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NotaPublicado: 03 May 2009 2:18 
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Le Gouverneur escribió:
Para empezar, en mi opinión Varnay es mucho mejor que Nilsson a la que alabo sin reservas su instrumento, pero que me parece mucho peor intérprete en cuestiones dramáticas y sicológicas. Especialmente después de haber visto algunos vídeos suyos donde me parece una actriz muy mediocre.

Hombre, si nos ponemos así y lo decimos también de gente como Caballé o Kraus, tiene su coherencia, aunque no lo comparto.

Yo más bien creo que Nilsson paga el tributo de tener (como Caballé) un look demasiado "Muchachada Nuí".

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NotaPublicado: 03 May 2009 2:20 
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¿Y cuántos de los que cantan las excelencias de Varnay como actriz la habrán visto actuar en un escenario?

Porque de la troupe de wagnermania no creo que ni uno.

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Última edición por Gino el 03 May 2009 11:44, editado 1 vez en total

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Kraus era una grandioso Werther porque era Werther, pero si nos vamos alejando de personajes de la nobleza y de románticos atormentados le vamos perdiendo como actor. De su interpretación como Tonio o como Elvino no se puede decir gran cosa.


No quiero saltarme el guión de los presentadores, pero por ejemplo aquí se puede ver a Varnay en una Jenufa que está completa.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiC7gJHL ... re=related


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Bueno extraordinario trabajo hasta el momento aunque tengo que admitir que ya lo había leído con antelación en wagnermanía :oops: , sin embargo son de esos comentarios que es necesario leer y releer no hay pérdida al hacerlo.

En cuanto al pequeño debate que se puede presentar creo que Varnay se alza como una de las mujeres más extraordinarias que hayan pisado un escenario, es que ella era tan fabulosa, tal vez el adjetivo que más quede sea única, por ejemplo en 1953 en el famoso anillo de Krauss su inmolación en el Ocaso es de una preciosidad, de una tremenda carga dramática que lo convierten en una grabación imposible de repetir, así como ella misma, desafortunadamente nunca tendremos otra Astrid Varnay en los escenarios; tal vez ella no tuviera la belleza vocal apabullante -casi divina, supradimensional- de Kirsten Flagstad ni aquellos titánicos acentos de Birgit Nilsson, pero no se vaya a creer que insinúo que se quedaba abajo vocalmente, nada más falso, bueno tal vez de Flagstad de 1937, que nos presentó el Idiota, es de otro mundo y no admite comparación con soprano alguna en la historia del canto no tiene parigual -sería injusto para cualquiera-, por cierto los problemas de Varnay porque se presentaron después de 1956 :?:
Sin embargo Astrid Varnay era una mujer de una inteligencia superlativa, que dejaba el alma en la escena -cantaba siempre entregada con una intensidad única-, sus interpretaciones puede o no gustar del todo o incluso puede llega a no convencer -no entendería este punto-, pero eso si nunca son indiferentes para uno, en el momento en que se escucha a Varnay siempre se produce todo una ristra de sentimientos, que hace estremecer a cualquiera incluso a aquel que tengo un corazón envuelto en una coraza de hierro.
Ella era así de grandiosa, y creo que se merece todo el mes, para dedicarselo con la contemplación necesaria, de la misma forma como se hizo con Kirsten Flagstad.

Ya por último diré que Astrid Varnay es la soprano wagneriano que más me gusta después de Kirsten Flagstad :D .

PD: La foto de Varnay como Sieglinde en 1941 es encantadora, con las fotos de Flagstad :love:

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Le Gouverneur escribió:
No quiero saltarme el guión de los presentadores, pero por ejemplo aquí se puede ver a Varnay en una Jenufa que está completa.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiC7gJHL ... re=related


Ningún problema, Le Gou. Al contrario: ese video es espectacular. Merece la pena echarle un vistazo. Los primeros planos son abundantes y nos permiten observar su técnica. Para ser de 1970, la voz está espectacular. En directo debía de resultar apabullante. Es cierto que hay problemas de afinación al principio y agudos abiertos hacia el final. Pero es una auténtica leona en escena -y vaya escena, además...-.

Enlazo el video de nuevo:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KiC7gJHLVMU&feature=related[/youtube]


* A la tarde nos ocuparemos de su Elsa en Lohengrin. ¿Alguna sugerencia, ofrecimiento o comentario a priori? Pasaremos con cierta celeridad sobre este rol, para abordar su Ortrud, que es lo verdaderamente interesante.


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Por cierto, olvidé enlazar la estupenda ficha de Varnay que redactó Andrea hace ya un tiempo:

Andrea escribió:
Andrea escribió:
Astrid Varnay (1918-2006)

Su vida

Astrid Varnay, hija de cantantes de ópera, nació en Estocolmo en 1918. Pronto la familia se trasladó a la localidad noruega de Kristiania, donde su padre se hizo cargo de la Opéra Comique, de cuya compañía formaba parte una joven Kirsten Flagstad. El negoció fracasó y en 1921 los Varnay navegaron rumbo a Buenos Aires. Dos años después, cuando la familia se hallaba en Nueva York, el padre de Astrid falleció y su madre hubo de mantener a la hija, en la que pronto vio importantes facultades como cantante. Aconsejada por Flagstad, puso a la joven en manos del director Hermann Weigert, futuro marido de la cantante, con quien estudiaría la mayoría de las partes wagnerianas y ciertas verdianas.

En 1941, ante una indisposición de Lotte Lehmann, la soprano se puso el ropaje de Sieglinde y subió por vez primera al tablado del Met. Y así, a los veintitrés años, Astrid Varnay abrazaba en escena a Lauritz Melchior, sufría la ira de Alexander Kipnis y recibía los pedazos de Nothung de manos de Helen Traubel. Las crónicas hablan de apoteosis. Seis días después Astrid Varnay era ya en el mismo escenario Brünnhilde.

Durante los siguientes años la soprano cantó un poco de todo, desde Gioconda hasta Aida, desde Santuzza hasta Salomé, principalmente en el Met. Pero fue en 1951 cuando empezaron sus años de mayor gloria. Wieland Wagner, el nietísimo, reabría entonces el Festival de Bayreuth, y por recomendación de varias personas, Flagstad incluida, fijó su mirada en Astrid. La cantante ya no abandonaría la Colina Sagrada hasta 1967. En sus sesenta intervenciones puso voz a Brünnhilde, Sieglinde, Isolde, Kundry, Ortrud, Senta...

Entretanto, ciudades como Nueva York, Salzburgo, Viena, Barcelona o París disfrutaban de su arte. Se dio el lujo en 1960 de rechazar la oferta de Decca para hacer Waltraute en la grabación de Solti de Götterdämmerung, pues aún no tenía previsto el salto a la cuerda de mezzo, pero los años pasaban y el ocaso de la soprano dramática no andaba lejos. A finales de los sesenta iban cayendo del repertorio roles como Elektra o Brünnhilde para dar paso a esos otros que se suelen llamar de carácter, así Kostelnicka, Herodias, Kabanicha o Klytämnestra.

Astrid Varnay se retiró de los escenarios en Munich, como el Ama del Zar en Boris Godunov. Era 1996. Diez años después, cercana a los noventa, la inalcanzable fallecía en la misma localidad alemana. Con ella se iba la última hija de Wotan.

Voz y arte

"Hasta 1956 su voz pareció inmarchitable, aquello era el campanario de la catedral de Colonia tocando a rebato una y otra tarde. Pero desde 1957 hicieron acto de presencia los problemas y la campana empezó a destemplarse". Así se refería Ángel Mayo a la volcánica y arrolladora vocalidad de Astrid Varnay, amplia en volumen, luminosa en los agudos, de un material caudaloso en el centro, un torrente sonoro que lo arrasaba todo a su paso.

Es discutible que el deterioro vocal que sufrió mediados los cincuenta se debiese a cierta falta de técnica. Probablemente el fuego de sus interpretaciones a lo largo de tantos años, desde tan joven y en partes tan exigentes (137 veces cantó Brünnhilde de Die Walküre en casi tres décadas) terminó por abrasar un instrumento que, por otra parte, nunca tuvo un acabado realmente diamantino, como el de su paisana, colega y amiga Birgit Nilsson. Más bien resulta milagroso que llegase a mediados de los sesenta aún capaz de imponer su soberanía vocal en partes tan comprometidas como la de la protagonista de Elektra. Sus detractores han visto también problemas de afinación en los ataques, siempre resueltos sobre breves apoyaturas, seguramente resultado de su particular ténica de emisión. Pero forman ya parte de su personalidad como artista, igual que la gama dinámica, la capacidad para regular el sonido y el control del aire. Y su talento dramático, capaz de una tensión imposible.

