Bella Alten
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Bella Alten (June 30, 1877 – December 31, 1962) was an operatic soprano who performed at the Metropolitan Opera House during the early 1900s. Bella Alten was born in Zaskaczewo, Poland. She studied with
Gustav Engel Gustav Engel (24 July 1893 – 17 December 1989) was a German historian. Life Born in Quakenbrück, Engel studied art history, English and French from 1912 to 1914. After the beginning of the First World War, Engel was called up before he coul ...
and Joachim at the Imperial Conservatory in Berlin, and later with Aglaja Orgeni in Dresden. Her first appearance in opera was as Aennchen in '' Der Freischütz'' in 1897 after which engagements followed in Berlin, Brunswick, Cologne and London. She was singing Cherubino in '' Le Nozze di Figaro'', Nedda in ''
Pagliacci ''Pagliacci'' (; literal translation, "Clowns") is an Italian opera in a prologue and two acts, with music and libretto by Ruggero Leoncavallo. The opera tells the tale of Canio, actor and leader of a commedia dell'arte theatrical company, who m ...
'' and Eva in ''
Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg (; "The Master-Singers of Nuremberg"), WWV 96, is a music drama, or opera, in three acts, by Richard Wagner. It is the longest opera commonly performed, taking nearly four and a half hours, not counting two breaks between acts, and is traditio ...
'' under Hans Richter when
Heinrich Conried Heinrich Conried (September 3, 1855 – April 27, 1909) was an Austrian and naturalized American theatrical manager and director. Beginning his career as an actor in Vienna, he took his first post as theater director at the Stadttheater Bremen i ...
, the Metropolitan Opera's General Manager, heard her at the
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and engaged her for the Met. Her New York debut took place in November 1904 as Cherubino in ''Le Nozze di Figaro'' in a cast that included Emma Eames, Marcella Sembrich and Antonio Scotti. During her nine seasons at the Metropolitan (1904–1908 and 1909–1914) she sang 31 different roles and a total of 426 performances.Annals of the Metropolitan Opera (Chronicle of Performances & Artists) 1883–1985, The Metropolitan Opera Guild, Inc. publ. 1989 by G. K. Hall & Co. Boston She appeared in casts that included famous singers such as Enrico Caruso, Frances Alda, Pol Plançon, Nellie Melba, Emmy Destinn, Ernestine Schumann-Heink, Pasquale Amato, Olive Fremstad, Louise Homer, and Geraldine Farrar, among others. Her operatic career included six Metropolitan premiere performances – Adele in ''Die Fledermaus'' (1905), Gretel in ''Hänsel und Gretel (opera), Hänsel und Gretel ''(1905), Saffi in ''Der Zigeunerbaron'' (1906), Olga in ''Fedora (opera), Fedora'' (1906), Columbina in ''Le Donne Curiose'' (1912), and Lisetta in ''L'amore Medico'' (1914). In November 1905 when she sang Gretel in the premiere Metropolitan performance of ''Hänsel und Gretel'', the composer Engelbert Humperdinck (composer), Engelbert Humperdinck was in the audience. This opera received 11 performances that first season and was selected by Theodore Roosevelt's wife as a benefit for the Legal Aid Society. Alten sang Gretel in this opera every season she was with the Met (77 times.) The one season she was not there the opera wasn’t presented. Her other most frequently performed roles were Musetta in ''La Bohème'' (68 times), and Nedda in ''Pagliacci'' (34 times). From 1908 to 1909, Alten went to Braunchweig, Germany where she created ''Madama Butterfly'' for that city. She also appeared in Bayreuth. Her only recordings date from this period; three selections from ''Madama Butterfly'' and the Ballatella from ''Pagliacci'' recorded for the Gramophone Company and all sung in German. Alten also appeared on Broadway as Maid Marian in Reginald De Koven's ''Robin Hood (De Koven opera), Robin Hood'' with Wallace Hyde and Florence Wickham. This opened May 6, 1912 at the New Amsterdam Theatre and ran for 64 performances. The popular air from this work, Oh Promise Me, is still heard frequently at weddings today. During her Metropolitan career in 1912, Bella Alten married Hermann Deri, an Austrian State Banker, and became Bella Alten-Deri. She returned to Vienna and continued to sing at both the Wiener Hofoper and Volksoper. She gave concerts and radio broadcasts as late as 1936. When the Nazis came to power in Austria, she and her husband moved to London where she died December 31, 1962 following her husband's death in 1941.London Gazette edition, October 31, 1941


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Alten, Bella 1877 births 1962 deaths Polish operatic sopranos 20th-century Polish women opera singers People from the Province of Posen 19th-century Polish women opera singers Emigrants from Austria after the Anschluss