- Inge Borkh
Inge Borkh (born
26 May 1917 ) is a German-born Swisssoprano .Inge Borkh was born Ingeborg Simon in
Mannheim ,Germany , in 1917. She was initially an actress and had some training in dance, both of which served her well in opera: she became known both for her voice and for her dramatic intensity - the "singing actress" exemplified, years before the term became common usage.She studied singing in
Milan and made her debut in 1940 at the opera inLucerne as Czipra inJohann Strauss II 's "Der Ziguenerbaron". She remained in Switzerland until 1951, when she sang a sensational Magda in the first German-language performance ofGian Carlo Menotti 's "The Consul " inBasle . It was her key to international stardom, leading to engagements in the world's great opera houses: Vienna, Munich, Berlin, London, New York, and San Francisco.She triumphed in her portrayals of the most challenging dramatic roles:
Aida and Lady Macbeth (Verdi );Tosca andTurandot (Puccini );Fidelio (Beethoven ); Medea (Cherubini ); Elsa, Sieglinde and Senta (Wagner ); Helena, Empress and Dyer's Wife (Richard Strauss );Euryanthe (Weber ); and Antigone (Carl Orff ). But it was as Salome and Elektra - both by Richard Strauss - that she gained her greatest fame. None of her performances were captured on film but some of her great performances were recorded, and both complete works as well as excerpts from a wide array of performances are now available on CD. The complete works include Antigone, Turandot, Iphigenie, and her famed Elektra and Salome.Inge Borkh was one of the leading dramatic sopranos of the 1950s and 1960s, though she recorded infrequently. She can be heard on CD performing "Scenes from Elektra and Salome", conducted by
Fritz Reiner in the 1950s (RCA 09026 68636-2) as well as a famous 1960 version of "Elektra" with theDresden Staatskapelle Opera Chorus and Orchestra conducted byKarl Böhm (Deutsche Gramophon 445 329-2).Inge Borkh retired from opera in 1973 after seven performances of "Elektra" in Italy, and briefly went back to the theater as an actress of the spoken word. She also for a while turned chanteuse, doing a unique cabaret act, a souvenir recording of which, "Inge Borkh singt ihre Memoiren", is available on Preiser CD. Today she is a fit and happy octogenarian, still very much in possession of the great looks that, in her prime, have always matched her great voice.
Personal
She was married to the Yugoslav bass Alexander Welitsch (1906-1991).
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