Jump to content

Grete Forst: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Rescuing 2 sources and tagging 0 as dead. #IABot (v1.6beta3)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Grete Forst''' (August 18, 1878 – June 1, 1942) was an Austrian [[soprano]].<ref>[http://www.operanederland.nl/Columns%20Interviews%20Gesmoorde%20stemmen%201.htm Biography] on operanederland.nl {{nl}}</ref>
'''Grete Forst''' (August 18, 1878 – June 1, 1942) was an Austrian [[soprano]].<ref>[http://www.operanederland.nl/Columns%20Interviews%20Gesmoorde%20stemmen%201.htm Biography] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101219025503/http://operanederland.nl/Columns%20Interviews%20Gesmoorde%20stemmen%201.htm |date=2010-12-19 }} on operanederland.nl {{nl}}</ref>


Born '''Margarete Feiglstock''' to a Jewish family in [[Vienna]], Forst made her operatic debut in [[Cologne]] in 1900 in the title role of ''[[Lucia di Lammermoor]]'' Three years later, made her [[Vienna State Opera]] debut in the same role and was made a member of the company by [[Gustav Mahler]].<ref>Donald Mitchell ''Gustav Mahler: the Wunderhorn years : chronicles and commentaries'' 1980 p404 "These were the most noteworthy productions in the first year. Mahler brought a host of distinguished artists to the Opera: Mildenburg, Gutheil-Schoder, Kurz, Foerster-Lauterer, Weidt, Forst, Weidemann, Slezak, Mayr, to name only a few."</ref> In 1908 she sang in the premiere of [[Karl Goldmark]]'s ''Ein Wintermärchen'' with [[Leopold Demuth]].
Born '''Margarete Feiglstock''' to a Jewish family in [[Vienna]], Forst made her operatic debut in [[Cologne]] in 1900 in the title role of ''[[Lucia di Lammermoor]]'' Three years later, made her [[Vienna State Opera]] debut in the same role and was made a member of the company by [[Gustav Mahler]].<ref>Donald Mitchell ''Gustav Mahler: the Wunderhorn years : chronicles and commentaries'' 1980 p404 "These were the most noteworthy productions in the first year. Mahler brought a host of distinguished artists to the Opera: Mildenburg, Gutheil-Schoder, Kurz, Foerster-Lauterer, Weidt, Forst, Weidemann, Slezak, Mayr, to name only a few."</ref> In 1908 she sang in the premiere of [[Karl Goldmark]]'s ''Ein Wintermärchen'' with [[Leopold Demuth]].
Line 15: Line 15:


==External links==
==External links==
* mp3 [http://www.operanederland.nl/Columns%20Interviews%20Gesmoorde%20stemmen%201.htm Puccini - ''Madama Butterfly'': "Se tu madre" (1908)]
* mp3 [https://web.archive.org/web/20101219025503/http://operanederland.nl/Columns%20Interviews%20Gesmoorde%20stemmen%201.htm Puccini - ''Madama Butterfly'': "Se tu madre" (1908)]


{{DEFAULTSORT:Forst, Grete}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Forst, Grete}}

Revision as of 03:22, 24 October 2017

Grete Forst (August 18, 1878 – June 1, 1942) was an Austrian soprano.[1]

Born Margarete Feiglstock to a Jewish family in Vienna, Forst made her operatic debut in Cologne in 1900 in the title role of Lucia di Lammermoor Three years later, made her Vienna State Opera debut in the same role and was made a member of the company by Gustav Mahler.[2] In 1908 she sang in the premiere of Karl Goldmark's Ein Wintermärchen with Leopold Demuth.

She remained in Vienna singing coloratura roles such as Olympia, Queen of the Night, Oscar, and Fiordiligi, as well as lyric soprano roles such as Cio-Cio-San. After she retired in 1911 upon her marriage to banker Johann Schuschny, she continued her career as a concert singer and teacher in Vienna for many years. She had one child, a son, Fritz Schuschny.[3]

She converted to Catholicism in 1940, but on May 27, 1942 she was placed in a transport to the Maly Trostenets extermination camp in Belorussia where she was murdered on June 1, 1942.[4]

Recordings

References

  1. ^ Biography Archived 2010-12-19 at the Wayback Machine on operanederland.nl Template:Nl
  2. ^ Donald Mitchell Gustav Mahler: the Wunderhorn years : chronicles and commentaries 1980 p404 "These were the most noteworthy productions in the first year. Mahler brought a host of distinguished artists to the Opera: Mildenburg, Gutheil-Schoder, Kurz, Foerster-Lauterer, Weidt, Forst, Weidemann, Slezak, Mayr, to name only a few."
  3. ^ Israelitische Kultusgemeinde Wien records
  4. ^ Morgenstern, Hans (2009). "Forst, Grete", Jüdisches biographisches Lexikon, p. 238. LIT Verlag Münster. ISBN 3-7000-0703-5. This information also appears on a List of murdered Jews from Austria found in Namentliche Erfassung der oesterreichischen Holocaustopfer, Dokumentationsarchiv des oesterreichischen Widerstandes (Documentation Centre for Austrian Resistance), Wien. She is listed under her married name: Margarete Schuschny.
  5. ^ His Master's Voice: the French catalogue Alan Kelly, Gramophone Company, EMI Music Archive 1990 p226 (Massé), pt I pt 2 LUCILLE MARCEL Obstination (de Fontenailles) GRETE FORST Nymphes et sylvains (Seulberg) Les Noces de Jeanette: Air du rossignol avec flûte
  6. ^ Alan Blyth, Malcolm Walker - 1984 "Leo Slezak, with Grete Forst, is hypnotically beautiful, but are a dozen honeyed repetitions of 'Seligkeit', lovingly crooned, quite what this duet, in substance, is?"