Su arte cercano, emotivo, carnal, de una intensidad desbordante, distinguido del hierático de su admirada Flagstad, está ya en la leyenda del canto wagneriano.


Repertorio y discografía

Los acentos líricos de sus inicios se hicieron dramáticos con el tiempo. Por eso en los cincuenta consolidó sus tres Brünnhildes, su Ortrud, su Isolde y su Elektra. Otras como Elsa, Salomé, Sieglinde (su debut en el Met descansa en los cielos de las verdes praderas) y Senta iban poco a poco quedando atrás. Mucho de los que se vivió en aquellas noches del Nuevo Bayreuth, junto a las Mödl, Nilsson, Rysanek, Grümmer, Madeira o Steber, los Windgassen, Lorenz, Hotter, London, Uhde, Greindl o Weber, a las órdenes de los Knappertsbusch, Krauss, Keilberth o Jochum, ha quedado en disco, testimonio de una década irrepetible. El Anillo de Keilberth editado por Testament permite disfrutar del arte y de la voz de Varnay en todo su esplendor.

Ya fuera de Bayreuth, merece la pena ante todo su Elektra. Si con Mitropoulos y Reiner el estado vocal de la soprano era óptimo, el registro de Salzburgo de 1964 con Karajan es en justicia un clásico. Lejos de su gloria, aún tuvo tiempo de sobrecoger en sendas filmaciones de Salome (Herodias) y Elektra (ahora ya como Klytämnestra) con Karl Böhm al frente de la filarmónica vienesa y realizadas por Götz Friedrich. En ellas alcanzaba, valga la paradoja, niveles inalcanzables.

La selección es breve y arbitraria:

Elektra - Richard Strauss
Astrid Varnay, Elektra
Fritz Reiner (Nueva York, 1952)

Der Ring des Nibelungen - Richard Wagner
Astrid Varnay, Brünnhilde
Clemens Krauss (Bayreuth, 1953)

Lohengrin - Richard Wagner
Astrid Varnay, Ortrud
Joseph Keilberth (Bayreuth, 1953)

Tristan und Isolde - Richard Wagner
Astrid Varnay, Isolde
Eugen Jochum (Bayreuth, 1953)

Der Ring des Nibelungen - Richard Wagner
Astrid Varnay, Brünnhilde
Joseph Keilberth (Bayreuth, 1955)

Der fliegende Holländer - Richard Wagner
Astrid Varnay, Senta
Hans Knappertsbusch (Bayreuth, 1955)

Der Ring des Nibelungen - Richard Wagner
Astrid Varnay, Brünnhilde
Hans Knappertsbusch (Bayreuth, 1956)

Elektra - Richard Strauss
Astrid Varnay, Elektra
Herbert von Karajan (Salzburgo, 1964)



* Fuente: http://www.unanocheenlaopera.com/viewto ... 566#161566


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He localizado el texto de la conversación en video entre Nilsson, Varnay y Mödl que Sharpless nos resumió. Es una transcripción traducida al inglés, para quienes quieran leerla completa:

Citar:
Roundtable Discussion with three Legends:

Martha Moedl, Birgit Nilsson and Astrid Varnay talk about their careers for Bavarian TV.
Conductor of the program is Klaus Schultz.


There is a longish table. Astrid Varnay is sitting at the front on the left side, Martha Moedl is sitting across from her on the right side,with Schultz sitting to her left. Nilsson is in the middle at the end of the table.
The program opens with a sound clip of the third act of "Walkuere" with Varnay as Bruennhilde, Moedl as Sieglinde and Nilsson as Ortlinde.

From here on KS= Klaus Schulz, MM= Martha Moedl, BN= Birgit Nilsson, AV= Astrid Varnay

KS- Astrid Varnay, Birgit Nilsson and Martha Moedl only ever stood on a stage together once, 1954 in Bayreuth in the third act of "Die Walkuere." Afterwards they were the Isoldes and Bruennhildes in all the great opera houses of the world. I experienced them often, and worked with them professionally. In Munich they came together again to tape this program for Bavarian Television. I had the honor to be their host, and to give them their cues for this discussion. Frau Moedl, the road that led to your career was very unusual, one might say unique.

MM- I wanted to sing. Nature gave me a big voice, and I used it at any opportunity, in the bathtub, at work... I wanted to develop it, but it remained just a wish until the war came. And it came, and took away all the last chances for study, the conservatories, the music schools. I did go to the conservatory for three months, and then it too was destroyed. I had no training at all, I knew nothing, I didn't know what an orchestra does, how you are supposed to sing, I just could, naturally. Then I got a message from a colleague who was in Remscheid that they were looking for a mezzo and I should apply. I travelled from Nuremburg to Remscheid, in the terrible war conditions. I auditioned, they hired me, and my career had begun.

KS- What was your first role?

MM- Haensel. In "Haensel und Gretel."

KS- After the war, the career had to continue. What happened after Remscheid?

MM- I had a contract for Dusseldorf.

KS- As first dramatic mezzo.

MM- Yes. My first role there was Carmen, I sang a lot there... Macbeth, Eboli, the "Wozzeck" Marie, all sorts of things. From there I went to Hamburg and from Hamburg to Bayreuth. It took four years until I went to Bayreuth, and I used them to learn. There was already my colleague Varnay, I got records and wanted to copy them, but then I realized that everyone has their own voice, and you can't copy. But I've learned so much from others, because I always wanted to learn. Then suddenly Wieland Wagner came to Hamburg, he said he was looking for a Kundry and he wanted to hear me. I was totally hoarse that day, so I drank lemon, and that took away the bit of voice I had left, but somehow he heard what was there, and I was engaged. I was in heaven. I could hardly believe I was going to be at Bayreuth.

At this point a German Newsreel about the opening of the first post-war Bayreuth season is shown, including a shot of Varnay, and another of Wieland Wagner and Moedl together.)

MM- That was a handsome couple, wasn't it, Moedl and Wieland?

AV- Definitely.

BN- Like yesterday, isn't it.

AV- (joking) You weren't there yet.

BN- (likewise) I wasn't born yet!

MM- You both came later. I was the first that Wieland worked with in 1951. And he was a beginner too, that is, not actually a beginner, he had worked other places, but he was a beginner at Bayreuth. And so we worked together, and it was the fact that we thought alike... unconsciously, I did just what he wanted. I accepted everything he said and did it, because I thought that way too. And from the work we did on "Parsifal" we developed new insights that hadn't been there before.

(An audio clip of Moedl as Kundry in 1951 is played.)

MM- Knappersbusch tempo.

AV- Slow he said, but not dragging, slow but not dragging... you couldn't drag, it was already so slow!

MM- I was 25 meters from him in that scene, and I couldn't see him because he was sitting down, then suddenly he stood up, and I could see him...he was like a god, he stretched one arm out, and then the other, and waves of intensity came from the orchestra pit...

AV- But he never covered the voices.

(A video clip of Knappersbusch conducting the transformation music from "Parsifal.")

MM- I always found it incredible when he stood up.

AV- Yes. And the orchestra went right with him...

MM- And the crescendos...

AV- Yes, the crescendos. He started sitting down, then he spread his arms out, and you thought, that's it, but then he stood up, and woe to you if you didn't have enough breath!

MM- Sometimes I breathed three times in one phrase in "Parsifal."

AV- That didn't bother him.

BN- But in the rehearsal he didn't have those tempi, just in the performance, and sometimes, of course, you were very surprised! Especially if you were a beginner.

MM- I did the dress rehearsal of the "Ring" with him in Naples. I had a recording of you (indicating Varnay) and I learned it from that, and he didn't do any rehearsals, I kept studying your record, and then he showed up for the dress rehearsal, and the theater there is full of cats, and they leave puddles all over the place, and he took my hand and led me to one of the puddles and said "That was Bruennhilde."

