Lauritz Melchior (often misspelled Melchoir) (born March 20, 1890 – died March 18, 1973) was a Danish and later American opera singer. He was the pre-eminent
Wagnerian tenor of the late 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s, and has since come to be
considered the quintessence of his voice type.
Biography
Born Lauritz Lebrecht Hommel Melchior in Copenhagen, Denmark, the young Melchior
was a boy soprano and amateur singer before starting his first operatic vocal studies under
Paul Bang at the Royal Opera School in Copenhagen at the age of 18 in 1908.
In 1913, Melchior made his debut in the baritone role of Silvio in Ruggero
Leoncavallo's Pagliacci at the Royal Theatre (Det Kongelige Teater) in Copenhagen. He sang mostly secondary baritone and
bass roles for the Royal Danish Opera and provincial Scandianavian opera companies for the next few years.
One night, while on tour, Melchior helped an ailing soprano performing in Il
trovatore by singing a high C in the Act IV Leonora-di Luna duet. The Azucena of that performance, the American
contralto Mme Charles Cahier, was impressed by the tone she had heard and gave her young
colleague sound advice: he was no baritone, but a tenor "with the lid on." She even wrote to the Royal Opera pleading that
Melchior be given a sabbatical and a stipend to restudy his voice. This he did between 1917 and 1918, taking lessons from the
noted Danish tenor Vilhelm Herold (1865-1937) who had sung Wagnerian roles in Covent
Garden, Chicago and elsewhere from 1900 to 1915. This proved to be a turning point in Melchior's career. His high baritone voice
was recast into that of a low tenor, but with a strong high extension. His second debut was on 8
October, 1918 in the title role of Tannhäuser,
also at the Royal Opera in Copenhagen.
In 1920, Melchior visited England to sing in an experimental radio broadcast to the
Scandinavian capital cities from the Marconi station in Chelmsford. From 1920, Melchior was a frequent performer in London, appearing at Sir Henry Joseph Wood's
Promenade Concerts in Queens Hall. While at London he
met the popular novelist and passionate Wagnerite Hugh Walpole, who provided the fledgling
Heldentenor with financial aid. Additional studies under Victor Beigel, Ernst Grenzebach and the
legendary dramatic soprano of the Vienna Court Opera, Anna Bahr von Mildenburg, kept
Melchior occupied until 1923. Word of his talent spread and was heard of by Cosima and
Siegfried Wagner at Bayreuth. There the
re-opening of the Festival for 1924 was under preparation. Melchior was engaged to sing Siegmund and Parsifal. This prestigious
contract opened the way to several other appearances such as a Wagner concert with Frida
Leider in Berlin in 1923. Around this time several acoustic records were cut for
Polydor.
On May 14, 1924 Lauritz Melchior made his debut, as Siegmund, at
the Royal Opera House at Covent Garden in
London. The result was a smashing success. Some weeks later Melchior made his debut on the stage of the Festspielhaus in Bayreuth in the roles of
Siegmund and Parsifal. On February 17, 1926 his first
appearance at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City took place. He sang Tannhäuser
opposite Maria Jeritza, Friedrich Schorr,
Karin Branzell and Michael Bohnen with Artur Bodanzky conducting. Although he was not adversely criticized, there was not much enthusiasm
elicited by this debut. In his first season at the Metropolitan opera, Melchior sang only eight times. His second season brought
only one appearance. To build up his repertory and gain more stage experience, he accepted an engagement at the Hamburg State Opera, where he appeared as Lohengrin,
Otello, Rhadamès in Aida and Jean van Leyden
in Le prophète. He also sung regularly at other major German music theaters, like the
State Operas of Berlin and Munich.
Although Melchior sang at most of the theatres and concert halls of the Western world
during his long career, he is perhaps best remembered as a member of the Metropolitan
Opera company where he sang 519 performances of Wagnerian roles between 1926 and 1950. Melchior's breakthrough at the
Metropolitan opera finally came when he performed in Tristan und Isolde on
March 20, 1929. From this point on his career flourished. It was
Lohengrin's Farewell which served as Melchior's "swan song" in his last stage performance, on
2 February, 1950.
Melchior appeared at Covent Garden from 1924 to 1939, also as Otello (opposite Viorica
Ursuleac as Desdemona) and Florestan, besides the Wagnerian repertory. Also at Covent Garden in 1932, he sang opposite
popular soprano Florence Easton in Siegfried, the only time they appeared together. Other important stations of his career were in
the Buenos Aires (Teatro Colón) (1931-1943),
San Francisco Opera (1934-1945) and Chicago
Opera (1934-1945).
Melchior made very many recordings, first as a baritone on Danish HMV, then as a tenor for
Deutsche Grammophon(Polydor) (1923-1930),
English and German HMV (1927-1935), RCA Victor (1938-1941), American Columbia (1942-1950), and lastly Warner Brothers. His final
appearance with Danish radio was in 1960 with a performance of the first act of Die Walküre to celebrate his 70th birthday, which was recorded and constitutes a terrific souvenir of
the indestructible, indeed almost supernatural Melchior in full flight.
Some of Melchior's most notable colleagues in the opera houses of the world included the sopranos Frida Leider, Kirsten
Flagstad, Lotte Lehmann, Helen Traubel,
Marjorie Lawrence and Elisabeth Rethberg
and conductors Felix Weingartner, Bruno Walter,
Wilhelm Furtwängler, Fritz Reiner, Sir
Thomas Beecham, Arturo Toscanini,
Erich Leinsdorf, George Szell, and
Otto Klemperer.
Between 1944 and 1952, Melchior performed in 5 Hollywood musical
films for MGM and Paramount Pictures and
made numerous US television appearances. In 1947, he put his hand and footprints in cement in the forecourt of Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Hollywood.
Following his unofficial retirement around 1955, Melchior made sporadic singing appearances. In the late 1960s, he set up a
fund through Juilliard for the training of potential heldentenors called "The
Lauritz Melchior Heldentenor Foundation."
In the summer of 1972, Melchior conducted the San Francisco Opera Orchestra at
Sigmund Stern Grove in a march by Johann Strauss I as part of the 50th anniversary
celebration of the company; this was one of his last public appearances.
An American citizen since 1947, Melchior died in Santa Monica, California in
1973. He was put to rest in the famous Assistens Kirkegaard cemetery in
Copenhagen.
Melchior is the father of famous Danish-American novelist and filmmaker Ib Melchior, who
has written a biography about him and for years has fought a legal battle to reclaim the Melchior family estate Chossewitz in
Germany, which was confiscated by the Nazis. Ib Melchior inherited the estate from Lauritz
Melchior in 1973, and it forms the center of an ongoing international scandal.
Filmography
Bibliography
- Emmons, Shirley: Tristanissimo: The Authorized Biography of Heroic Tenor Lauritz Melchior (New York, Schirmer
Books, 1990)
- Ib Melchior: Lauritz Melchior: The Golden Years of Bayreuth (Baskerville Publishers, 2003)
References
External links
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