Ernestine Schumann-Heink
Opera, Contralto, Austrian Empire, Symphony No. 9 (Beethoven), Il trovatore, Semperoper, Ferdinand Schumann-Heink
978-613-6-75191-7
6136751917
80
2012-05-10
34.00 €
eng
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Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Ernestine Schumann-Heink was a celebrated Austrian, later American, operatic contralto, noted for the size, beauty, tonal richness, flexibility and wide range of her voice. Ernestine was born as Ernestine "Tini" Rössler to a German-speaking family in the town of Lieben, Bohemia, Austrian Empire which is now known as Libeň near Prague in the Czech Republic. Her father Hans Rössler was a shoe maker; while previously serving as an Austrian cavalry officer, he had been stationed in northern Italy, where he met and married Charlotte Goldman, with whom he returned to Libeň. When Ernestine was three years old, the family moved to Verona. In 1866, at the outbreak of the Austro-Prussian War, the family moved to Prague, where she was schooled at the Ursuline Convent. At war's end, the Roesslers moved to Podgórze, now part of Kraków. The family moved again to Graz when Tini was thirteen. Here she met Marietta von LeClair, a retired opera singer who agreed to give her voice lessons
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