothea Roschmann as Isolde is undoubtedly at the top . The North German was one of the leading Mozartians , but she is triumphant in this change of Fach. Her Isolde, on the one hand, has the girlish shine and the bewitchingly beautiful tones of a lyric, and on the other hand, the rich, but never overused middle and low register of the chest voice.One is reminded of Margaret Price under Carlos Kleiber.

    • Aus gesehen machte vor allem die erste Isolde von Dorothea Röschmann neugierig. Und tatsächlich: die exzellente Mozart-Interpretin bei diesem spektakulären Fach-Wechsel zu erleben, lohnt die Reise nach Lothringen! Was Röschmann hier bietet, ist ein Schulbeispiel für wortverständlichen Wagnergesang, inklusive der orchesterumtosten hochdramatischen Ausbrüche. Man hört und staunt. Wobei sich ein Besuch für junge Sängerinnen empfiehlt, denn streckenweise liefert Röschmann auch eine optisch nachvollziehbare Lehrstunde darin, wie man Töne ansteuert, stützt, sie abfeuert und dabei keinen einzigen Konsonanten oder Vokal verschlampert. Dabei ist ihr mozartgeschultes Timbre ein besonderer Genuss. Dorothea Röschmann's first Isolde aroused curiosity. To experience the excellent Mozart interpreter in this spectacular change makes the trip to Lorraine worthwhile! What Röschmann offers here is a classic example of word-for-word Wagnerian singing, including the highly dramatic outbursts roaring with the orchestra. You hear and marvel. A visit is recommended for young singers, because Röschmann also provides a visually comprehensible lesson in how to control tones, support them, fire them and not squander a single consonant or vowel. Her Mozart-trained timbre is a special treat.

    • Dorothea Röschmann, mozartienne en pleine reconversion comme elle nous l’expliquait, réussit en grande partie le défi d’Isolde. Le volume et la projection sont suffisants pour une salle et une fosse comme celle de l’Opéra national de Lorraine. Certes, le haut de la tessiture se tend rapidement et les deux uts de la partition s’avèrent hors de portée, marqués au mieux, criés au pire. Mais l’incarnation et le portrait trouvent dans la ligne, la diction et la rondeur du medium tout ce qu’il faut. Les récits et imprécations du premier acte résonnent déjà avec la maturité d’une habituée du rôle, le duo du deuxième, dès lors qu’il s’apaise, lui permet de déployer toute l’onctuosité savamment acquise chez Mozart. La diseuse se charge du reste et si son retour au troisième manque d’endurance et de souplesse, elle sait se couler dans ces raucités pour toucher au plus juste. Dorothea Röschmann, a Mozartian in full re-invention as she explained to us, succeeded in the challenging role of Isolde. The volume and the projection are sufficient for a room and a pit like that of the Opéra national de Lorraine. … the incarnation and the characterisation find everything they need in the line, the diction and the roundness of the medium. The stories and imprecations of the first act already resonate with the maturity of one experiences in the role, the duet of the second, as soon as it calms down, allows her to deploy all the smoothness skilfully acquired in Mozart.

  • Ariadne auf Naxos (Ariadne)

    Teatro Comunale di Bologna
    Mar 2022
    • Dorotea Röschmann (nei panni della Prima donna/Arianna) è perfetta interprete della diva d’altri tempi, sia per portamento e naturale inclinazione, sia per la sua vocalità spiegata. Dorothea Röschmann (who played the role of Ariadne) is the perfect interpretor of the diva of yesteryear, both for her posture and natural inclination and in her vocailty.

  • Le Nozze di Figaro (Marcellina)

    Opera National de Paris
    Jan 2022
    • German soprano Dorothea Röschmann was a true gift in the supporting role of Marcellina. She has sung as both Susanna and the Countess throughout her career and is consequently no stranger to this opera. Her fourth act aria was cut, as it often is, so her role was limited to short interventions and ensemble numbers, but Röschmann was still able to showcase her potent lyric sound and strong stage presence in these moments.

    • Dorothea Röschmann was a delightful Marcellina, sparring with Susanna and pleading her case to the Count with rapt conviction, but plausibly sympathetic in the second half.

  • Ariadne auf Naxos (Ariadne)

    Edinburgh International Festival
    Aug 2021
    • The headline name on the bill was that of German soprano Dorothea Röschmann, who was absolutely magnificent.

    • Internationally renowned German soprano Dorothea Röschmann gives an impeccable performance as Greek mythological princess Ariadne.

    • Röschmann’s first Ariadne was a triumph, her Prima Donna role in the Prologue giving little away as she emerged in the main opera as her full character with rusty coloured scarf in tow, her commanding voice, dramatic focus and sighing cellos setting the solemn tone.

    • Following the agreement reached in the Prologue, the opera begins with a captivating Röschmann emerging onto the stage as Ariadne, solemn in tone and demeanour … Röschmann’s first entrance as Ariadne is in total , deep contrast to the prologue - a tortured and depressed figure. Her voice fills the airy venue, a masterclass in restrained power.

  • Recital Dorothea Röschmann & Magnus Svensson

    Athénée Théâtre Louis-Jouvet
    Jun 2021
    • [Röschmann] soars with each new emotion... Her voice is rich in character, on all the tessitura and all the nuances, from eloquence to prayer. The bass is deep, chestnut when necessary, the medium supple and solid, the treble radiating or a very unfolded lyricism... The perky outbursts of joy thus fall all the more into sad nostalgia.

  • Mahler Des Knaben Wunderhorn

    Barcelona Auditorium
    Apr 2021
    • Dorothea Röschmann was wonderful in all her interventions, perfectly drawing the states of mind that she was in charge of, both as the mother of the dead child, as the lover in the face of loss or as a loquacious narrator. Her highs, her phrasing, her dramatic focus, everything about her is pure emotion.

    • Dorothea Röschmann, in a state of grace, overcame not only the orchestral texture imposed by Gardolinska but also the acoustic difficulties of a hall ungrateful for voices. The Röschmann instrument has evolved and has grown considerably in recent years without losing quality and always maintaining the elegance and expressiveness of its phrasing. From " Das irdische Leben" she was plentiful, perfectly coordinated with Gardolinska's baton, and her performance went in permanent crescendo to a moving " Wo die schönen Trompeten blasen".

    • Röschmann showed undeniable tables and musicality throughout all his [Ian Bostridge] interventions. The German soprano, with great clarity in the broadcast, raised her Mahler with a great expressive load, which is what these texts require, in which both the onomatopoeias of the cuckoo, the nightingale and the donkey in the Praise of Intelligence and the demand in the treble in the love struggle of the lied Useless effort overcame the acoustic problems posed by the room.