AV- No!!!

MM- And that was all my rehearsal for the entire "Ring"!

AV- (laughs) Would you believe it!

BN- I was to do "Salome" with him in Munich. He didn't like "Salome" very much, and we were all in a bad mood, and the Jochanaan, I don't remember who it was, it wasn't Metternich, it was a guest, and he was very insecure, and made one mistake after another, and Knappersbusch yelled at him from the pit, and I thought "Oh my God! if that happened to me, I don't know what I'd do." So then, of course, I mad a mistake, at "Ach, du wolltest mir deinen Mund nicht kuessen lassen" I came in a quarter too early, and he stood up and said a bad word that started with "A" and ended with "Hole." And my tears poured down and I cried, the whole final scene that takes about 18 minutes, I cried and sang, and Knappersbusch didn't look up once. He could have helped me. I'll never forget it. No conductor would dare tdo that today, the singers would walk out. But it used to be like that. You can live or die with a conductor like that. It is so different when you get a singer's conductor, like Jimmy Levine. Wonderful.

AV- Who breathes with the singer.

BN- Who breathes with the singer. Who enjoys it, and inspires you. Who has the music in his head, and not his head in the music. Like Mitropolos, he knew every rehearsal number.

AV- Mitropolos was a great influence on me. He wanted me for "Elektra", and I said "Elektra with 30 or 33 is a bit early!" But he wanted me, he said "It is a concert." I stood beside him, and felt I was being carried on air. It was wonderful. I had a voice that was young for the role, and he held the orchestra back when necessary, but then let it go in between, it was a magnificent encounter. Then I worked with many great men... I never worked with a female conductor, I don't know if someone else....

BN- No.

MM- (laughs) Sorry for my reaction. I stand on stage and there is a woman in the pit, and I feel deserted, not defended or protected. I'm sorry, but that's how I feel.

BN- I'm nervous when a conductor conducts by memory. In a concert it's different. The players have the music in front of them. But you can have a blackout, it happened to me with Karajan, and he had no idea where he was. The prompter was so sure that I knew my role... it was Isolde... that he wasn't paying attention, and he peered through the hole in the prompter's box to see what Karajan was doing, but Karajan acted like it had nothing to do with him, and was paying a lot of attention to the concert master, until after a page I found out where I was. It was awful!!! And then in Bayreuth in Tristan, 1957 or 58, it was the premiere with Sawallisch, the duet in the second act with Windgassen, and Windgassen was always so reliable, I just listened to him and took over his words... "Ewig! Ewig! Isolde mein! Tristan mein!" and so on, and suddenly he got lost, and I didn't know where I was, I relied totally on Wolfie. So I looked at Sawallisch, because I knew there was a high B coming up, or maybe a Bb, I don't remember now, on "Ewig!" and Sawallisch threw me the cue and saved me. But he had the score! But if someone is conducting by memory, they can't do that.

AV- Knappersbusch was asked why he didn't conduct without a score, and he said "I can read music!"

BN- He had a sharp wit.

AV- The sharpest of anyone. But it plays a great role who is down there. He is like a father, who can help. We don't have a score with us, we have to have it by memory, we have to control our voice and our emotions, things can happen, but if there is someone there you trust, things don't happen. It is what they radiate. And then if you suddenly feel you want to expand a phrase, he understands and lets you do it.

BN- And he realizes you are in good voice and lets you use it, it's lovely, and inspiring.

MM- What I felt with Furtwaengler... that was very strange. Sometimes I think I didn't appreciate it at the time. I did "Parsifal" with him at La Scala, that was before Bayreuth, and I thought, "Oh yes, that's fine I'll sing and get along with him somehow. It was only later that I realized how I had taken it for granted, and I don't know why, but that's how it was. Working with him was the greatest musical experience of my career. I can say that with a clear conscience without insulting anyone else. He was the mentor that reached the deepest recesses of my heart. I can't even say why now. Furtwaengler was Furtwaengler, and there was no one like him. That doesn't mean the others are less, but there just isn't another Furtwaengler. I just felt a support from him down there. I just understood what he wanted.

BN- An ideal pair. You both had so much heart. "Tristan" with Boehm in Bayreuth, that was like that. So much heart and warmth. The opera meant so much to him. Sometimes his tears flowed when he was conducting. It was wonderful.

MM- He sang along.

AV- Yes, he did. Fortunately not as loudly as Toscanini!

(Video clip of Boehm conducting a "Tristan" rehearsal)

MM- He was the only one I was afraid of.

AV- You didn't dare take your eyes off him.

MM- I was only afraid of him because he could be so cutting in such a terrible Austrian way. He didn't mean it, he meant well, but he had this wounding way about him.

AV- He could be very nasty.

BN- It wasn't a good atmosphere on the stage, it was very irritating.

AV- But actually you didn't have to be afraid of him Martha, because he usually picked out a scapegoat among the singers of the smaller roles. It was because he himself was nervous, and had to let it out somehow. And there were a couple of ways he could be handled. I remember a dear chap who sang David in "Meistersinger." Wohlfahrt was his name. Boehm kept yelling at him "What are you doing up there!! Look at me!!! Always the damn stage direction! Look at me! Look at me!" I was in my hotel and Wohlfahrt came to me and said "Astrid, I'm going to go back to being a barber." I said "No, you won't be a barber. There is only one thing you can do, I've known it to work before. I knew someone who went to him and said "Herr Professor, what do you want me to do?" and then he found someone else to pick on. I remember a "Tristan" with him, he picked on the Brangaene. It was only a way for him to calm his own nervousness, but people who didn't know that were very hurt.

MM- Somehow everyone loved him anyway, even if they were afraid of him.

AV- But he was an excellent conductor, no doubt about that. Very controlled, with very small movements, which is dangerous for anyone with the slightest problem. Even if you were moving on stage, you always had to watch him, because if you didn't, he would change the tempo so that you did. That was what was so difficult.

BN- He didn't mind following though, if you led. He loved voices.

AV- Oh yes.

BN- He followed wonderfully in Bayreuth. It is hard for a conductor there, because they can hardly hear the singers. A lot of conductors have problems there.

AV- I had a problem with Karajan that started in Bayreuth. It was "Tristan" and the tenor and I were a long way away from him in the second act. And particularly then he was going through his esoteric period, and he was tracing clouds in the air, and you didn't know which was the first and which was the third beat.

MM- And if he got lost, he made circles.

AV- Yes. This was his means of expression. But I suffered! It was terrible for my nerves! Two colleagues, who I won't name, went to Wieland Wagner and said "We can't work with Herr von Karajan like this." I was in America, talked it over with my husband, and wrote that I admired Herr von Karajan very much, but under these circumstances, I didn't say I wouldn't, but I said I'd prefer not to work with him. Then someone showed him my letter, and he put me on ice for ten years.

BN- Yes, and that is how I came to Vienna for Bruennhilde.

AV- Yes, I know.

BN- So do I. It was 57 or 58 and I was astonished, because everyone thought you were going to do it. It was because of that. He never forgot a slight.

AV- About ten years later I got a call that Herr von Karajan wanted me for "Elektra" in Salzburg, but only under the condition that we didn't mention the past. I said "Who wants to dig up the past?" and that is how I came to Salzburg for those Elektras.

MM- You just can't...

AV- But the best is still to come.

MM- Oh yes?

AV- I never read letters or telegrams the day of a performance, or even a dress rehearsal. I want my peace. If it's bad news, I don't want to hear it, and if it's good news, it can wait. At the dress rehearsal there was a beautiful bouquet of red roses on the dressing room table, with an envelope. I put the envelope to one side and said I'd have the flowers picked up because I had too much to carry, and my dresser said "You can read that, Frau Varnay." I said, no, I never do, and she said "THAT you can read." And it was the contract for the next season for the repeat of "Elektra." I thought, "Now, that is class." And from then on we could work together again.

