Read An Excerpt From ‘Diva’ by Daisy Goodwin

New York Times bestselling author Daisy Goodwin returns with a story of the scandalous love affair between the most celebrated opera singer of all time and one of the richest men in the world.

Intrigued? Well read on to discover the synopsis and an excerpt from Daisy Goodwin’s Diva, which is out January 23rd 2024.

In the glittering and ruthlessly competitive world of opera, Maria Callas was known simply as la divina: the divine one. With her glorious voice, instinctive flair for the dramatic and striking beauty, she was the toast of the grandest opera houses in the world. But her fame was hard won: raised in Nazi-occupied Greece by a mother who mercilessly exploited her golden voice, she learned early in life to protect herself from those who would use her for their own ends.

When she met the fabulously rich Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis, for the first time in her life, she believed she’d found someone who saw the woman within the legendary soprano. She fell desperately in love. He introduced her to a life of unbelievable luxury, showering her with jewels and sojourns in the most fashionable international watering holes with celebrities like Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton and the Duke and Duchess of Windsor.

And then suddenly, it was over. The international press announced that Aristotle Onassis would marry the most famous woman in the world, former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy, leaving Maria to pick up the pieces.

In this remarkable novel, Daisy Goodwin brings to life a woman whose extraordinary talent, unremitting drive and natural chic made her a legend. But it was only in confronting the heartbreak of losing the man she loved that Maria Callas found her true voice and went on to triumph.


PROLOGUE The Treasure
ATHENS, FEBRUARY 1940

It had snowed the night before and for once, the sixteen-year-old Maria Kalogeropoulou felt grateful for the clumpy men’s brogues that were the only shoes in Athens large enough for her size nine feet. She hadn’t seen snow since leaving New York, three years ago. The night before, she had been listening to the radio and Milton, her sister’s boyfriend, had turned to Maria and said that maybe she should think about going back to America. “Everyone thinks that the Italians are going to invade. You would be safer there.”

A year earlier, Maria would have been delighted at the idea of going back to the States and her father. But not now. She couldn’t possibly leave her singing teacher, the great Spanish soprano Elvira de Hidalgo.

It usually took Maria twenty minutes to walk from the apartment on Patission Street to the Conservatoire, but today the snow was slowing her down. As she turned the corner into Syntagma Square, she saw a familiar figure come out of an apartment building.

“Madame,” she cried, slipping and sliding on the snow as she tried to catch up with her teacher.

Elvira de Hidalgo turned to smile at the eager face in front of her.

“Madame! I have mastered it. The trill.” Standing in the middle of the road, Maria started to sing the trill from the mad scene in the second act of Lucia di Lammermoor, her voice so urgent and full of emotion that it shook the snow-muffled silence of the street.

Elvira put up a hand to silence her.

Maria looked mortified. “Did I make a mistake? I was so sure I got it right this time.”

Elvira sighed. “That is not why I stopped you. Maria, you should not be singing at the top of your voice in the street.”

Maria looked back at her in surprise. It had clearly not occurred to her that there was anything strange about her behavior. Of all Elvira’s pupils, Maria was always the first to arrive and the last to leave; even if her own lesson had finished she would sit through all of Elvira’s classes, hoping to learn something. She wanted to be the best singer that Elvira had ever taught.

Now she looked crestfallen, “Did I embarrass you?”

Elvira shook her head. “My concern is for you, Maria. A voice like yours must be looked after. It is a precious gift. Don’t waste it singing in the snow. Right now, you are young, and you think that your voice will always do anything you want. I used to think that too. But it won’t be like that forever. The more you protect it now, the longer it will last.”

Elvira took the girl’s arm as they walked along Patission Street.

“You think you are invincible, and that I am making a stupid fuss, but I know what I am talking about. You must have patience, Maria.”

Maria nodded obediently, but Elvira could see she was not convinced and she tried to think of a way to convince her. A display in the window of an antiques shop caught her eye.

“Imagine an amphora like the ones in the Acropolis museum filled with those gold coins.” She pointed at the tray in the shop window. Maria turned her head to look.

“That is your voice now. Every time you sing you are giving away one of those coins. So spend them wisely, my dear, because once they are gone, there won’t be any more.”

Maria looked so solemn that Elvira almost laughed.

