Tamaki made her professional operatic debut in Tokyo in 1911. In 1913 she married with a prospect young medical doctor Miura, and the next year went to
Europe to perform and study along her husband. First they went to
Berlin and then moved to
London after Japan and Germany declared war on each other (
World War I). In London she got a chance: she was first cast as Cio-Cio-San by the innovative director
Vladimir Rosing as part of his
Allied Opera Season held in May and June 1915 at the
London Opera House. In the autumn of 1915, she performed the role in America for the first time in
Chicago with the
Boston Opera Company. She also sang in
St. Louis, Missouri, in October that year. Positive reviews led to further performances in both Madama Butterfly and
Mascagni's
Iris in
New York City,
San Francisco and
Chicago, before returning to
London to work with the
Beecham company. In 1918 she returned to the
United States where for two seasons she performed both
Madama Butterfly and
André Messager's
Madame Chrysanthème. The latter was not well-received, being viewed as a warmed-over
Butterfly. In 1920 she was a guest performer at
opera houses in
Monte Carlo,
Barcelona,
Florence and
Rome. Upon her return to Japan from this tour, she stopped in
Nagasaki in 1922 to see places connected with the opera and to give a concert. In 1924, Miura returned to the United States to perform with the
San Carlo Opera Company. Two years later she again went to Chicago to create the title role in
Aldo Franchetti's
Namiko-San. After this she took part in various tours and sang in
Italy (March 1931 she performed at the Teatro Verdi of Pisa with the famous tenor
Armando Bini, at Carani in Sassuolo, Modena in Livorno, Florence, Lucca, Pistoia, Torino, Novi Ligure, Rimini) before returning to Japan in 1932. In 1940, Miura assisted Arai Wagorō with the production and distribution of ''
Madame Butterfly's Illusion''. She died on May 26, 1946, in Japan. ==Legacy==