BN- Making music with him was marvelous. But doing theater with him wasn't so marvelous. He was a lighting technician. We walked around like blind pilgrims looking for some light, with our faces tilted up to catch some if we found it. If you liked his lighting everything was fine! Everyone was so reverent about him. I didn't see why you had to be more reverent about Karajan than about anyone else. I said what I thought. Once he said, "Frau Nilsson, do that again, but this time with heart. You know your heart, it is there where your wallet is." "Then we have at least one thing in common, Herr von Karajan" I replied. But I think he thought it was funny. There were a lot of things like that. He'd call us for a musical rehearsal of the "Ring" at 10 or I0.30, and we'd wait half an hour, three quarters of an hour, and even more, and then his secretary would come and say "*Herr von Karajan doesn't have any time, come this evening at 7" and he'd still be three quarters of an hour late. I felt he was just trying to show his power. For "Goetterdaemmerung" he had 82 lighting rehearsals and one orchestra rehearsal! The balance is off. But it was wonderful making music with him when he was there. But he had so much to do with his telephones and his spotlights, that I felt he wasn't 100% there. Maybe 50% or even less, and that isn't enough. He was only human, and couldn't think of everything. But he couldn't accept that. He wanted to control everything. Too bad. He was a great artist, but a small human being. What can you do?

MM- I met him, let me see, it was 51, no, 52, "Fidelio" at La Scala. And when I tell you he was the opposite of what you describe... there were a lot of years in between.

BN- Congratulations!

MM- You can believe me...

BN- I do.

MM- He was a nice, friendly person, ready to help you. I remember once Windgassen was hoarse, and he said "If you don't have the high note, turn your back, and I'll cover you with the orchestra."

BN- Of course he would have lost his fee for the evening if Windgassen hadn't sung.

MM- He was a real "Kumpel" (pal, companion) and I know you don't believe me, but it is true. He went out for lunch with us in Milan, (wondering noises from Nilsson!) he rehearsed with us, he played the piano from the conductor's score... he played "Tristan" from the score!....for 4 years he was a totally normal person, in German we say a "Kumpel." Not like in your time. I know, you are perfectly right. But earlier he wasn't like that. When he stage directed, the lighting... he let someone else do that. And his staging was so musical, every movement came out of the music, that was wonderful for us. But of course, for Wieland it was too much!

(Audio clip of Varnay singing the end of the Liebestod)

MM- That was the best thing Wieland ever did... that she didn't fall to the floor as she usually does, she raised her arms up, and slowly disappeared from the feet upwards.

BN- It is Isolde's Transfiguration, not her death.

MM- Yes, but usually she really sinks to the floor and dies. It was her disappearing into nothingness that was so different. I learned something from him. He couldn't demonstrate, it was terrible when he did, but he showed me something that I had always felt instinctively. Like Furtwaengler.

AV- He often stood with his fists clenched... that was his standard position at the time, because he hadn't made contact with his own body yet. But what his face and words expressed... he spoke the words, or marked the music a bit... but you could see behind his face the expression he wanted. And movements, he didn't want you thrashing your arms around, although he never used the word, but he didn't want movements that didn't mean anything. He'd say "That's too much" or "That's not enough." He always got to the core of the role, or the work, and he could explain it so that it was clear to us, and he could get it out of us, but each in our own way. He said to me "Moedl is all emotion and heart. You are more intellectual." I was trained that way at home, never to lose control. Martha sometimes just let go, let her emotions carry her away, and I thought "Will she able to get through it?" But for Martha, that fire was the right thing. If I had done it, it would just have been a copy.

BN- We were three different Isoldes, and he saw what each of us needed. He did with me, I felt like a great actress! It is like wearing a custom-make dress, not a ready-made one, like with a different director. He explained to us so wonderfully... although he was sceptical when I started it with him. He knew I'd already sung the role 100 times and thought "I won't get anywhere with her." I said "Herr Wagner, I've sung Isolde so many times..." "Yes, I know" he said, and I said "Let me finish. I want to forget all that and start afresh." And he laughed, rasing his shoulders like he always did. But after a couple of hours he realized that I meant it, and it was a fantastic time. He formed the role exactly for me. "He swore a thousand oaths..." I wasn't dramatic enough, and he said "Think of a broken contract...he swore a thousand dollars!" I said, "Herr Wagner, I can't get upset over a thousand dollars!" And Wolfgang Windgassen was so wonderful, so secure and reliable, and he was... I think we sang it together 90 times, when I sang it with someone else, it was like committing adultery! We were so used to each other, you could depend on him, he never overdid things, he was so tasteful. But at that time only the best singers sang at Bayreuth, no one else was allowed to. Now of course it is a workshop, and you can do anything. So many beginners show up, sing there once or twice and never sing anywhere else again. But not then.

(video clip with Nilsson, Thomas Stewart and Josef Greindl in "Goetterdaemmerung")
All three- Greindl!

BN- Greindl was magnificent.

AV- His heavy movements, how he brought out that Hagen isn't totally normal, only half human. His movements were incredible, it was a wonderful time. It was a joy to be there, it didn't matter if you were on stage or in the auditorium.

BN- The greatest thing is that the ensemble was there for months, every day. Now they do a rehearsal, then go off somewhere in the world to do a performance, then come back for a day or two, you couldn't do that then.

AV- You lived, ate, and slept Wagner!

MM- And then there were the landladies! There was the Frau Moekl, she was so proud when Isolde or Bruennhilde lived at her place! The apartment was so small... Hotter once used the same bathtub that the Begum had bathed in, he was so proud!

BN- But you could only bathe on friday, otherwise there was no hot water. So you had to wash off all the stage dirt from the whole week, and wait until next friday to do it again! And then you often ate at the "Adler", you could eat well there. And Astrid was such a big star, and the menu never changed, but one day I came, and there was "Omelette alla Varnay" on the menu. I asked "What is Omelette alla Varnay"? "It was with wild raspberries" So I said, I have to have that! So they brought it and I couldn't believe my eyes, it was moving! The raspberries were wild, so they were full of worms! Of course I made a bittersweet comment, and the next day there was "Rump steak alla Nilsson!" (they all laugh)

KS- Were you ever mistaken for each other?

BN- Once I was at the Wagner Verein on a free day, there were various tables, and 8 or 10 people at each, and there was a man across from me at another table, and he said "Oh Frau Varnay, you are magnificent! Your Bruennhilde, your Isolde, just fantastic... and this young Nilsson, what does she want, she's nothing! I can't understand what people see in her" and I gave him a smile, a bit forced, but none-the-less, and he kept on complimenting me, and finally a lady from another table came by and said "Oh Frau Nilsson, thank you for your Isolde, you were wonderful!"

AV- Oh God!

BN- And I think the man almost died. He turned red, and white, and I had no sympathy with him whatsoever! I enjoyed every minute of

all laugh)

AV- I believe it. It's a wonder we are still speaking to each other! You could have held that against me.

BN- I didn't dare then. I had such respect for you both, I worshiped you.

AV- I had so much respect for the generation before me. I think of Kirsten Flagstad, she was my idol, and still is. She was a friend of the family. When I was still a small child and couldn't talk yet, my mother sang in Norway and Sweden. in "Masked Ball" Flagstad was Amelia, and my mother was Oscar. She couldn't find a babysitter, she didn't know what to do, so she wrapped me up and thought that the dressing room table had drawers, and she could put me the lowest one and I wouldn't fall out. But it was still too high, so she went to Flagstad's dressing room, and there it was just the right height, so she put me in that. And that was my first contact with Kirsten Flagstad! And I like to think that I inhaled some of that dramatic sound while she was singing. Incredible.

BN- I came to Bayreuth, and there were two such great Bruennhildes and Isoldes. The first thing I heard was Isolde with Astrid. You have no idea what a complex I had in Bayreuth with you two!

MM- My mother was on the fourth floor and she heard someone singing Wagner, she told me, but I don't remember what, and she came down to me and said "I just heard a voice, she is going to give you all a run for your money!" And that was you.

BN- Mothers say things like that to spur their children on.

MM- She really said it.

KS- You all experienced, and sang in, the Ring in the early fifties in New York, a production as different from Bayreuth as could be. Even with a real horse.

BN- Ah, Grane!

AV- Das Ross!

MM- Mine would only move for sugar. He knew exactly that I had sugar. He didn't like high notes, his ears would twitch, and he'd paw with his hooves. They put felt slippers on them so he wouldn't make so much noise! At "Grane, mein Ross!" I embraced him and he twitched his ears, but then I kept singing and he was nice, and I had the sugar in my hand behind my back, and he nuzzled forward to it, and munched away! In the score it says "She swings herself onto the horse and gallops into the fire" but two of us couldn't get him to move. His trainer and I pushed and shoved, and we never did get him off stage. All the 6 times I sang it.