“One day, I am sure, you will be a great diva, one of the greatest sopranos the world has ever known, and you will think you are immortal. But when you are taking your curtain call at La Scala and the crowd is throwing roses at your feet, remember the coins, Maria. Hold on to your treasure for as long as you can.”

They walked along in silence for a minute, and then Elvira said, “You sang the trill quite brilliantly by the way, light and dark at the same time. Just the way it should be done.”

The solemn face of her pupil broke into a beaming smile.

The Conservatoire loomed in front of them. Elvira touched her pupil on the arm.

“Right, Maria. Time for class.”


CHAPTER ONEIn Performance


PARIS, OCTOBER 20, 1968

In her apartment on Avenue Georges Mandel, Maria drew the brush across her eyelid into an italic flick. Her hand was surprisingly steady. It was always like this before a performance: there would be nerves before, but once she sat down in front of her dressing room mirror, she would become completely absorbed in her task and the terrors would recede as she painted her face.

The door opened and Bruna, her maid, came in carrying a white fox stole.

“I brought you this, madame, from the cave—it is chilly tonight.”

Maria nodded her thanks. She didn’t ask Bruna why she had gone all the way to the cave when there was a cupboard full of furs just across the hall. She knew why her maid had made the extra journey. This fur had been a gift from the director Luchino Visconti after their first Traviata at La Scala. The other, more convenient furs, had all been given to her by her lover of the last nine years, Aristotle Onassis.

“Will madame wear the ruby earrings tonight?”

Maria nodded. The bodice of her white satin gown was embroidered with red and gold crystal beads. The rubies would bring a little color to her face, which was pale despite her makeup. She would wear no other jewelry, no bracelets, no rings. Definitely no rings.

She heard the sound of her poodle, Toy, barking; that must mean that Franco was already here. Franco Zeffirelli, her favorite director and the closest thing she had to a best friend, was always punctual. She picked up a lipstick that matched the red beads on her dress and began to paint a sweep of color. Up close the shade looked alarming, as if her mouth were full of blood, but Maria knew that from a distance it would give her smile conviction.

Franco was playing with the dog when she made her entrance. When he saw her, his eyes flicked up and down, inspecting, and then he nodded.

“I approve. Dignified but also spectacular. Did I tell you that we are sitting next to the Burtons?” Franco Zeffirelli had just directed Elizabeth Taylor alongside her latest husband, Richard Burton, in The Taming of the Shrew.

Maria was surprised. “But do they speak French?”

“I doubt it, but they like drama.” Franco smiled.

Maria looked at the boulle clock on the mantelpiece. It was seven thirty. The ceremony would just be beginning in the church on Skorpios, the sickle-shaped island in the Ionian Sea that Onassis had bought just after their affair began and where she had spent every summer until this one. Then she remembered that Greece was an hour ahead. The wedding that Maria had first learned about from the newspapers two days before would already be over.

The most famous widow in the world, Jacqueline Kennedy, would now be Mrs. Aristotle Onassis.

“Maria?”

Franco was holding out his hand to her. It was cool and dry and he smelled faintly of limes. Maria hesitated and then crossed herself. In answer to Franco’s look she said, “Always, before a performance.” There was no other word to describe what she was doing tonight. She would not be singing, but she would be performing the role of a woman without a care in the world, just as intensely as if she were standing on the stage of La Scala.

Franco nodded and said, “I guarantee that you will upstage everybody, even Liz Taylor.”

For a moment Maria hesitated. “I hope I can do this.”

Franco raised an elegant eyebrow. “Most women would find it impossible, but Maria Callas?”

Looking at his watch he took her by the arm. “Andiamo. We don’t want the photographers to use up all their film on the battling Burtons.”

* * *

The play, at the Comédie-Française, was a Feydeau farce, and Maria’s cheeks were aching with the effort of smiling. She was not wearing her glasses so the action on the stage was just a blur, but Elizabeth Taylor’s delighted cackle in the seat next to hers made it easy to know when to laugh.

She had met the Burtons before. They were the sort of shiny people that Ari adored. He had asked them to come on the Christina many times, but it had never worked out. The Burtons had their own yacht.

