- Helen Traubel
Helen Traubel (
June 16 1899 -July 28 1972 ) was an American operatic dramaticsoprano , best known for her Wagnerian roles, especially those of Brünnhilde and Isolde.Born in
St. Louis, Missouri , she made her debut as a concert singer with theSt. Louis Symphony in 1923. In 1926 she got a first offer to join theMetropolitan Opera company which she turned down to continue with her studies. She didn't appear on the opera stage until May 12 1937, when the composerWalter Damrosch asked her to sing the first performance of his opera "The Man without a Country".Since the Met already had two first-class Wagnerian
sopranos ,Kirsten Flagstad andMarjorie Lawrence , Traubel at first had difficulty finding her niche. Her debut as a regular company member was as Sieglinde in "Die Walkure ", the only standard role which she had previously sung, at the Chicago Opera. Flagstad left the US in 1941 to visit her homeland of Norway and couldn't return for political reasons. The same year, Lawrence was stricken with polio and her career was curtailed.Traubel later triumphed in Tannhäuser and in
Tristan und Isolde . She was renowned for her strong voice, which was often described as a "gleaming sword"; her endurance and purity of tone were unsurpassed, especially as Brünnhilde and Isolde. Although she longed to sing Italian opera, she never did in a complete performance, although she often included Italian arias in her recital repertoire. Towards the end of her Met career, she did add the Marschallin in Richard Strauss'Der Rosenkavalier briefly to her repertoire.Traubel's contract wasn't renewed in 1953 when the Metropolitan Opera's
Rudolf Bing expressed disapproval of her radio and TV appearances with the likes ofJimmy Durante and her expressed desire to expand her lucrative career in major supper and night clubs. Traubel went on to appear at theCopacabana , as well as in many cameotelevision roles.After her Met career, she appeared on Broadway in the Rodgers and Hammerstein failure, "Pipe Dream", playing a bordello madame with a heart of gold and the voice of Isolde. Additionally, she appeared in the films "Deep in my Heart", "Gunn" and "The Ladies Man". She also appeared opposite
Groucho Marx as Katisha in a Bell Telephone presentation (abridged) ofGilbert and Sullivan 's "The Mikado ".Traubel wrote a murder mystery, "The Metropolitan Opera Murders" (1951), which features a soprano heroine, Elsa Vaughan, who helps solve the mystery, as well as being a thinly-disguised portrait of Traubel herself. She also wrote an autobiography, "St. Louis Woman" (1959).
For her contribution to the recording industry, Helen Traubel has a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6422 Hollywood Blvd. In 1994 she was inducted into theSt. Louis Walk of Fame .Helen Traubel died in
Santa Monica, California , aged 73, and was interred in theWestwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery inLos Angeles .External links
* [http://www.stlouiswalkoffame.org/inductees/helen-traubel.html Traubel's Entry] at the St. Louis Walk of Fame
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