* En anglais uniquement
The French alto and mezzo soprano
Lucile Richardot has been an important presence on the Baroque operatic scene in the 2010s. She has also, since 2012, led her own ensemble, Tictatus.
Richardot grew up in eastern France, where she sang for six years in the Petits Chanteurs à la Croix de Lorraine d’Epinal, a children's choir. Instead of continuing with music, however, she studied journalism and worked in that field until she was 27. Returning to vocal studies,
Richardot attended the Conservatoire du Vème arrondissement de Paris, the Maîtrise de Notre-Dame de Paris, and finally Paris' Conservatoire à rayonnement régional, where she worked with Margreet Hoenig, Noëlle Barker, and
Jill Feldman, among others. A notable feature of
Richardot's career is that she was taking on, and even originating, major roles while still a student. Shortly after resuming her studies, she performed with the ensemble
Poème Harmonique under director
Vincent Dumestre in Lully's opera Cadmus et Hermione.
Richardot played the first Aunt in the premiere performance of the contemporary Belgian opera Yvonne, Princesse de Bourgogne, by Philippe Boesmans, in 2009. Another major contemporary role was one in Luigi Nono's Omaggio a Kurtag, which
Richardot performed in 2014 with the famed
Ensemble InterContemporain. In the Baroque realm,
Richardot performed as Lisa in Vivaldi's little-heard opera Arsilda with the Czech Baroque ensemble
Collegium 1704 in 2017. She has appeared with Solistes XXI,
Ensemble Pygmalion,
Ensemble Correspondances, the Toulouse Chamber Orchestra, and
Les Arts Florissants as part of a complete performance cycle of Monteverdi's madrigals under director
Paul Agnew.
Richardot also performed in a series of Bach cantata concerts in Paris and appeared on several recordings of this repertory. In 2018, she made her first appearance on recordings as a featured soloist, on
Perpetual Night, an album of 17th-century English songs, with
Ensemble Correspondances under
Sébastien Daucé.