Maria could see a huge diamond glittering on Liz’s hand, which at that moment was squeezing her husband’s thigh. It was a gesture that spoke of ownership. Maria tried to remember which husband Burton was—the fourth or the fifth? An image of Elizabeth in a lace mantilla flashed into her mind. Was that the wedding with Burton or the one before? But that reminded her of that other wedding on a Greek island far away, and she had to breathe from the pit of her stomach to stop herself from screaming. For a moment she felt a surge of rage corroding her stomach and scalding her throat. If she were onstage now, she would be Medea, singing a vow of vengeance against Jason, her faithless lover who has set her aside to marry another woman.

The sigh of fury was loud enough to make Franco turn his elegant profile toward her and touch her arm. She knew what that touch meant. She was forgetting to give a performance of a woman having the time of her life. She fixed her eyes on the stage.

When the curtain fell, a couple of photographers came rushing down the aisle to capture the audience. Maria was about to turn her head away when Elizabeth Taylor grabbed her arm and leaned over to her, whispering, “Act like I am telling you the funniest thing you have ever heard.”

Maria complied, throwing her head back with feigned glee. Elizabeth’s astonishing violet eyes sparkled.

“That should make the front page. Maria Callas without a care in the world enjoying a joke with her old pal Liz Taylor.”

She patted Maria’s hand. “We divas need to stick together. Next time, don’t trust a man till there’s a ring on your finger.”

“I will try to remember that, Mrs. Burton.”

* * *

It had been Franco’s idea to go to Maxim’s. Maria wanted to go back to her apartment, but she had been persuaded that dinner at the restaurant, the one she had eaten at so many times with Ari, would send an unmistakable message. As the car pulled up outside the restaurant’s red-and-gold exterior on the rue Royale, Maria took a deep breath. Holding Franco’s hand, she stopped in front of the coven of photographers and gave them her best first-night smile. She pretended not to hear the shouted questions—“Do you have a message for Mr. Onassis, Madame Callas?” “Is that your new man, Maria?”—and kept her head up and her eyes bright until she was safely inside the red plush interior.

“What a pleasure to see you tonight, Madame Callas. An honor, in fact.” The maître d’, Girardoux, gave a little bow that acknowledged both her bravery in coming and his gratitude that once again she had chosen to put his restaurant on the front page.

“Your usual table is ready, unless, of course,” Girardoux continued smoothly, “you would prefer to sit somewhere else.”

“Now why on earth would I do that, Gaston?”

Adjusting her stole, Maria made her entrance into the main room of the restaurant. She headed for the table in the corner under the art nouveau painting of a bathing nymph. It was Ari’s favorite table because he thought it gave him the best view of his fellow diners, and vice versa.

“You’ll have to tell me who’s here, Franco. You know how blind I am.”

Maria had been nearsighted since childhood, and in private she wore glasses. But tonight was a public occasion. She did not want to see the expressions on people’s faces as they spotted her. It was bad enough hearing the whispers of recognition—Yes, it’s her, Maria Callas, the opera singer. The one who was with Onassis before Jackie Kennedy. I wonder how she is feeling now.

Maria thought of all the times that she had stood on a stage as Norma, singing of the pain her lover had caused her by his desire to marry another woman. Audiences had wept as she brought out all the magnificent pathos of Bellini’s score. No one had ever sung it better. But now she understood how inadequate her performance had been, because now she knew what it felt like to be abandoned by the man you loved.

Franco surveyed the room. “The Windsors are in the far corner with Marie-Hélène de Rothschild. The duchess is waving at you.”

Maria lifted a hand to wave back.

Franco continued. “And in the other corner I can see Noël Coward having dinner with Marlene Dietrich and a very pretty boy.”

The waiter put two coupes of champagne in front of Maria and Franco, and he lifted his to toast her. “Your health, Maria.”

“To the new man in my life.” They touched glasses and smiled at each other. To anyone who didn’t know Franco’s predilection for porters from Les Halles, they looked like an ideal couple. Franco Zeffirelli had directed Maria in some of her greatest roles and was one of her closest friends. They had seen less of each other during the nine years that Maria had spent with Onassis, as Franco had refused to set foot on Onassis’s yacht. “I cannot wake up to gold taps, darling, not even for you.” He had disapproved when Maria had cut her hair short at Ari’s suggestion: “Very suitable for your new career in news reading, Maria.”

From Diva, by Daisy Goodwin.  Copyright © 2023 by the author, and reprinted with permission of St. Martin’s Press

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