Josephine de Reszke
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Joséphine de Reszke (Template:Nee Józefina Reszke; 4 June 1855 – 22 February 1891) was a Polish operatic dramatic soprano.Template:Sfn She and her brothers, Jean and Édouard de Reszke, learned to sing from their mother Emilja. Josephine also had lessons with Mme. Nissen-Salomon. She made her debut in Paris as Ophelia in Hamlet on 21 June 1875.
She performed in Western Europe. She was with the Paris Opera for several years, during which time she became known for her performances in Italian and French operas. She retired from the stage after she married Baron Leopold Julian Kronenberg, yet she stayed in the arena as a voice teacher.
Early years
Reske was the daughter of Emilja (also Emilie) Ufniarska (born c. Template:TrimScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".) and Jan Reszke.Template:Sfn Emilja was an amateur soprano who had studied under Manuel García II and Pauline Viardot, his sister. She had a clear, powerful voice. She traveled throughout Italy and attended performances by the great masters of the opera. In Warsaw, she performed the role of Desdemona in William Shakespeare's Otello by Gioachino Rossini at an event for the Benevolent Society at the Grand Theatre.Template:Sfn
The Reszkes built and operated the Hotel Saski, which catered to artists from Moscow, Berlin, and Paris, adjoined their residence. Impromptu performances with Emilja, as well as artist's rehearsals for upcoming performances, were held in their house.Template:Sfn
Her siblings were Jean and Édouard de Reszke. Emilja taught her children to sing.[1] and Josephine also studied with a Mme. Nissen-Salomon.Template:Sfn She studied music at the Conservatorium in St. Petersburg.[2] Josephine, Jean, and Édouard performed at a soirée in 1869.[1]
Career
She made her debut in Paris as Ophelia in Hamlet on 21 June 1875.[2] Josephine, a soprano, and her younger brother Édouard de Reszke performed in Western Europe beginning in the 1870s.[3][4]Template:Sfn Jean sang soprano solos as a boy in Warsaw Cathedral.[3] [5] Édouard, a bass, debuted in Aida in Paris in April 1876.[5]
She remained at the Opéra in Paris, France for several years,Template:Sfn[2] during which time she became known for her performances in Italian and French operas; she also created the role of Sita in Jules Massenet's Le roi de Lahore.Template:Sfn[2] She was a success in Madrid, Spain in Les Huguenots, L'Africaine, La favorite, and Don Giovanni.Template:Sfn She also performed in Lisbon, PortugalTemplate:Sfn but turned down an offer to appear in the United States. She remained in Europe—including Italy and Great Britain[6]—for the duration of her career.Template:Sfn
Reszke debuted in England on 18 April 1881 at Covent Garden where she played the title role in Aida and her brother Édouard was also a performer.[2]
Reszke appeared with her brother Jean on the occasion of his debut; the two, along with Edouard, participated in the Paris premiere of Hérodiade in 1884.Template:Sfn[2] Josephine played Salome and Jean was John the Baptist.[2]
At the end of the opera seasons, Josephine returned to Warsaw where she performed for charities, as her mother had. She gave any income that she made in Poland to charity. She became the darling of established poets and composers who dedicated poems and songs to her. Audience members gave her flowers and honored her by singing the Poland national anthem, Jescze Polska nie zginęła (English: Poland Is Not Yet Lost) to her. Fans from Krakow had a portrait of her painted by Tadeusz Ajdukiewicz and placed in the National Museum, Warsaw.Template:SfnTemplate:Efn
She retired from the stage after her marriage, and she was then a voice teacher.[7]
Personal life
In 1885, she was married to Baron Leopold Julian Kronenberg.[6] At the peak of her career, she retired from the stage almost completely, giving only charity performances thereafter. For this she was awarded with a diamond from the city of Poznań.Template:Sfn
Death
She died in Warsaw in 1891, aged 35.Template:Sfn[8]
Notes
References
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Sources
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External links
- Pages with script errors
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- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
- 1855 births
- 1891 deaths
- Polish operatic sopranos
- 19th-century Polish women opera singers
- Musicians from Warsaw
- 19th-century women opera singers from the Russian Empire
- People from Congress Poland