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Schwarzkopf, ranked alongside Maria Callas as a giant of the opera and concert stage, died about 1:15 a.m. in the town of Schruns in Austria's westernmost province of Vorarlberg, where she most recently lived, state broadcaster ORF said, citing a local funeral home director. No cause of death was given.
Schwarzkopf, who retired in 1975 after many years living outside Zurich, Switzerland, captivated audiences and critics alike during a career that spanned four decades.
Her leading roles, ranging from Elvira in Mozart's "Don Giovanni" to the Marschallin in Richard Strauss' "Der Rosenkavalier," were immortalized on records and CDs. So were her recitals of lieder - German songs of a lyrical, often popular character.
After her retirement she admitted having applied to join the Nazi Party in 1939, but she said it was "akin to joining a union" so that should could further her singing career.
Performing with an array of famous conductors, including Wilhelm Furtwaengler, Otto Klemperer, Vittorio de Sabata and Herbert von Karajan, she was what Italian opera aficionados would call a "diva assoluta" - an absolute star.
"Perhaps never again will there be a recitalist like here," wrote Andre Tubeuf, one of Europe's most influential music critics and one of her many enthusiastic admirers.
Schwarzkopf was born Dec. 9, 1915, in Jarotschin in what was then eastern Germany, but which became the Polish town of Jarocin in the redrawing of national boundaries after World War I ended three years later.
Her family moved to Berlin, where she became a prize-winning student at the Berlin Hochschule fuer Musik, now part of the Berlin University of the Arts.
A wrong analysis by her first voice teacher, who thought she was a contralto, almost thwarted her ambitions, she recalled later. Her mother recognized the danger and made her change teachers.
Schwarzkopf first was paid to sing as a member of the chorus in a 1937 recording of Mozart's "The Magic Flute" under the baton of Sir Thomas Beecham.
One year later, she made her operatic debut at the Berlin Municipal Opera as one of the flower maidens in Richard Wagner's "Parsifal." Given short notice, she learned the part overnight. Two years later she already was singing prominent parts, including as Zerbinetta in Strauss' "Ariadne on Naxos."
Tuberculosis forced her to rest for a year, just after she was signed by the Vienna State Opera. Following recovery in 1944, she could sing only a few weeks in Vienna before Allied air raids sent the curtains falling on all stages.
American CARE parcels were her pay for entertaining U.S. soldiers in the early postwar days. But when European opera houses reopened, her reputation grew rapidly with Vienna, Salzburg, Bayreuth and Milan's La Scala among early milestones.
At Igor Stravinsky's request, she took a leading role in the 1951 world premiere of his "The Rake's Progress" in Venice. The aging Arturo Toscanini, who heard her singing the Missa Solemnis at La Scala, greeted her with: "I never had the soprano so good." It was through her that the late renowned pianist Artur Rubinstein learned to love lieder, as he wrote in his memoirs.
"She showed that the human voice can be as much an instrument of phrasing as the violin," one enthralled critic gushed after her first appearance in London's Covent Garden in 1947 with the Vienna State Opera Company.
Her U.S. debut came in 1953, after her marriage to Walter Legge, an English recording company executive and founder of the Philharmonia Orchestra.
It was a new resounding success. The New York Times celebrated her as a "beautiful woman with a superb stage presence" who gave a "stunning example of vocal artistry."
A year later, a U.S. tour again won general acclaim with "Musical America" referring to her "exquisite finish, technical mastery and interpretative felicity." In 1955, she made her first appearance on a U.S. stage, starring in Der Rosenkavalier with the San Francisco Opera Company.
A golden "Orfeo," which she accepted from Toscanini at a ceremony the same year, was among many awards won by Schwarzkopf. She eventually took British, and later, Austrian citizenship.
Her farewell to the stage came in 1971 at the Brussels Opera in "Der Rosenkavalier." Her recitals continued to draw capacity audiences until her last appearance in Zurich, three days before her husband died in 1979.
Schwarzkopf, who had teamed with her husband in conducting a series of master classes at the Julliard School in New York City in 1976, remained much in demand as a teacher. Legge died in 1979.
In 1981, a Viennese researcher revealed that she had told the Allies after the war that she had "temporarily" been a member of the Nazi party in 1940 or 1941.
She later wrote in her own defense: "I applied for membership when I was 24, in my second year at the Deutsche Oper in Berlin. I was told by the intendanz that I must do so if I wanted to continue my career. The membership card never reached me."
19 Entries
April 2, 2010
For Elisabeth...Never was a
a voice so sweet.
WEEP NOT FOR ME
Do not weep for me when I no longer dwell among the wonders of the earth; for my larger self is free, and my soul rejoices on the other side of pain...on the other side of darkness.
