Leo Slezak

Leo Slezak

born on 18/8/1873 in Mährisch-Schönberg, Olomoucky Kraj, Czechia

died on 1/6/1946 in Rottach-Egen, Bayern, Germany

Leo Slezak

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Leo Slezak (German pronunciation: [leo slzak]) (18 August 1873 1 June 1946) was a world-famous Moravian tenor. He was associated in particular with German opera as well as the title role in Verdi's Otello.

Life and work

[1]

Beginnings

Born in umperk (Mährisch-Schönberg) the son of a miller, Slezak worked briefly as a blacksmith,[2] an engineer's fitter and served in the army before taking singing lessons with the first-class baritone and pedagogue Adolf Robinson. He made his debut in 1896 in Brno (Brünn) and proceeded to sing leading roles in Bohemia and Germany, appearing at Breslau and, in 1898-99, at Berlin. From 1901 onwards he was a permanent member of the Vienna State Opera's roster of artists, achieving star status.

International career

Slezak's international career commenced in London at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, where he sang Siegfried (a punishing role that he would soon drop from his repertoire) and Lohengrin in 1900. (He would return to Covent Garden in 1909 after undertaking further vocal studies in Paris the previous year with a great tenor of a previous era, Jean de Reszke.)

Slezak secured a three-year contract with the New York Metropolitan Opera in 1909. Met audiences acclaimed him in performances of works by Wagner and Verdi. Along with Italy's Giovanni Zenatello, he became the most famous Otello of his generation, famously performing the role at the Met with Arturo Toscanini conducting.

He was a convivial person, and many anecdotes reveal his amiable sense of humour. The best-known example is as follows: during a performance of Wagner's Lohengrin, a stage hand sent the swan out too early, before the tenor could hop aboard. Seeing his feathered transportation disappear into the wings, Slezak ad-libbed to the audience: "Wann fährt der nächste Schwan?" ("When does the next swan leave?").

Slezak had a versatile repertory which embraced 66 roles. They included notably Rossini's Guillaume Tell, Manrico, Radames, Walter, Tannhäuser, Hermann and, as we have seen, Otello and Lohengrin. He sang 44 roles in Vienna alone, where he chalked up 936 appearances in 1901-12 and 191727 and became an idol of audiences.

Vocal characteristics & death

A tall barrel-chested man, Slezak possessed a large and attractive lyric-dramatic voice which enabled him to undertake all but the very heaviest Wagnerian parts such as Siegfried or Tristan. He had a distinctive tonal quality, too, which became markedly darker after his studies with de Reszke in 1908. Slezak was a master of mezza-voce singing and he could also deliver haunting head notes. Unfortunately, with time and hard use, his top register developed a strained and unsteady quality when used at full volume, as can be heard on some of his recordings.

Leo Slezak died in Rottach-Egern in 1946, shortly after the death of his wife, whose loss he felt deeply.

Recordings

Slezak made hundreds of disc and cylinder recordings, beginning in the early 1900s and ending in the 1930s. They were produced by several different record companies and include arias, duets and songs by a wide selection of composers, ranging from Mozart to Wagner. Most of his best records have been released on CD compilations. Some of his film work as an actor survives, too.

Books

Slezak's autobiography, published in 1938 in English as Song of Motley: Being the Reminiscences of a Hungry Tenor, contains pen-portraits of many of the musicians and artists with whom he worked, including Gustav Mahler, Arturo Toscanini and Cosima Wagner. It also describes his tours of America, Russia and the Balkans and recalls his doomed audition for Frau Wagner at Bayreuth, when he foolishly chose to sing music from the verismo Italian opera Pagliacci.

Later in life, he published several very humorous, semi-autobiographical books, notably:

  • "Meine sämtlichen Werke" ("All of my works"), his first book
  • "Der Wortbruch" ("The broken promise")
  • "Der Rückfall" ("The relapse")
  • Dr. Christopher Norton-Welsh: "Leo Slezak," with discography by Alex Weggen in "Étude" n° 27, JulyAugustSeptember 2004 (Association internationale de chant lyrique TITTA RUFFO. Site: titta-ruffo-international.jimdo.com).

Selected filmography

  • Dance Music (1935)
  • The Postman from Longjumeau (1936)
  • The Four Companions (1938)
  • Woman at the Wheel (1939)
  • Everything for Gloria (1941)

See also

  • Slezak

References

  1. Potter, John (2009). Tenor: History of a Voice, p. 154, New Haven: Yale University Press.
  2. 1
  • Warrack, John & West, Ewan (1992) The Oxford Dictionary of Opera. Oxford: Oxford University Press ISBN 0-19-869164-5

Films

In 1932, Slezak began appearing in German cinema. As an actor/comedian, he played humorous characters, but mostly he sang. His movies included La Paloma (1934) and Gasparone (1937). Slezak's final film role was as a portly sultan in the 1943 UFA prestige production Münchhausen. His son, Walter Slezak, who started off in musical theater, became a successful character actor in Hollywood during the 1940s. His granddaughter (Walter's daughter) is the actress Erika Slezak, noted for her role on the soap opera One Life to Live.

External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Leo Slezak

  • Leo Slezak at the Internet Movie Database
  • Leo Slezak cylinder recordings, from the Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara Library.
  • Photographs of Leo Slezak
  • Photo
  • History of the Tenor - Sound Clips and Narration
  • Leo Slezak ; Victor Catalog listings
  •  1921, "Slezak, Leo", Collier's New Encyclopedia
This page was last modified 25.04.2014 01:06:24

This article uses material from the article Leo Slezak from the free encyclopedia Wikipedia and it is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.