1776) was an Italian soprano who performed in European opera houses during the latter half of the eighteenth century.
There she created the role of Flaminia in Pietro Alessandro Guglielmi's La spirito dicontradizione in 1766.
Silas Neville called her "the best of the company" and Charles Burney described her as "a very pretty woman, but an affected singer".
The combination of her extremely high salary and the scandal caused by her reputed love affairs resulted in Anna Zamperini being fired by Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, 1st Marquis of Pombal, who further more banned women from performing on stage in Portugal.
[10] While the ban on women stage performers were on paper only in most of Portugal, it was enforced in the capital of Lisbon, where it was in force until Mariana Albani, Luisa Gerbini and Joaquina Lapinha were engaged at the Teatro Nacional de São Carlos in 1795.