Do not weep for me, for I am a ray of sunshine that touches your skin, a tropical breeze upon your face, the hush of joy within your heart and the innocence of babes in mothers arms.
I am the hope in a darkened night. And, in your hour of need, I will be there to comfort you. I will share your tears, your joys, your fears, your disappointments and your triumphs.
Do not weep for me, for I am cradled
in the arms of God. I walk with the angels, and hear the music beyond the stars.
Do not weep for me, for I am within you;
I am peace, love, I am a soft wind that caresses the flowers. I am the calm that follows a raging storm. I am an autumns leaf that floats among the garden of God, and I am pure white snow that softly falls upon your hand.
Do not weep for me, for I shall never die, as long as you remember me...
with a smile and a sigh.
© Joe Fazio
~
[email protected] /Joe Fazio,
Beverly Hills, California
Mark Farrington
August 7, 2006
Dame Elisabeth,
You opened my eyes to some of the shining glories of Mozart & Richard Strauss. Your presence and your work were gifts, in themselves and in illuminating the very different work of your contemporaries...You are now singing on the New "Naxos," but a more joyful aria than Ariadne's Lament. And, no doubt, you and Walter are coaching the celestial choirs and showing them how it can be done. Give him my regards, and may the Theotokos bless you forever, because you will always shine in our memories.
Shirley J. Minter
August 7, 2006
You were my favorite voice! I always strived to sing like you!
William Petrakis
August 6, 2006
With cherished memories of musical splendor-especialy those concerts given in this city.
Darek Jeter
August 6, 2006
Very sadden by the loss.
Barbara Tuai
August 5, 2006
What a priviledge it is to be alive when you lived. Your voice will be forever remembered in my collection of your music. To be able to tell my grandchildren that we lived in the same era in such an honour. Thank you for your talent and sharing it with us.
Robert James
August 5, 2006
Thank you for enriching my life and those of many others.
MARTIN VOGELIUS MATTA
August 5, 2006
WELCOME TO HEAVEN, YOU BLESSED CREATURE OF GOD, DEATH IS TIME TO SAY THANKS, NOT FOR TEARS, BUT FOR HAPINESS BECAUSE THE CREATURE FLEW TO HIS CREATOR, GOD!!!!THANKS TO OUR LORD FOR HER MARVELOUS LIFE, CARREER AND ANGELICAL VOICE, WE LOVE YO SO MUCH!!!! I TALK IN PRESENT BECAUSE NOW, IN HEAVEN, SHE IS IN ETERNAL LIFE AND HAPINESS WITH OUR CREATOR!!!!!!!!
Gregory Teachey
August 4, 2006
Although I did not have the pleasure of knowing a quite remarkable person and artist, I, too, mourn her passing. Her recordings have, and continue to bring me much happiness.
Barbara McClure Pailhes
August 4, 2006
Mme Schwarzkopf and Walter Legge were friends of my late husband and
mine. She was warm and charming, good and kind, no ego at all, hausfrauish in a way with a wonderful sense of ease and humor. I'll never forget a master class at which a young Thomas Hampson beautifully sang an aria from Die Todestadt at the end of which she was speechless for a moment then threw open her arms and said "What can I say!" We loved her very much and are grateful for the opportunity to have known her for a while.
James Gotwald
August 4, 2006
Thanks and blessings be yours as you have given us your beautiful voice and song. Enjoyed your association with Robert Shaw.
Monica Bohn
August 4, 2006
I mourn your passing, but know you will be part of many heavenly performances that we will not be privileged to see or hear.
I remember the thousands of hours that my Father devoted to teaching me to (hopefully) love classical music and opera. It began in my teen years (late 1950s), when the last thing a teenager wanted was to be forced to listen to classical music in the home since rock 'n roll was "the thing," and my Father HATED IT!! Born in Vienna, Austria and emigrating to the U.S. when he was 15, my Father taught me well, and I have many recordings which include your phenomenal voice.
Thank you, Daddy, for spending the time with me and versing me on what will always be my first love of music... classical and the opera; I do love ALL music. And thank you. Ms. Schwarzkopf, for making my world much brighter with your outstanding God-given talent.
Monica A. Bohn
Katharine Law
August 3, 2006
For all the glorious evenings at the Met and the records, tapes and CDs that attest to her power to move the mind and heart, I will be eternally grateful.
Jonathan Sternberg
August 3, 2006
The pleasure and learning you provided in the late 40s and early 50s in Vienna and Salzburg has remained with me through the years and been a strong influence in the quality of my career. Together with Furtwaengler you were my musical idols of the 20th century and never forgotten.
August 3, 2006
My condolences to the family of Elisabeth. You all are in my prayers
The bible promises that soon there will be no more sorrow, no more
mourning.
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