Elsa Ruegger
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Elsa Ruegger (December 6, 1881 – February 19, 1924), later Elsa Ruegger-Lichtenstein, was a Swiss cellist, billed as "the greatest woman cellist in the world."


Early life

Elsa Ruegger was born in
Lucerne Lucerne ( , ; High Alemannic German, High Alemannic: ''Lozärn'') or Luzern ()Other languages: gsw, Lozärn, label=Lucerne German; it, Lucerna ; rm, Lucerna . is a city in central Switzerland, in the Languages of Switzerland, German-speaking po ...
. Her father Julius Ruegger was a government official, and her mother was a music teacher before marriage. Her sisters Valerie (Wally) and Charlotte were also musicians. She started learning the violin as a small girl, but changed to cello while still young. She studied with Édouard Jacobs and Anna Campowski at the
Royal Conservatory of Brussels The Royal Conservatory of Brussels (french: Conservatoire royal de Bruxelles, nl, Koninklijk Conservatorium Brussel) is a historic conservatory in Brussels, Belgium. Starting its activities in 1813, it received its official name in 1832. Provid ...
, and gave her first public concert in Brussels in 1892, at age 11.


Career

Ruegger made a concert tour in Switzerland with her sisters in her teens. In 1895, she played in Berlin, and from there toured more widely as a solo artist. Her London debut came in 1897. In 1899 she was compared to American cellist Leonora Jackson. She helped her mother open a music school in Brussels in 1902. Elsa Ruegger played with the Boston Symphony in 1903, and with the New York Philharmonic in 1907, then toured the United States performing with British tenor Cecil James, and American violinist
Francis MacMillen Francis Rea MacMillen (14 October 1885, in Marietta, Ohio – 14 July 1973, in Lausanne) was an American violinist. At the age of seven, he began studying at Chicago Musical College, where his teacher was . From 1895 to 1899, he studied with (a ...
. "Miss Ruegger possesses poetic gifts of the highest order and is blessed with the true artist temperament," declared one American reviewer in 1907. From 1908 to 1912 she was a member of the Detroit String Quartet. She played on the American vaudeville stage from 1912 to 1921. She toured with harpist Zhay Clark in 1917 and 1918. She taught music in Brussels in 1921 and 1922. Although she was billed as "the greatest woman 'cellist in the world", she did not like the description. "I don't believe that it is possible to draw any sex line in art," she told a Detroit newspaper in 1908.


Personal life

Elsa Ruegger married violinist Edmund Lichtenstein in 1908. She died in 1924, aged 42 years, in Chicago. Her gravesite is in Detroit.


References


External links


A 1918 photograph of Elsa Ruegger
by Edmund Lichtenstein, in the J. Willis Sayre Collection of Theatrical Photographs, University of Washington Libraries.
A photograph of Elsa Ruegger
in the collection of the Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco. * {{DEFAULTSORT:Ruegger, Elsa 1881 births 1924 deaths Musicians from Lucerne Women cellists Swiss cellists 20th-century cellists Swiss emigrants to the United States