Renowned American operatic soprano and voice teacher Patricia Craig joined the NEC faculty in 1990. Her performing career spans more than three decades of major roles in the leading opera houses of the world. She made her Metropolitan Opera debut in 1978 as Marenka in The Bartered Bride under James Levine. Met audiences heard her for the next 12 seasons in a variety of leading roles in operas including Madame Butterfly, Dialogues of the Carmelites, La Bohème, and Mahagonny. Craig is a specialist in Puccini and Verdi heroines whose other operatic credits include performances with New York City Opera; Teatro la Fenice in Venice, Italy; Teatro a Torino, Torino, Italy; the Festival of Two Worlds in both Spoleto, Italy, and Charleston, South Carolina; L’Opéra de Marseilles; Frankfurt Opera, Frankfurt, Germany and the companies of Cincinnati, Miami, Baltimore, and Washington, D.C. Concert performances include Tchaikovsky's Pique Dame with the BSO under Seiji Ozawa. In addition to her private voice studio and masterclasses around the country and abroad, she continues her summer teaching and as Board Member at AIMS in Graz, Austria, and the Bay Area Summer Opera Theater Institute (BASOTI), where she collaborated for many years with her late husband, the world-famous Wagnerian tenor and voice teacher Richard Cassilly. Craig serves as Founding Chairman of the Board of Overseer's for Opera Boston, and advisor to Boston Lyric Opera, and the Bel Canto Institute. She also is in demand as a competition adjudicator for organizations including the Metropolitan Opera, the Baltimore Opera, and the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. Craig gained her first critical vocal acclaim as a winner of the Metropolitan Opera National Council Auditions. Some of her students have gained recognition in this competition; others are singing with major opera companies in the United States and abroad. Craig has studied and collaborated with prominent artists including Donald Craig, Marenka Gurevitch, Magda Olivero, Iris Adami Coradetti, James de Blasis, Henry Lewis, Julius Rudel, Jeffrey Tate, Diane Richardson, Joan Dorneman, Martin Katz, Warren Jones and Anton Coppola.