Praised for her "delightful" (The Boston Globe) and "delicately compassionate" (Times Herald Record) singing, soprano Elizabeth Bell is gaining recognition as a dynamic performer in operatic, musical theater, oratorio, and recital venues. She charmed audiences as Flora (The Turn of the Screw), and her recent solo recitals in New York City were met with high praise. Her interpretations of Sarah Brown (Guys and Dolls), Marie (La fille du régiment), Hope Harcourt (Anything Goes), as well as her comic portrayals of contemporary Art Songs by Tom Cipullo and Richard Hundley have garnered laugh-out-loud responses.

Elizabeth is a graduate of New England Conservatory and Occidental College, and is a Doctor of Musical Arts candidate at the City University of New York Graduate Center. Her dissertation focuses on the Art Songs of Tom Cipullo. She has been teaching voice since 2002, and was a teaching assistant at New England Conservatory in both the music history and voice departments. Elizabeth grew up in a wonderful artistic community in California where she played clarinet, piano, sang with award-winning choruses and chamber ensembles, participated in musical theater productions, taught dance, and was apprenticed to a professional modern dance company. As a voice teacher, she strives to pass on her great love of music to her students, as well as guide them through their vocal development with enthusiasm and encouragement.

Since moving to Colorado in 2008, Elizabeth has appeared as Hope Harcourt in Anything Goes with Coal Creek Community Theater and competed in The Metropolitan National Council Auditions. Upcoming engagements include a recording of selected songs by Tom Cipullo and her Carnegie Hall debut with the opera/musical theater crossover company Remarkable Theater Brigade in 2009.