BN- I had a Grane in Stockholm. I fed him sugar at all the rehearsals, but at the premiere I was so nervous and forgot to bring the sugar. I came on stage, and he wanted his sugar, and he bit me! I had to keep leading him around the stage to keep him occupied. The veterinarian was in the front row. He was white as a sheet, he was afraid we'd land up in the orchestra pit! He was so nasty, that horse! The only thing I could do was keep walking and walking and singing. At the end there was an ovation, and one man stood up and clapped and blew kisses. When I'd removed my makeup and left the theater, he was still there, and he said "Oh, Frau Nilsson, you were magnificent!" "I'm glad you liked my Bruennhilde," I said. "Oh, yes, Bruennhilde, "he said, "That was fine, but I've never seen a woman handle a horse the way you can!"

MM- The things you go through as a singer!

BN- How true.

MM- It all looks so lovely.

AV- No one knows how much we have to invest, every time you go on stage, you are afraid.

MM- Lotte Lehmann said, you are only in really good shape to sing three times a year, and then you don't have a performance!

BN- That's true.

AV- None-the-less, I don't think any of us would ever had wanted to give up the stage. We accepted that that was a part of it.

KS- Did any of you ever have a crisis, difficulties..

AV- Of course.

KS- Technical or artistic, or...

AV- Go ahead and say it, vocal. I don't think anyone who has had a success hasn't go through a crisis, even if just one. And if they didn't, it is a small miracle, or they're not telling the truth. When I started I was very young, 23, and after three years I had trouble. My body and muscles hadn't developed to the same extent that my voice had. The voice wanted to break out, like out of an eggshell. Everybody goes through something like that. Or when you've sung when you're sick, and something goes wrong, and you develop a complex about it, it takes a long time to get over it.

BN- Everybody in a different way.

MM- You say it was at the beginning. For me it was always, my whole career. (to Nilsson) How about you?

BN- 1954 in Bayreuth I was singing Elsa and Ortlinde in "Walkuere." It was very cold, and it rained, and I caught a cold. Astrid had one too, but she was very famous, and she could go around with a sign hung around her neck "I can't talk!" But I was there for the first time, I didn't dare do that! So I sang and sang and sang, and three days before the premiere I woke up, and my voice cracked, the middle register didn't function at all. Totally gone, like yodeling. I didn't have the nerve to tell Wieland Wagner, he wouldn't have let me sing, so I thought "I'll go into the dress rehearsal with a cool head, and sing as long as I can." But shortly before I'd found my technique, I was singing in Brussels, and had a cold there too. So I locked myself in and vocalized using the combination of breath and very high placement, forward in the mask, and went to the dress rehearsal and by the time it was over I'd sung myself back to health. I still remember how terrible that was when absolutely no tone came. I thought, shall I sing from the top down, or from the bottom up, but whatever I did, there was still this hole in the middle. But with a cool, collected head, I sang my voice back to normal, and before the premiere there were a couple of days, and it went well.

(Audio clip of Nilsson and Varnay in "Lohengrin.")

AV- Why did you never sing Ortrud?

BN- I can give you a simple answer, that was your fault. When I sang Elsa, and you were Ortrud, I never dared touch it. She was incredible, so fantastic.
Wieland asked me, and I said, no, I don't want to. Later I did look at it, but realized it wasn't right for me. The tessitura was too low, I started the second act and suddenly my high register wasn't so good anymore. Although everyone said I was a mezzo when I started, because my voice was dark, but then it got higher. The voice isn't an elastic band that you can just pull where you want it.

AV- That's right.

MM- That's why Wagner was so good for you. You had the high and the low notes, almost like a mezzo. Both of you. You both had the right vocal range, not that you just got the high notes out somehow, you really got them, some people get them, but it isn't the real thing. The same thing with lows notes. Both of you, unique in my experience had the high and the low register. That is right for Wagner.

BN- A lot of Bruennhildes come from the mezzo Fach.

MM- Yes, of course. And they manage it. Look at me. I started as a mezzo. In my good period I sang every high C that was written, but it wasn't a high C like yours.

BN- It was a high C from Martha Moedl, and that was quite enough!

(Audio clip of Moedl in the Immolation scene)

MM- I sang the big Wagner roles in Bayreuth from 1951 until 1964 and then I gave them up, because if you can't do them justice, you should leave them alone. Easily said, but what do you do then? I did the Amme, and the Kostelnicka, but not for long either, and then Klytemnestra, I did that longer, of course, that is because of the role.

AV- When I couldn't sing Bruennhilde's "Hoyotoho" consistently anymore, that is, I sang it, but not to my satisfaction, I decided I wanted to go into the character repertoire. I already sang Herodias, but a soprano or a mezzo can sing that, and my low register developed, so I found my way, maybe Ortrud was the seed that they grew from. They were usually weird, or evil characters, not necessarily evil... people who took advantage of and used other people. So I slid into this second career. The Kostelnicka in Jenufa is sort of between soprano and mezzo, and I felt very comfortable in it. It was filmed and Kubelik conducted.

(Video clip of Varnay in "Jenufa.") I was happy, I was on stage with classical music. The so-called modern music, hyper-modern music, it didn't do anything for me. I couldn't remember the notes. (to Moedl) I always admired you because you could.

MM- I sang all sorts of wrong notes. The composers would come after the premiere and say "How you manage to hit all the right notes." Even the composers didn't know! I sang one modern opera, two, three.. until I finally realized that, in what we call modern music, the text fits the music exactly. It was an eye-opener for me. I won't say that I love modern music, love has nothing to do with it, my love belonged to Wagner, who always remained the center for me, then I found my way back to older music again, the old Countess in "Pique Dame" became a foundation of my existence, I did it for the last time 1992 at the Vienna State Opera with Ozawa, Atlantov, Freni, an incredible cast, and I stopped it there, because I thought "I'll never get it so good again, not at any theater."
(Video clip of Moedl in Pique Dame, 1992)

BN- When Windgassen left Bayreuth in 1970, I thought "It's time for you to say goodbye here too." Better a couple of years too early than too late. He had an official farewell performance in "Tristan", but I didn't tell anyone that it was my last one too. I couldn't have faced an official farewell performance. I saw the final performance of an older colleague as Bruennhilde in Stockholm. I was in the audience and cried the whole evening, it was like a funeral. That is why I canceled my last "Frau ohne Schatten" in Vienna in 1981. There were two performances with 10 days in between, and everyone knew the second performance was my last. And everyone knows how over-sentimental the Viennese are, and I thought "I can't do it, I can't!" I did the first one, with Horst Stein, it went extremely well, then I did an Elektra in Frankfurt, and I said afterwards "That was my last performance." They said, "But you're singing in Vienna." and I said "I'm going to cancel." I wrote a very long letter saying I'd had a long love affair with the Vienna State Opera, and I didn't want to say "Leb wohl", I wanted to say "Auf Wiedersehen." That was my way to stop. Some people didn't understand me, but I was content. That's how I stopped.

MM- But now you are teaching.

BN- Since 1983. At first I didn't want to, I thought "I can't do that, I can't!" The responsibility! I know what it is like to have a bad teacher, from my own experience. And I thought, "I won't do it." But then the school gave me an honorary doctorate, and I thought I somehow owed them at least a master class. I gave one every year for 10 years, and they went well, at least, the first one was terrible, I was more nervous than at my Met debut! I really shook. I think it is important to explain the technical side first. How one should sing, and how it works. I always say, I bake the cake before I decorate it with interpretation and expression and so forth, that is just as important, but first you have to have the instrument you can play. I thought about it a lot, and forced myself to think that way, how you spare the vocal chords, and how you make a sound without ruining the instrument. For me there were two important things, the support, the air that carries the tone, and the resonance that we have here in the front of our head. That is our violin, our grand piano, and then to free and relax the vocal chords as much as possible, that is the most important thing for me, and as deep a support as possible. But you have to know how it works, that helps so much, you feel freer, and then it is easier to interpret, you don't think "Oh my God, how am I going to do it?" when you are in trouble. I went through that too, that is why I think about it. And as long as I had problems with my voice, I couldn't free myself as an actress, because I was still worried about my voice.

