Asmik Grigorian — First Solo Concert in Latvia. A Diva is Born.
The Return of a Star, the Birth of a Diva
"A Diva is Born"
Exceptional vocals and phenomenal dramatic talent. A delicate frame and a powerful voice. A national award received before she even graduated from the conservatory — and an operatic “Oscar”, the International Opera Award. Named Singer of the Year in Germany — once by Opus Klassik, twice by Opernwelt. Appearances in New York and London, Milan and Vienna, Paris and Salzburg. Asmik Grigorian returns to Latvia after a long hiatus, during which she has reached every imaginable height on the global musical stage.
The daughter of two People's Artists — Armenian tenor Gegham Grigorian and Lithuanian soprano Irena Milkeviciute — Asmik was already singing Violetta in La Traviata in her native Vilnius at the age of 22, and at 23 received her first international contract, in Norway. Her parents were also her first vocal teachers. “The model of singing and the model of life aren’t so different,” says Asmik. “My father always encouraged in me a love for the world, for people, a sense of openness and courage. And the very first thing my mother taught me was the natural beauty of the human voice — no operatic coating, nothing artificial. Singing must feel natural…”
Latvian music lovers vividly remember the young Asmik. She came to Riga to perform in Carmen, Don Giovanni, Manon Lescaut, and Il Trittico, and twice appeared at the Sigulda Opera Festival gala concerts. Years later, after her impressive debut at the Metropolitan Opera, she revealed what the public never suspected. “At the beginning of my career, I had a reputation as a pure stage animal — a born performer who, however, couldn’t yet fully control her voice. And it was true. Control comes with experience, and I was too young.”
Nevertheless, Asmik’s repertoire continued to grow — until, in 2012, she felt it all crashing down. “I had traumatized my voice. I had traumatized my body. I had traumatized everything. I couldn’t sing anymore. And I realized I had only two options: keep destroying myself — or start all over again.”
She chose the second. For several years, Asmik worked tirelessly to rebuild her vocal technique. One day, she read a review that said: “Technically flawless, but less interesting as an actress.” That was the turning point. The moment she began to trust her voice again, she blossomed once more as a performer. In 2017, she made her debut at the world’s most prestigious stage — the Salzburg Festival — and there was no longer any doubt among critics or audiences: a true star had arrived.
Visionary directors like Romeo Castellucci, Barrie Kosky, and Dmitri Tcherniakov now create productions for her. Leading conductors invite her to perform in their concerts and stagings. In the 2025–2026 season alone, Asmik Grigorian will sing Lady Macbeth in Salzburg, Salome in London and Hamburg, Rusalka in Barcelona and Munich, Desdemona in Madrid, Tatiana in New York and Vienna, Turandot in Dortmund, Senta in Monte Carlo, Manon Lescaut in Frankfurt — plus give concerts all over the world.
But A Diva is Born, first presented at the Vienna State Opera this spring, is something else entirely.
It’s a show where you can trace her biography — not the formal version, but the one hidden backstage. Here, the private becomes public. Here, desires break through. Here, insults don’t go unanswered — they’re confronted head-on. Here, you’re allowed to slip out of an evening gown, sit at the piano in leather shorts, and sing, say, Janis Joplin. Or Bernstein. Or Sting. Or Bizet — but not the weepy aria usually assigned to sopranos. This kind of freedom — to be fully yourself — is a luxury only a diva can afford.
Her partner in this two-hour adventure is pianist-virtuoso, composer, showman, and endlessly charismatic Briton Hyung-Ki Joo, well known to audiences as one half of the iconic music-comedy duo Igudesman & Joo.
The tandem of an operatic prima donna and the most eccentric pianist-accompanist on the international stage delivers a remarkable result: A Diva is Born is officially part of the Salzburg Festival 2025.
But Latvian audiences won’t need to travel to Austria. On November 7, Asmik Grigorian and Hyung-Ki Joo will take the stage of the Latvian National Theatre.
Soloist – Asmik Grigorian
Piano – Hyung-Ki Joo
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