THE VOICE DETECTIVE

LUISA TETRAZZINI
SOPRANO
JUNE 29TH, 1871

Drawing of Luisa Tetrazzini

Coloratura soprano Luisa Tetrazzini was born on this day in 1871 in Florence. It is a lesser known fact, that she had two older sisters who were also sopranos, albeit they did not achieve her level of celebrity (1).

After initially studying with her sister Eva, who was nine year’s senior to Luisa, she proceeded to have lessons with Eva’s teacher, Professor Ceccherini at the Instituto Musicale of Florence (2).

As is the case in so many lives of famous singers, she received her big break making her operatic debut in 1890, at the age of only 19 years, by standing in for the prima donna in Meyerbeer’s L’Africaine at the Teatro Paglione in Florence. 

In her autobiography, My Life in Song, she recalled that, “The pavements from the theatre to my home were lined, even at that late hour, with large numbers of people, all of whom seemed to be shouting congratulations to me.” (3) 

It was just 2 months after that she was engaged to repeat the role in Rome for the King and Queen of Italy.

The tenor Giacomo Lauri Volpi described her as ‘having a scintillating voice with a brilliant timbre and a range and agility well beyond the norm…” (4)

Her voice has been described as possessing ‘warm, clarinet-like beauty’ (5).

But it was claimed that her middle voice was rather thin and child like, (though reportedly it grew with maturity in warmth), this aspect of her voice did not please another tenor of renown John McCormack, who compared it to ‘wailing like a cross infant.’ (6)

Nevertheless, Tetrazzini herself had only words of praise for McCormack’s ‘God-given gift’, noting generously, ’I found that his rich voice went so well with mine that I took him back with me to America, and he sang with me both in New York and in the other big towns when the Hammerstein company went on tour.’ (7) 

Later it was written ‘Tetrazzini possessed an extraordinary vocal technique that enabled her to surmount any vocal challenge with joyful ease. She had complete mastery of runs, trills, staccati and vocal ornaments of all kinds.’

She established herself in Latin America and Europe where in St Petersburg she sang her favourite role in Donizetti’s Lucia di Lammermoor with Enrico Caruso. This marked the beginning of a firm friendship and later even a collaboration in a book on vocal technique between the two (8).

Though she was still relatively unknown to English opera audiences. But this was all about to change when the opportunity arose for her to stand in for Nellie Melba as Violetta in La Traviata at Covent Garden. She garnered twenty curtain calls and she was critically acclaimed by E.A. Baugham in the Daily News writing,“I do not think I am exaggerating when I say that Mme Tetrazzini has the voice of the century and stands out from even the great Italian singers we know…” (9)

Her superstardom lay just around the corner when reviews compared her to her idol Adelina Patti. Patti being from the opera generation before, attended a performance and later invited her to lunch. The two sopranos became firm friends and Patti was often seen making a point of clapping loudly at Tetrazzini’s performances. Likewise Tetrazzini wrote about a letter she had received from Patti, “Praise from a mixed audience is very gratifying after one has given it of her best. But, praise, and such praise, from Patti is far more than the passing pleasure of a public ovation.” (10)

Engagements in America ensued and recording contracts with Victor Recording Company captured her voice for posterity between 1904-1920 (11).

One very famous event she is known for, is her defiance against Oscar Hammerstein who held her to her contract not to sing in San Francisco. Hammerstein, was her agent whom she admired for his entrepreneurship and business acumen. She exclaimed ‘I will sing in San Francisco if I have to sing there in the streets, for I know the streets of San Francisco are free.” With this declaration she won her legal case, and her new agent W.H. Leahy announced she would sing in the streets of San Francisco. So on a clear Christmas Eve in 1910,Tetrazzini climbed a stage platform in a sparkling white gown, surrounded by a throng of an estimated two to three hundred thousand San Franciscans, and serenaded the city she loved (12). 

As well as this early taster of coming mega-star’s open air benefit performances, she has also been remembered in the culinary world. Whether it be called Turkey or Chicken Tetrazzini, the dish has worked its way into the ubiquitous list of food favourites.

After the First World War she mainly devoted her work to concerts and recitals. Tetrazzini was married three times and was embroiled in legal battles with her third husband which diminished her enormous wealth.  Nevertheless, she was well known for her generosity.

In her retirement she taught in both Rome and Milan and her vocal technique, was apparently stunning and remained so until her end in 1940.

FOOTNOTES

(1) ENCYLOPEDIA.COM. EVA TETRAZZINI

(2) FORGOTTEN OPERA SINGERS, EVA TETRAZZINI (SOPRANO) (MILAN 1862-PARMA 1938)

(3) TETRAZZINI, L., MY LIFE IN SONG, NEW YORK, 1977 – FROM the ORIGINAL 1921 LONDON EDITION. p.55.  REPRINT AVAILABLE ONLINE

(4) LAURI-VOLPI, GIACOMO, “COLORATURAS AT THE  METROPOLITAN,” IN LILY PONS: A CENTENIAL PORTRAIT, ED, JAMES A. DRAKE AND KIRSTEN BEALL LUDECKE (PORTLAND, OR: AMADEUS PRESS, 1999.), pp.38-45.

(5) SHAWE-TAYLOR., DESMOND. ARTICLE LUISA TETRAZZINI IN THE GROVE BOOK OF SINGERS, NEW YORK, OUP, 2008. Pp.493-4

(6)GATTEY, CHARLES NEILSON GREAT BRITAIN:(1995) LUISA TETRAZZINI: THE FLORENTINE NIGHTINGALE SCOLAR PRESS.P.P 4. ISBN 1859280102.

(7) Ibid. p.242

(8) CARUSO AND TETRAZZINI ON THE ART OF SINGING, 1909, BY ENRICO CARUSO AND LUISA TETRAZZINI, FROM PROJECT GUTENBERG

(9)TETRAZZINI, LUISA, “INTRODUCTORY SKETCH OF THE CAREER OF THE WORKD FAMOUS PRIMA DONNA,” IN  CARUSO AND TETRAZZINI ON THE ART OF SINGING (NEW YORK:DOVER PUBLICATIONS, 1975) pp.1-2.

(10) TETRAZZINI, LUISA, “MY LIFE OF SONG”, 1922, p.234 

(11) Ibid p.250

(12) LUISA TETRAZZINI’S GIFT ENDS S.F ERA ON A HIGH NOTE, SFGATE, CARL NOLTE DEC 24, 2010

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