MM- I'm not interested. I'd rather sing, even just small roles, until I die. I can't teach. I know, it is my mistake, but I didn't know how I sang. That's why I had troubles. So how could I teach it to a student?

AV- If you could teach a student expression... you could do that,couldn't you?

MM- Expression, yes, I could do that. But is that is still required today, with these stage directors, imagine I'm singing "Fidelio" I want to teach someone "Fidelio." Then I say "I see a rainbow" and I make a gesture like this, and the director says "Don't raise up your arm, that's completely wrong!"

BN- Crawl around on the floor!!

MM- Crawl around on the floor. How can I teach that?

AV- You can.

MM- How do you work with young singers who come to you to learn dramatic expression?

AV- I've always said you can tie my hands behind my back, but I can still communicate. I mainly teach them this. They come to me, and are supposed to be in control of their vocal technique. The technique is a case apart, I think you work on technique until the end of your life, you are always on the search for technique. A great colleague once said to me "Now I know how, I'm too old." What I want, is that the singers... out of their own personality, everyone should be different, even when they sing the same things. And it is fascinating to see how everyone interprets the same thing differently. I want to get THEIR interpretation out of them, I don't want to force my interpretation onto them. I try to discover what they have. That means I have to gain their trust slowly, because when I went to someone, I had to trust them, because I didn't want to lose what I'd already learned. So I say "Do it as you've learned it, and then try what I suggest, and see which is easier." And then sometimes he'll say "Can I try it a third way?" And I say "Do it!", and then I know I've reached him. That gives me so much pleasure, because vocally they are prepared. To develop the personality and get rid of inhibitions, that is the great thing. I'd taught for a while and didn't know if I could, but there was this young man, I have to tell this story, it was the greatest success of my life. He sang Lieder, and he was unbelievably inhibited when he sang love songs. He had no idea how to express love. Then I got this ridiculous idea... but God gave it to me, and I said "What do you like to eat more than anything?" And he said "A steak." I said "Rare, well done?" He said, " It doesn't matter, but a good beef steak." And I said, "Then sing this love song, but think of a beef steak, marinated, with herbs, grilled, maybe with french fries." I can tell you, he sang a love song... I wish I'd been that beef steak! (all laugh)

KS- (to BN) Like Frau Varnay, you've written a book?

BN- I did. I typed it on a machine with two fingers. 380 pages. It was work. I wrote between ten pm and two am, when it was quiet, no telephone calls, and then when I went to bed, my heart raced, I thought of my career, it was exciting. I always sang, even before I could walk. But I was on the farm, then when I was six a school teacher discovered my voice. He wanted me to sing at the Christmas Concert, and my mother made me a beautiful costume, taught me a couple of children's songs. I climbed up on a chair, and it was nice and they clapped, but I thought "They could have clapped more than that!" So I changed my repertoire, I learned a couple of less respectable songs from workers on the farm, and then I sang them! And the public laughed and clapped. I thought "Now I know how to reach the public!" But when we got home, my mother said, "That was the first and last time!" My book was on the bestseller list in Sweden for months.

MM- You deserve a prize for humor.

BN- I didn't want to say it, but yes, I think there is a lot of humor in it.

AV- I cursed a lot because they talked me into writing the book. We worked on it for 3 1/2 years. It isn't just a book about my career, but about the history of the world. My debut was Pearl Harbor. History played a big role in my career.

KS- And this debut?

AV- This debut... an unbelievable story, the sixth of December, the day before Pearl Harbor, Lotte Lehmann canceled, she was supposed to sing Sieglinde. Then Mr. Johnson threw me out onto the stage, and I had to sing Sieglinde. I don't know how many million people were listening.

KS- It was broadcast on the radio.

AV- Yes. When you are young, you have the advantage of being a substitute. I knew I could sing it, but I thought "How will I act?" That was my debut at the Met. Then six days later Helen Traubel canceled and I had to go on as Bruennhilde. Those were the sensations. But the real, serious part came afterwards.

BN- You really started so early.

AV- Yes, but I had to pay my dues later.

BN- At that time, I was digging up potatoes in the country.

AV- Yes, but I had to work afterwards. Making a sensation is one thing, but then the voice grew, but the muscles had to develop, and I had to go through different experiences until I felt sure of myself on stage.

KS- The word "luck" has played a major role in this discussion.

BN- Luck plays a big part in this profession, you have to have it.

AV- Yes, but when luck presents itself, you have to be ready. You have to work hard for this career.

MM- When I started there was war, there were no possibilities, and never-the-less, luck threw one opportunity after another in my path.

End of the program.


* Fuente: http://www.geocities.com/vienna/strasse ... trid1.html


Última edición por Spinoza el 03 May 2009 14:13, editado 1 vez en total

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En cuanto al declive la Varnay, que comentais en las grabaciones de Lohengrin del 53 y 54, a mí se me hace abrumante la tesitura ya resentidísima de 1956 a 1958 en el papel de Brunilda, de unos Hojotho absolutamente soberbios del 56 pasamos a unas notas rasgadísimas, golpeadas e inexistentes en el 58.

Si ustedes quieren, me comprometo a subir una grabación inusual que conseguí de alguien que la debía de tener en cassette de un 1º acto de una Walkyria en NY con Vinay, simplemente para comparar la maduración vocal de su primera Sieglinde a esta.

Por otro lado, recomiendo abiertamente a quien casi desconozca a la Varnay que escuche el 3º acto del Siegfried en estéreo del anillo de Keilberth, su entrada conel "Heildir sonne, Heildir Tag" es absolutamente insuperable vocalmente, esa fuerza, ese timbre... Y además acaba el acto como si nada...


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Buenísima.

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¿La entrevista, supongo? :?:


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<center>Astrid Varnay
Elsa (Lohengrin)

Imagen

Elsa fue el tercer rol que Varnay intepretó en el Met, en enero de 1942, tras sus precoces y apabullantes Sieglinde (6 de diciembre del 41) y Brünnhilde (12 de diciembre del 41). Su voz era, por entonces, lo suficientemente pura y juvenil como para resultar creíble en esta encarnación. Las exigencias agudas del papel no eran en aquél momento obstáculo alguno. Varnay, como en su Sieglinde, aparecía como una lírica dramática, arrolladora pero dueña ya de una capacidad interpretativa y de una atención al texto y a los matices digna de las grandes. Como en el caso de Flagstad, aquí Varnay no ofrece tampoco una caracterización aniñada y más bien pueril de la princesa Elsa, sino un retrato algo más vigoroso, más cariacontecido que doliente, donde la rabia y la resignación se dejan entrever con más vigor del acostumbrado, rompiendo la pasividad que resulta ser el núcleo de algunas otras interpretaciones del rol.

En la base de datos del Met constan 17 interpretaciones del rol de Elsa, desde el 1 de septiembre de 1942 hasta el 5 de febrero de 1950. Si bien con prontitud (en 1945) abordó el rol de Ortrud, no abandonó el de Elsa hasta 1950 (constan unas últimas funciones de aquel año con Set Svanholm). Otras fuentes indican que en total llevó a cabo 30 representaciones del rol de Elsa, incluyendo las 17 citadas del Met.

