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Franz Lehár

 
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Franz Christian Lehár

(born April 30, 1870, Komárom, Hung., Austria-Hungary — died Oct. 24, 1948, Bad Ischl, Austria) Hungarian composer. He began studying the violin at age 12 in Prague. In the 1890s he was a military bandmaster like his father; by the end of the decade he had moved to Vienna, where he became a popular composer of marches and waltzes. After 1901 he concentrated on orchestra conducting and on composing, notably his 40 witty and melodic operettas that embody the prewar Viennese spirit, including the popular The Merry Widow (1905), The Countess of Luxembourg (1909), and The Land of Smiles (1929).

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American Theater Guide: Franz Lehar
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Lehar, Franz (1870–1948), composer. The Hungarian artist who was the most famous exponent of 20th‐century operetta is best known worldwide for his masterpiece, The Merry Widow (1907). Of his other works only two were successful in America, Gypsy Love (1911) and The Count of Luxembourg (1912), although their popularity by no means matched that of the earlier hit. Several of his operettas were produced later, only to fail, while a number of his greatest works have never been given major professional mountings in New York. As a composer Lehar moved away from the more florid, quasi operatic style of 19th‐century Viennese operetta.

Music Encyclopedia: Franz Lehár
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( b Komarón, 30 April 1870; d Bad Ischl, 24 Oct 1948). Austrian composer of Hungarian origin. The son of a military bandmaster and composer, he studied in Prague with Foerster and Fibich and followed his father in an army career. In 1902 he resigned to work in Vienna as a conductor and composer, notably of operettas, achieving spectacular international success with Die lustige Witwe (1905), Der Graf von Luxemburg (1909) and Zigeunerliebe (1910). These and others restored the fortunes of the Viennese operetta and opened the genre to a greater musical and dramatic sophistication. After World War I his time seemed to have passed, but then came new successes, many written for Richard Tauber: Paganini (1925), Der Zarewitsch (1927), Friederike (1928), Das Land des Lächelns (1929) and Giuditta (1934). His other works include waltzes, marches and songs.



 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Franz Lehár
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Lehár, Franz (fränts lĕ'här), 1870-1948, Hungarian composer of operettas. After completing studies at the Prague Conservatory (1882-88), he began a career as a conductor of military bands and settled in Vienna. There, following the success of his first operetta, Wiener Frauen (1902), he devoted himself to composition. He endowed such works as Der Graf von Luxemburg (1909) and Zigeunerliebe (1910) with his engaging melodies, capturing the frivolous gaiety that pervaded Viennese life early in the century. Die lustige Witwe (The Merry Widow, 1905), his outstanding work, had international success.
Dictionary: Le·hár
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('här) pronunciation, Franz 1870-1948.

Hungarian composer of light operas, most notably The Merry Widow (1905).


Artist: Franz Lehár
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Franz Lehár
  • Period: Post-Romantic (1870-1909)
  • Born: April 30, 1870 in Komorn, Hungary
  • Died: October 24, 1948 in Bad Ischl, Austria
  • Genres: Miscellaneous Music, Opera, Orchestral Music, Vocal Music

Biography

The most prominent figure of the early twentieth century Viennese operetta revival, Franz Lehár ranks among history's greatest composers in the genre. He was known above all for his international success Die lustige Witwe (The Merry Widow). That work kicked off a vogue for Viennese operetta in America. He expanded the genre by introducing more serious subjects in such works as Eva. Die lustige Witwe had the dubious honor of being Hitler's favorite stage work of all time, but its merits are greater than this recommendation indicates. Dramatic and vigorous, full of life, it is original and full of melodic invention. The libretto is unusually good, and the story full of romance and wit.

Lehár's ancestry included a typically Central European ethnic mix: his father, a composer, horn player, and bandmaster of note, had roots in the Czech-German Sudetenland, and his mother was Hungarian. The young Franz studied violin and entered the Prague Conservatory at age 12. He studied instrumental performance and composition, and in 1888 was hired as a violinist in a Rhineland theater orchestra. He was drafted into the military, beginning a long career as a military bandmaster, following in his father's and uncle's footsteps. Lehár composed marches, waltzes, and dances, and, after a new post brought him to Vienna from Budapest, tried his hand at operetta. He became music director of the Theater an der Wien in 1902, but his first operettas, with the exception of Der Rastelbinder (The Tinker), were not terribly successful. Lehár was a second choice as composer for the Merry Widow libretto, but the runaway success of that work established for him a permanent place on the world's stages.

Der Mann mit den drei Frauen (The Man with Three Wives), Der Graf von Luxemburg (The Count of Luxembourg), and Zigeunerliebe (Gypsy Love) were all given in 1908 and cemented Lehár's success. And as Lehár became better known, his stage works became ever more ambitious, and he began to draw on the musical resources of contemporary grand opera, particularly the works of Puccini, in his scores. During the First World War he again conducted music for the military. After the war, Viennese opera declined in popularity as new kinds of popular music took over the scene, including blues and American popular dance tunes. Instead of acknowledging defeat, Lehár tried to incorporate these new elements into the Viennese genre. The result was more successes. His success in the 1920s was also due to the famous tenor, Richard Tauber, who could handle Lehár's increasing challenging vocal roles. Two of Lehár's best operettas from the postwar period include Der Zarewitsch (The Tsarevitch) of 1927 and Das Land des Lächelns (The Land of Smiles) of 1929. Lehár also began composing film scores and producing filmed versions of his operettas. Giuditta, based upon the biblical story of Judith, was his final opera, produced in 1934. Written for the Vienna Staatsoper, its dramatic content and music helped blur the distinction between serious opera and the lighter genre, which was on the wane. An ambitious work, it was broadcast by 120 radio companies. Lehár remained in Vienna during the Second World War, even though his wife was Jewish. He remained aloof from politics, and thus briefly attracted the attention of Allied anti-fascist investigators after the war. ~ Rita Laurance, All Music Guide

Discography

Franz Lehár: Wo die Lerche singt

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Franz Lehár: Wo die Lerche singt

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Farewell Concerto

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Giuditta [In English]

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Giuditta [In English]

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Franz Lehár conducts Richard Tauber in The Land of Smiles and Giuditta

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Franz Lehár conducts Richard Tauber in The Land of Smiles and Giuditta

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Land of Smiles

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Eva

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Lehár Conducts Lehár

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Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
American Theater Guide. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2007. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
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