The Australian Women's Weekly

When Maria Callas met Aristotle Onassis

In November 1952, Maria Callas was invited by Sir David Webster of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, to give five performances of Norma. She held a high D for 12 beats, inspiring critics to call her “the most exciting singer on the stage today”. Opera magazine wrote, “Callas held her audience in abject slavery.” Until then, she had immersed herself in the vocal techniques of opera. Now she wanted to physically embody its heroines. She said, “You can’t portray a beautiful young woman if you’re enormous.”

A forthcoming production of Medea at La Scala was her incentive: she wanted a sharp chin “for expression in certain very hard phrases, cruel phrases or tense phrases”.

In early 1954, Maria visited a Swiss clinic run by Dr Paul Niehans, a pioneer in living cell therapy, who injected her with dried hormone extract to stimulate her endocrine system, reducing her weight to 165lb (75kg). Unsatisfied with her progress, she sought a different treatment from Niehans in which iodine was injected into her thyroid gland. It was also rumoured that she went to another Swiss doctor for additional injections and was therefore overdosing on iodine, resulting in an overactive thyroid. Despite the risk to her health, the results were to her liking: she now weighed 140lb (63kg) and her measurements had decreased from 45–35–47 to 37–28–37.

Although Maria was satisfied with her new figure, she began to make other changes to her appearance. Evidence suggests she resorted to plastic surgery to tighten the skin around her arms.

During that period, Maria and Titta [Giovanni Battista Meneghini, the brick manufacturer she married in 1949] sold their apartment in Verona and moved to Milan, buying a small house. Its interior

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