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Alumni spotlight: Elizabeth Welch

Elizabeth Welch posing

New York-based Elizabeth Welch (BM ā€™98) is singing her way through musical theatre productions on Broadway and on regional stages.

New York-based (BM ā€™98) is singing her way through musical theatre productions on Broadway and on regional stagesā€”including Denver, where she was a Denver Post Ovation Award recipient for her portrayal of Maria in ā€œWest Side Storyā€ā€”and before audiences as far away as Germany and Austria.

Indeed, the Colorado native who studied vocal performance at the CU Boulder College of Musicā€”followed up by a masterā€™s degree in the same discipline at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaignā€”moved abroad for a couple years, receiving critical praise for her rendering of Christine DaaĆ© in ā€œDas Phantom der Oper,ā€ sung in German.

ā€œItā€™s hilarious thinking about it now, but I applied only to CU for my undergraduate studies,ā€ recalls Welch. ā€œMy parents are alumniā€”they met at CUā€”and I knew the music program was perfect for me. So there was no point in applying anywhere else.

ā€œI was incredibly lucky to simply follow my passion.ā€

Not only did things work out, but spectacularly so. While Welch fell in love with musicals at a young ageā€”thanks to Julie Andrews, ā€œThe Music Manā€ and her record of ā€œJesus Christ Superstarā€ā€”she dove head-first into classical repertoire and training at the College of Music. In turn, she fell in love with Mozart, too, and landed a succession of operatic roles in ā€œThe Marriage of Figaroā€ (Susanna), ā€œCosƬ fan tutteā€ (Despina), ā€œThe Tales of Hoffmannā€ (Olympia) and ā€œLā€™elisir dā€™amoreā€ (Adina) ā€¦ to name just a few of the accomplishments for which she credits her operatic roots as a student of former Professor of Voice Julie Simson.

ā€œIā€™m right in the middle between opera and musical theatre,ā€ says Welch. ā€œThanks to my training at CU, I came away with a really solid understanding of how the voice worksā€”and how to use my voice in different genres.

Elizabeth Welch as Christine

Welch as Christine in ā€œDas Phantom der Oper,ā€ sung in German.

She adds, ā€œI didnā€™t have my sights set on Broadwayā€”I just wanted to sing. I knew thatā€™s what I was good at. My parents were very supportive, and I just figured it would all work out.ā€

ā€œIn addition, I received unbelievable diction training from [Professor of Vocal Coaching and Berton Coffin Faculty Fellow] Mutsumi Moteki. When I auditioned to sing the role of Christine in German, I was so grateful for my degree from CU that prepared for that moment.

ā€œSinging German before German natives and being described as ā€˜Akzent-freiā€™ [accent-free] in reviews was huge! My phonetics coach thanked Dr. Moteki, and I canā€™t emphasize enough my gratitude for the CU program and all of my instructors there.ā€

Welch also appreciates what she learned about song interpretation at CU. ā€œAll the acting Iā€™ve learned along the way is from song texts,ā€ she says. ā€œNo matter the language, the text is the most important thing. Understanding that telling the story drives everything else has served me well.ā€

It follows that Welch is particularly excited about the new Musical Theatre bachelorā€™s degree at the College of Music.

ā€œWhile I always felt supported in my love of musicals at the collegeā€”working with Dr. Simson included all kinds of music theatre, arts songs and operaā€”Iā€™m thrilled that thereā€™s a dedicated musical theatre program now,ā€ she says. ā€œBecause my classically-based operatic vocal training was so open to the other genre, musical theatre was an easy transition for me. But for anyone like me with musical theatre in their heart, a dedicated program will certainly prepare them for that career path even more.ā€

Adds Welch, ā€œI hope the program includes a lot of dance and acting. I see what kids are bringing to New York these days, and you absolutely have to be a triple threat. Playing another instrument also helps!ā€

To date, beyond her decade-long experience as Christine in ā€œPhantom,ā€ her wide-ranging musical theatre repertoire includes Cosette in ā€œLes MisĆ©rables,ā€ Peggy in ā€œThe Taffetas,ā€ Lilli in ā€œKiss Me, Kate,ā€ Belle in ā€œBeauty and the Beastā€ and Anna in ā€œThe King and Iā€ā€”as well as her favorite childhood role, Marian the Librarian in ā€œThe Music Man.ā€