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Encyclopedia > Mary Garden

Mary Garden (February 20, 1874 - January 3, 1967) was a popular operatic soprano in the first third of the 20th century.

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Mary Garden

Mary Garden was born in Aberdeen, Scotland. Her family moved to Chicago, Illinois, USA in her childhood. She showed promise as a young singer, and after training with the best in Chicago was sent to Paris to receive further instruction there. She made her public debut in April of 1900, in Gustave Charpentier's Louise at the Opéra-Comique. Two years later, Claude Debussy selected her to play the female lead at the Opéra-Comique debut of his Pelléas et Mélisande. Garden's performances met with considerable critical acclaim. She also created a sensation as Salomé in Richard Strauss's Opera of that name.


Mary Garden first performed in the USA at the Manhattan Opera House in 1907 in the title role in Thaïs.


She starred at the Chicago Civic Opera from 1910 through 1931, the year in which she retired from the operatic stage. She stayed active giving recitals, lectures, and master classes for another 2 decades.


Garden was known a dramatic example of the diva archetype, and had a number feuds with various musical colleagues. Her flamboyant personal life was often the subject of as much media attention as her public performances, and some of her affairs were made scandals by the newspapers.


Mary Garden made a number of gramophone records between 1903 and 1929, for G & T, Columbia and Victor. Her recordings continue to be reissued and are of interest to historic opera lovers, although Garden herself was said to have been generally disappointed with the results of her work in the recording studio.


Her autobiography, "Mary Garden's Story", was published in 1951.


Mary Garden died in Aberdeen, the city of her birth.


External links

  • Mary Garden, Scottish-American Soprano (http://www.cantabile-subito.de/Sopranos/Garden__Mary/hauptteil_garden__mary.html) with many photos
  • Mary Garden on Jules-Massenet.com (http://www.jules-massenet.com/a_pic47.htm) short biography with unusual photo
  • Mary Garden Recordings (http://shopping.yahoo.com/shop?d=product&id=1921575888&clink=dmmu//ctx=id:1920007226) Pearl label cd reissue with audio samples in Windows Media format

  Results from FactBites:
 
In Search of A Mary Garden Statue (3300 words)
Mary's gracious movements and the tender changes of her expression under the promptings of the Holy Ghost are better reflected in the play of light and the rustling of the breeze in the garden than in sculpture and painting.
Mary is imaged as both the throne of the Eternal Word which she presents to the adoration of mankind, and also as the human instrument of the Incarnation.
Mary's title, Seat of Wisdom, which in the liturgy is preserved in the Litany of Loreto, signifies in the broadest sense her role as the abiding place or resting place of Divine Wisdom, of which she is the chosen instrument.
Mary Garden, Annapolis, Maryland (1954 words)
Dedicated on Mary's birthday, September 8, 1988, the Mary Garden in Annapolis, Maryland, is located behind St. Mary's Church, in the quadrangle formed by the church, the rectory and the historic John Carroll House.
She decided she wanted a Mary Garden as a tribute to her to and to be closer to her.
It was not until she moved to Annapolis and became a member of St. Mary's Church that she found a pastor interested in a Mary Garden.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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