Herbert Heyner (26 June 1882 – 18 January 1954) was a noted English baritone. Heyner appeared in a handful of operas, and a number of broadcast operas, but his stage appearances were predominantly in oratorio and songs. He sang in some notable performances of Sir Edward Elgar's oratorios under the composer's baton. He sang in Britain, France, Germany, the United States and Canada, and he sang at The Proms 59 times between 1909 and 1937, in songs and operatic arias.[1]
Career
Herbert Augustus Otto Heyner[2] was born in London on 26 June 1882.[3][4] He was a choirboy at St Botolph's Aldersgate,[5] making his debut in that capacity in 1892;[4] he was also accepted for Lincoln's Inn Chapel.[3] He studied at Brighton House School and it was planned that he would become an actuary, but music had a greater pull on him, and he studied singing with Frederic King in London, Victor Maurel in Paris, and Karl Scheidemantel in Dresden. Maurel had believed Heyner's true range was that of a bass, but it proved to be baritone.[3]
At the start of the First World War, he volunteered along with many other musicians, artists and writers to join the United Arts Rifles.[7] He was appointed temporary Second Lieutenant on 22 May 1915.[2] He saw active service and was seriously wounded in 1916,[3] but recovered and had risen to the rank of Captain by the end of the war.[7]
Heyner toured the United States and Canada in 1928, giving the New York premiere of Delius's Sea Drift.[3] He also sang in North America in 1929 and 1930.[16] At the Proms on 4 September 1930, he gave the first concert performance of Dame Ethel Smyth's Ode anacréontique, with the BBC Symphony Orchestra under the composer.[17]
In 1910 Heyner married the Savoyard contralto Bertha Lewis, who died in May 1931 after being involved in a car accident.[21] He did not attend the funeral. In June 1931 he married Mary Louise Hamilton (1902–1973), with whom he had two daughters, Susan, born in 1936 and Diana, born in 1937.[22]