Discografía

Tan sólo me constan tres registros de su Elsa, de nuevo junto a Melchior y la estupenda Ortrud de Thorborg, y no todos disponibles con facilidad (no he localizado el tercero):

Metropolitan Opera House
January 17, 1942 Matinee Broadcast


LOHENGRIN

Lohengrin...............Lauritz Melchior
Elsa....................Astrid Varnay
Ortrud..................Kerstin Thorborg
Telramund...............Herbert Janssen
King Heinrich...........Norman Cordon
Herald..................Leonard Warren

Noble...................Emery Darcy
Noble...................John Dudley
Noble...................Wilfred Engelman
Noble...................Gerhard Pechner

Conductor...............Erich Leinsdorf


* * *

Metropolitan Opera House
January 2, 1943 Matinee Broadcast


LOHENGRIN

Lohengrin...............Lauritz Melchior
Elsa....................Astrid Varnay
Ortrud..................Kerstin Thorborg
Telramund...............Alexander Sved
King Heinrich...........Norman Cordon

Herald..................Mack Harrell
Noble...................Emery Darcy
Noble...................John Dudley
Noble...................George Cehanovsky
Noble...................Lansing Hatfield

Conductor...............Erich Leinsdorf


* * *

Metropolitan Opera House
December 22, 1945 Matinee Broadcast


LOHENGRIN

Lohengrin...............Lauritz Melchior
Elsa....................Astrid Varnay
Ortrud..................Kerstin Thorborg
Telramund...............Herbert Janssen
King Heinrich...........Nicola Moscona
Herald..................Hugh Thompson


Conductor...............Fritz Busch


* * *

:arrow: Escuchamos su "Einsam in trüben Tagen":

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wiGdSRV2y3Q[/youtube]


:arrow: Reseña de una función del 7 de abril de 1942, celebrada en Cleveland

Citar:
Review in unnamed Cleveland newspaper by Elmore Bacon

VARNAY AND MELCHIOR AS ELSA AND LOHENGRIN IN WAGNERIAN TRIUMPH

Replacing Kirsten Flagstad, held by many to be the greatest Wagnerian soprano of the present day, was the assignment undertaken by Astrid Varnay, buxom Swedish singer, last night at Public Hall.

And while comparisons were unavoidable and the young woman was definitely no Flagstad, she scored an undoubted triumph as Elsa in "Lohengrin." Hers is a vocal and histrionic artistry that seems bound to make its Met Opera mark.


Another near-capacity audience was thrilled by the fine performance of this familiar Wagnerian music drama given under the inspired baton of Erich Leinsdorf. The entire cast was excellent. Lauritz Melchior making his only appearance of the Cleveland season, Julius Huehn being the Telramund, Kerstin Thorborg the Ortrud and two of the newer Met stars, Norman Cordon as the King and Leonard Warren as the Herald, turning in fine performances.

The whole performance of this legend of the Knight of the Holy Grail led by a swan to deliver Elsa of Brabant from the wily Telramund and his wife, Ortrud, gained added inspiration though Leindsorf's commanding direction. He scored, too, with the orchestra in the beautiful prelude to the first act and the famous wedding march. He fairly lifted the male chorus in the first act though an effective dramatic episode and put spirit and inspiration into the dramatic scene closing the second act when Lohengrin overcomes the machinations of Telramund and Ortrud and leads Elsa into the church.

Director Leinsdorf maintained through all the dramatic stress of this Wagnerian drama the spirit of mystery and the religious atmosphere surrounding this revelation of the power of good to overcome evil.

Miss Varnay at 23 has risen far in the Metropolitan ranks. She possesses a dramatic soprano that has the Wagnerian power, that is smooth and flexible and that even under the forcing that is necessary to lift it above the orchestral clamor, retains its golden quality. But again, it does not have the power nor the richness though all the range as does the Flagstad voice.

The "Elsa's Dream" was Miss Varnay's best bit of vocalizing. Her scene in the third act when she demands that Lohengrin reveal his name was her best dramatic display, a superb performance. All through the opera, too, she revealed definite histrionic ability.

Miss Varnay is what one might call pleasingly plump. No more than that. And she is beautiful. In he arms of Melchior she seemed rather small, but only by comparison. She could almost put her arms around him, too.


So much has been said about Melchior and his Wagnerian triumphs that little is left to be said. His is the authentic Lohengrin. He has the Wagnerian power plus, sings with ease born of long Wagnerian experience, reveals a gratifying richness of tone and soft pliable head tones which sometimes are uneven.

THORBORG IS SUPERB IN ROLE OF ORTRUD

The Ortrud of Kerstin Thorborg is something to remember - a superb gem of artistry. Her opulent voice has power and she uses it with great skill. And the Telramund of Julius Huehn, too, was an inspired performance, although a bit of roughness crops up in his powerful voice.

Leonard Warren made the part of the Herald stand out, a fine bit of acting as well as singing. Norman Cordon was excellent as King Henry, but his voice lacked somewhat of authority. The four noblemen were Emery Darcy, John Dudley, Wilfred Engelman and Gerhard Pechner.

The chorus was most effective in the second act scene in the courtyard and in the bridal music. The costuming was colorful and the scenery adequate. If we remember rightly Lohengrin is supposed to be attired in shining armor when he arrives on the banks of the Scheldt. Melchior, perhaps as a gesture to the present metals conversation, wore a shining suit of silver silk.

The thrill and drama of this Wagnerian music stirred the big audience to enthusiasm again and again. And all of the principals were required to take repeated bows. Those later comers had a long wait - 53 minutes. Tonight, with "Carmen," the first act consumes 46 minutes, so you better be there at 8.
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Spinoza escribió:
Gino escribió:
Buenísima.


¿La entrevista, supongo? :?:


Sí. Por cierto: es la entrevista que el sector Mayo-Diverdiano siempre cita para usar las opiniones de Nilsson y Varnay contra Karajan. En cambio bien que se cuidan de "olvidar" las opiniones favorables de Mödl.

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<center>Astrid Varnay
Otrud (Lohengrin)

Imagen

“Pienso que el personaje que mejor ha definido mi contribución a la escena operística ha sido Ortrud. O- ¿fue Elektra?” (A. Varnay).

¿Qué os voy a contar que no sepáis sobre Ortrud y Varnay? Estamos ante un rol agotador. En escena, como el de Kundry, debe de resultar aplastante, fatigoso como pocos. No es una mera cuestión de exigencia técnica, de pura tesitura (que también, conste); es que se trata de roles tan intensos, tan llenos de matices, tan encarnados, con un texto tan potente… Me temo que sólo hay dos formas de cantarlos: inconmensurables o mediocres. Nada hay peor que una Ortrud o una Kundry anémicas, poco creíbles, justas. Son roles que exigen poner toda la carne en el asador. Y eso Varnay lo hacía mejor que nadie. Su Ortrud es legendaria. Tan sólo Ch. Ludwig, M. Klose (qué olvidada tenemos a esta mujer…) y W. Meier se han aproximado a su recreación.

En la entrevista que hemos repasado páginas atrás, Varnay le preguntaba a Nilsson porque no había cantado el rol de Ortrud. La sueca respondía así:

A. Varnay - Why did you never sing Ortrud?

B. Nilsson - I can give you a simple answer, that was your fault. When I sang Elsa, and you were Ortrud, I never dared touch it. She was incredible, so fantastic.


¿Qué más se puede añadir?

Creo que lo mejor es escucharla directamente.

Enlazo también unos comentarios de la página de wagnermania que hemos seguido en páginas anteriores:

Wagnermanía escribió:
Volviendo a Ortrud, su concepción del personaje, como ella misma dice, sufrió transformaciones a lo largo del tiempo, debidas a la variedad de directores de escena con los que trabajó, con lo que enriqueció tremendamente su interpretación. Varnay como Ortrud es esa bruja pagana de sangre aristocrática, heredera de la tradición de sus antepasados, negada y ultrajada ahora por el nuevo régimen monoteísta imperante. Impone su voluntad a su marido por su total superioridad intelectual y maneja el mundo que la rodea con todos los medios a su alcance con tal de alcanzar sus objetivos. Recomendaría al lector que escuchase su “Entweihte Götter!” en el segundo acto, todo un prodigio de buen hacer wagneriano.



Imagen

Varnay como Ortrud en la producción de Lohengrin de Bayreuth en 1953.

