Betty Fabila

Betty Fabila Herrerías (28 May 1929 – 7 August 2012) was a Mexican soprano opera singer and biologist.

In 1950, she made her operatic debut as Musetta in La bohème at the Palacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City and went on to sing leading roles there in operas including La traviata, Madama Butterfly, L'amico Fritz, Faust, Carmen, La serva padrona, Il segreto di Susanna, Werther, and Don Giovanni With her husband, the Italian conductor and musicologist Uberto Zanolli, she also developed programs for Mexican television.

She later became a biologist and ethnologist and taught at the Escuela Nacional Preparatoria where she was a founding member of the school's chamber orchestra and its served as its soprano soloist from 1972 to 1994.

[citation needed] In 1962, at the Castle of Chapultepec in Mexico City, Fabila gave the first modern performances of solo cantatas by the Italian baroque composer Giacomo Facco, whose scores had been discovered by her husband in the National Library of Paris.

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Betty Fabila