Nellie Melba, Australia`s superstar
Transcription
Nellie Melba, Australia`s superstar
HISTORY | 80 Years Ago Nellie Melba Australia’s superstar Vor 80 Jahren ist die weltberühmte australische Opernsängerin Nellie Melba verstorben. Anlässlich ihres Todestags lässt MIKE PILEWSKI ihr bewegtes Leben Revue passieren. A ustralia has been called a lucky country and a sunburned country, but more than anything, it’s a young country, formed from a 112-year-old British colony on 1 January 1900. at’s a short time in which to produce famous people, although some 19th-century Australians were nationally known in their day: gangster Ned Kelly (see Spotlight 11/10), for example. But the first Australian to be truly famous was opera singer Nellie Melba, whose unrivalled soprano voice charmed the European aristocracy. Her career spanned more than 40 years until her death 80 years ago this month, on 23 February 1931. “Melba”, the stage name of Nellie Mitchell, was chosen to represent the fact that she was born near Melbourne in 1861. Her parents, Scottish immigrants, shared their interest in music with young Nellie; her mother, who played several instruments, was her first music teacher. But when her mother died in 1880, her father bought a sugar mill in Queensland, and 19-year-old Nellie joined him there. Two years later, she found herself caught in an unpleasant marriage, when what she really wanted was to sing professionally. So she left her husband and baby in 1884 and went back to Melbourne. e Australasian’s critic heard one of her performances and wrote, “She sings like one out of ten thousand.” But that was only the start. Her father took her to London in 1886, when he was appointed a representative to the Indian and Colonial Exhibition. A letter of introduction from a diplomat’s wife then got her an audition at a Paris conservatoire. After a year of voice training, she was ready for the European stage, singing in Rigoletto and other Italian operas in Brussels and London. Her tone and delivery were said to be perfect. e critics loved her, and — more importantly — so did the public. In her biography I Am Melba, Ann Blainey writes, “Melba received the kind of worship that is today reserved for pop stars. 38 Spotlight 2 |11 The young Nellie Melba: on her way to a great career Newspapers called it ‘Melba rage’, or ‘Melbamania’, and it was fuelled by thousands of loyal fans.” e opera fans of the time were still mainly aristocrats, especially at the Royal Opera, Covent Garden. Melba soon became very well connected, receiving invitations not only to perform in opera houses across Europe, but also to sing privately for the king of Sweden, the emperors of Germany and Austria, and the tsar of Russia. By 1920, younger singers had taken the stage. But even at the age of 59, Melba had a remarkable voice. When the Marconi company broadcast the world’s first live solo performance by a professional musician, it asked Melba to be the voice that listeners heard. She sang “Home, Sweet Home” and other popular songs into a home-made microphone created from a telephone mouthpiece and a cigar box. e signal from London was heard in places as far away as Iran and Newfoundland. In 1926, Melba began a world farewell tour that lasted four years. It was so lengthy that Australians still use the expression “more farewells than Dame Nellie”. In a 2004 documentary for Australia’s ABC television, biographer Jim Davidson said: “I think it’s partly that she was a bit terrified of what life would be like after singing. Singing had been her whole career, her whole life, and she had been remarkably durable. I mean, when she gives her farewell at Covent Garden, it’s 1926, and Forever young: a great soprano who became a legend Peach Melba: named after the diva Fotos: Interfoto (2); Mauritius she’s 65, which is an amazingly late age for somebody to be singing a complete role onstage in an opera.” In 1931, Melba died mysteriously in Sydney after having appeared to be healthy only a short time before. e nuns who ran the hospital where she died kept the reason secret for 70 years. eir report is shocking: in Europe, Melba had had a facelift. Having lived her life on the stage, she felt she had to look as good as she could. Facelifts were a new procedure, developed to help soldiers who had been disfigured in the First World War. Soon actors, actresses and aristocrats were asking for them, too. But the procedure was risky, because antibiotics were not yet in use (see Spotlight 8/06). Melba developed a fatal infection on the voyage home and was in great pain. e whole of Australia mourned appoint [E(pOInt] audition [O:(dIS&n] broadcast [(brO:dkA:st] charm [tSA:m] delivery [di(lIvEri] disfigured [dIs(fIgEd] dish [dIS] durable: be ~ [(djUErEb&l] emperor [(empErE] farewell [)feE(wel] fuel [fju:El] ernennen Vorsingen senden verzaubern hier: Vortragsweise entstellt Speise hier: sich lange halten Kaiser Abschied(s-) nähren her death, as did the rest of the world. Jeff Brownrigg of Australia’s National Film and Sound Archive said: “e very morning after, she’s on the front page of the Neue Freie Presse in Vienna. She makes it to newspapers like that in Europe. It’s hard to imagine many Australians who’d find their death notice on the front page of a foreign newspaper.” Melba’s name lives on in two kinds of food that were created for her: Melba toast, a very thin toasted bread, and peach Melba, an ice-cream dish. • mill [mIl] mourn [mO:n] mouthpiece [(maUTpi:s] peach [pi:tS] rage [reIdZ] take the stage [)teIk DE (steIdZ] the very [DE (veri] tone [tEUn] unrivalled [Vn(raIv&ld] worship [(w§:SIp] Fabrik trauern Sprechmuschel Pfirsich Rausch, Manie die Bühne erobern schon Klang unübertroffen Verehrung (→ p. 57) Unsere Auswahl für Sprachliebhaber. Entdecken Sie Ihre Leidenschaft für Sprachen. + Deutsch perfekt – Einfach Deutsch lernen + Spotlight – Das Magazin für Englisch + Écoute – Das Sprachmagazin für Frankreichliebhaber + Business Spotlight – Englisch für den beruflichen Erfolg + ECOS – Die Welt auf Spanisch + Spot on – Das Sprachmagazin in “Easy English” + ADESSO – Die schönsten Seiten auf Italienisch www.spotlight-verlag.de