
N. E. Opera Club Pays Tribute to Hildegard Behrens
On
Sunday, June 13 at 2:00 pm the New
England Opera Club will pay tribute to Hildegard
Behrens (1937-2009) with recordings and video clips of her performances.
A native of Germany and one of the foremost dramatic sopranos
and singing actresses of her generation, Behrens was acclaimed
for her intense musicality and fearless dramatic commitment. She
was particularly identified with Wagner's Brunhilde, a role she
sang at the Metropolitan Opera in the company's historic first
telecast and first audio recording of the complete Ring Cycle.
The program will be facilitated by Erika Reitshamer.
The New England Opera Club was founded 30 years ago by a small
group of opera lovers. The Club meets monthly for programs featuring
interesting guest speakers, professionals and talented amateurs.
Erika Reitshamer is a former board member of the New England Opera
Club, Vice President of the Boston Wagner Society and a member
of the Sudbury Opera Lovers Group.
http://www.newtonfreelibrary.net/programs/calendar/nav/?year=2010&month=6&content=music

http://www.whrb.org/programs/octnov2009.pdf
The Metropolitan
Opera
Metropolitan
Opera Radio on Sirius XM pays tribute to Behrens with the historic
broadcast of a 1989 performance of Wagner’s Die Walküre
HILDEGARD
BEHRENS: 1937-2009
Hildegard Behrens, one of the foremost dramatic sopranos of her
generation, died on August 16, 2009, in Tokyo. She made her stage
debut as the countess in Le Nozze di Figaro in her native Germany
and was first heard at the Met in 1976 as Giorgetta in Puccini’s
Il Tabarro. Acclaimed for her intense musicality and fearless
dramatic commitment, she was particularly identified with Wagner’s
Brünnhilde, a role she sang in the company’s historic
first telecast and first audio recording of the complete Ring
cycle. Her other roles at the Met include Isolde, Elektra, Tosca,
Leonore in Fidelio, Marie in Wozzeck, and Elettra in the company
premiere of Idomeneo. Metropolitan Opera Radio on Sirius XM pays
tribute to Behrens with the historic broadcast of a 1989 performance
of Wagner’s Die Walküre on 8/25 at 12 noon ET, 8/27
at 9 PM ET, and 8/30 at 9 AM ET.
http://www.sirius.com/metropolitanoperaradio
SAN
ANTONIO'S CLASSICAL OASIS
KPAC
& KTXI (Texas Public Radio) will honor Behrens singing today
at 2pm with some Wagner.
Wednesday,
August 19, 2009
Passing
of a legend
Soprano Hildegard Behrens, one of the finest Wagnerian performers
of her generation, has died while traveling in Japan. She was
72. Jonathan Friend, artistic administrator of the Metropolitan
Opera in New York, said Tuesday in an e-mail to opera officials
that Behrens felt unwell while traveling to a festival near Tokyo.
She went to a Tokyo hospital, where she died of an apparent aneurism.
Friend's e-mail was shared with The Associated Press by Jack Mastroianni,
director of IMG Artists.
Her funeral was planned in Vienna.
Organizers
of Behrens' visit said she was in Japan to perform at a music
festival and then give lessons at a hot springs resort. Miyuki
Takebayashi, an official at the Kanshinetsu Music Association,
said Behrens was taken to a hospital Sunday night and died there
Tuesday. Her son and daughter were at her bedside when she passed
away," she said.
Behrens
was among the finest actors on the opera stage during a professional
career that spanned more than three decades. She made her professional
stage debut in Freiburg as the countess in Mozart's "The
Marriage of Figaro" in 1971 and made her Metropolitan Opera
debut as Giorgetta in Puccini's "Il Tabarro" in 1976.
One
of her breakthrough roles came the following year, when she sang
the title role in Strauss' "Salome" at the Salzburg
Festival in Austria. She sang 171 performances at the Met, where
she appeared until 1999. She was most acclaimed in the late 1980s
and early 1990s for her portrayal of Bruennhilde in the Otto Schenk
production of the Ring Cycle, the Met's first televised staging
of Wagner's tetralogy.
"She
is the finest Bruennhilde of the post-Birgit Nilsson era,"
Associated Press critic Mike Silverman wrote in 1989. "Though
she lacks the overpowering vocal resources of a great Wagnerian
soprano, she makes up for that with dramatic intensity as she
changes before our eyes from a frisky young Valkyrie to a passionate
and then betrayed lover, and finally to a compassionate woman
whose sacrifice returns the ring to its rightful owners, the Rhinemaidens."
A dramatic
soprano, her Met career included Elettra in Mozart's "Idomeneo,"
Isolde in Wagner's "Tristan und Isolde," Senta in "Die
Fliegende Hollander," Donna Anna in Mozart's "Don Giovanni,"
Santuzza in Mascagni's "Cavalleria Rusticana," the title
roles in Strauss' "Elektra" and `Salome," and Puccini's
"Tosca," and Marie in Berg's "Wozzeck."
She
was injured during the final scene of Wagner's "Goetterdaemmerung"
at the Met on April 28, 1990, when Valhalla collapsed prematurely
and an overhead of foam rubber landed on her. Behrens walked off
the stage under her own power and was taken to Roosevelt Hospital.
She missed subsequent performances because of the injury, and
later sued the Met, according to a 1995 article in The New York
Law Journal.
According
to Behrens' Web site, she was born in the north German town of
Varel-Oldenburg. Her parents were both doctors and she and her
five siblings studied piano and violin as children. She earned
a law degree from the University of Freiburg, where she was also
a member of the student choir.
She
received Germany's Bundesverdienstkreuz (Order of the Merit Cross),
Bavaria's Bayerischer Verdienstorden service medal and was honored
by both the Bavarian State Opera in Munich and the Vienna State
Opera.
Posted by Your Classical Oasis at 9:51
AM
http://kpac883.blogspot.com/2009/08/passing-of-legend.html
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