:arrow: Discografía
Los registros de su Ortrud son abundantes y muy representativos de la evolución vocal de Varnay. Las principales tomas disponibles son estas:


Metropolitan Opera House
January 7, 1950 Matinee Broadcast

LOHENGRIN {481}

Lohengrin...............Lauritz Melchior
Elsa....................Helen Traubel
Ortrud..................Astrid Varnay
Telramund...............Herbert Janssen

King Heinrich...........Dezsö Ernster
Herald..................Frank Guarrera

Conductor...............Fritz Stiedry

* * *

Lohengrin - Richard Wagner
Joseph Keilberth (1953)

König Heinrich de Vogler Josef Greindl
Lohengrin Wolfgang Windgassen
Elsa Eleanor Steber
Telramund Hermann Uhde
Ortrud Astrid Varnay
Heerrufer Hans Braun

Erste Edler Gerhard Stolze
Zweite Edler Josef Janko
Dritte Edler Alfons Herwig
Vierte Edler Theo Adam

Orquesta: Bayreuther Festspiele
Coro: Bayreuther Festspiele
Grabado en directo

* * *

Chor und Orchester der Bayreuther Festspiele
Dirigent – Eugen JOCHUM
Bayreuth 1954

Richard Wagner
LOHENGRIN

Lohengrin – Wolfgang Windgassen
Elsa von Brabant – Birgit Nilsson
Ortrud – Astrid Varnay
Telramund – Hermann Uhde
Koenig Heinrich – Theo Adam
Heerrufer – D. Fischer-Dieskau


Vier Brabantische Edle:
Gerchard Stolze, Eugene Tobin, Toni Blankenheim, Franz Crass

Vier Edelknaben:
Lotte Kiefer, Gerda Grasser, Erika Eskelsen, Roswitha Burrow

* * *

Lohengrin
July 23, 1958
Bayreuth

König Heinrich Keith Engen
Lohengrin Sándor Kónya
Elsa Leonie Rysanek
Telramund Ernest Blanc
Ortrud Astrid Varnay
Der Heerrufer Eberhard Wächter

Ein Edle Gerhard Stolze
Ein Edle Heinz-Günther Zimmermann
Ein Edle Gotthard Kronstein
Ein Edle Egmont Koch

Cond - André Cluytens

* * *

LOHENGRIN

Bayreuth Festival
1959

Lohengrin Sandor Konya
Elsa Elisabeth Grummer
Friedrich Telramund Ernst Blanc
Ortrud Astrid Varnay
Heinrich, der Vogler Franz Crass
Heerrufer Eberhard Waechter

1. brabantischer Edler: Harald Neukirch
2. brabantischer Edler: Herold Kraus
3. brabantischer Edler: Donald Bell
4. brabantischer Edler: Hans Günter-Nöcker

Conductor Lovro von Matacic

* * *

Richard Wagner
Lohengrin
Opera in three acts - Libretto by Richard Wagner
Bayreuth Festival - July/August 1960
Production and Staging: Wieland Wagner

König Heinrich - Theo Adam
Lohengrin - Wolfgang Windgassen
Elsa von Brabant - Aase Nordmo-Loevberg
Telramund - Gustav Neidlinger
Ortrud - Astrid Varnay
Der Heerrufer - Eberhard Wächter

1. Edler - Wilfried Krug
2. Edler - Hermann Winkler
3. Edler - Hans-Günther Nöcker
4. Edler - Egmont Koch

Chorus and Orchestra of the Bayreuth Festival
Chorus Master: Wilhelm Pitz
Lorin Maazel

* * *

Richard Wagner
Lohengrin
Bayreuth Festival - July/August 1962
Production and Staging: Wieland Wagner

König Heinrich - Franz Crass
Lohengrin - Jess Thomas
Elsa von Brabant - Anja Silja
Telramund - Ramón Vinay
Ortrud - Astrid Varnay
Der Heerrufer - Tom Krause

1. Edler - Niels Moeller
2. Edler - Gerhard Stolze
3. Edler - Klaus Kirchner
4. Edler - Zoltan Kelemen

Chorus and Orchestra of the Bayreuth Festival
Chorus Master: Wilhelm Pitz
Wolfgang Sawallisch

* * *

Lohengrin - Richard Wagner
Wolfgang Sawallisch (1965)

König Heinrich de Vogler Franz Crass
Lohengrin Jess Thomas
Elsa Ingrid Bjoner
Telramund Gustav Neidlinger
Ortrud Astrid Varnay
Heerrufer Tom Krause


Orquesta: Teatro alla Scala di Milano
Coro: Teatro alla Scala di Milano
Grabado en directo



:arrow: Audiciones.

* De la toma de 1953, apabullante:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHtRUyJiH3E[/youtube]

* De esta misma toma me permito citar uno de los más excelsos Lohengrins que conozco: W. Windgassen.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rnEmnnJc3Zc[/youtube]

* De la toma de 1954, una de las más espectaculares y con mejor audio de entre las disponibles:

* Varnay uy Uhde (1954, Bayreuth, Jochum)
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VbMy3mR1cmg[/youtube]

* Varnay y Nilsson (1954, Bayreuth, Jochum)
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JqI0Si-6Sxc&feature=related[/youtube]

* De la toma de 1962, con Sawallisch a la batuta. Flipante, a pesar de la fecha.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gDYaOHZ0K6k[/youtube]


:arrow: Aunque las comparaciones sean odiosas, son importantes para valorar el bárbaro logro de Varnay con este rol. Aquí os dejo a Ludwig y a Meier encarnando a la bruja del Lohengrin wagneriano:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDCMHd72lFU[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JagUQabN2zg[/youtube]


[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ot4tOk-xBq0[/youtube]

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pkAmvtO_nZA[/youtube]

* * *

Y por último, tarea que os encomiendo: la parte crítica. Ortrud es, casi con total seguridad, el rol que mejor manifiesta la evolución vocal de Varnay, sus crecientes flaquezas a partir de mediados de los cincuenta, etc. O sea, que comentarios como los siguientes, merecen explicación: ;-)

Gino escribió:
Por ejemplo, en la "Maldición" del Lohengrin de 1954 hay un rosario de estos problemas.


Mister Scorpio escribió:
¿Y cómo se explica que en el 53 y en el 50 no existan esos problemas?


Sharpless escribió:
Hace un tiempo Gino y yo comentábamos acerca del final de Lohengrin y de los problemas que fue teniendo Varnay con la imprecación final. Sin embargo, esos problemas para mi no existen en el registro de Keilberth del 53, pero curiosamente si se apunta ya algo en el 54, en el registro de Jochum


También cito, por conocida, la siguiente afirmación de Ángel Fernández Mayo:

A. F. Mayo escribió:
"Hasta 1956 su voz pareció inmarchitable, aquello era el campanario de la catedral de Colonia tocando a rebato una y otra tarde. Pero desde 1957 hicieron acto de presencia los problemas y la campana empezó a destemplarse. Se ha hablado de una técnica imperfecta. No creo que sea éste exactamente el caso. La voz era (es) grande, extensa; la impostación, seguramente natural; el cráneo actuaba (actúa) como caja de resonancia al igual que en el caso de Elisabeth Grümmer. Precisamente tuve una vez el privilegio de poder preguntar a esta adorable Eva o Agata las posibles causas del deterioro de la voz de la Varnay: "Empezó muy pronto y cantaba siempre entregada, con demasiada intensidad", ésta fue la sincera y a la vez admirativa respuesta. De estatura media y tampoco con gran capacidad torácica, seguramente la presión de la columna de aire era excesiva; además, a diferencia de la Flagstad y de la Nilsson, la Varnay era (es) una actriz trágica con los frágiles medios del canto, carne y sangre del espíritu de la tragedia, un verdadero animal escénico".


* Fuente: http://archivowagner.info/6003s.html

Pues eso, amigos, vamos a ver si desentrañamos un poco más qué fue pasando con la voz de Varnay a partir de esos años. Creo que el rol de Ortrud es una buena excusa para ello. ;-)
</center>


Última edición por Spinoza el 04 May 2009 16:15, editado 2 veces en total

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Spinoza escribió:
<center>Astrid Varnay
Otrud (Lohengrin)

Imagen

“Pienso que el personaje que mejor ha definido mi contribución a la escena operística ha sido Ortrud. O- ¿fue Elektra?” (A. Varnay).


QUÉ GUAPA! :besucon: La Ortrud perfecta.

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Hombre, es ficción que unso aficionados desentrañen las causas de un declive vocal, pero está claro que abrir el agudo es un problema técnico que suele aparecer cuando no se es prudente en los ataques di forza (compárese cómo los atacaban Flagstad o Nilsson), por ejemplo debido al temperamento. Y estamos hablando de un repertorio tremendamente exigente. También es sabido que los ataques bruscos (con "golpe de diafragma", decía Lauri-Volpi) terminan por fatigar pronto la musculatura.

Lo de las desafinaciones parece más complejo.

Lo que parece claro es que Varnay era una supedotada pero la técnica tenía sus fisuras, por mucho que Mayo y sus seguidores se empeñaran en lo contrario (lo de las oscilaciones en los inicios de frase como cualidad o marchamo me sigue pareciendo muy gracioso)

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