Austrian and British opera singer and film actress
Irene Eisinger (8 December 1903 – 8 April 1994) was an Austrian and British opera singer and film actress. Her career was closely linked to the foundation and the early years of the Glyndebourne Festival Opera.
Her debuts – both in opera and film – took place in 1926. She played a minor role in Frederic Zelnik's silent movie Die Försterchristl and started singing leading roles in operas and operettas at the Stadttheater Basel in the north of Switzerland. In 1928 she was called to Berlin and within a short period became one of the favourite singers of conductor Otto Klemperer – first at the Kroll Opera House, later on at the prestigious Staatsoper Unter den Linden. Although best remembered for her soubrette roles in Mozart operas, especially Despina and Blonde, and as Ännchen in Weber's Der Freischütz, she achieved also great successes and admiration in Strauss operetta roles, particularly as Arsena in Der Zigeunerbaron and as Adele in Die Fledermaus. Musicologist Elizabeth Forbes describes her singing: "Her voice, bright-toned, light and very flexible, and her charming, diminutive appearance, invariably drew adjectives such as 'enchanting' and 'winsome' from the critics."[3]
In 1930 came what can be considered her breakthrough in both Germany and Austria as she debuted as Adele in Max Reinhardt's version of Die Fledermaus,[4] as Cherubino in Mozart's Le nozze di Figaro at the Salzburg Festival[5] and again as Adele at the Vienna State Opera.[6] Furthermore, in this year her first sound film was released, the light comedy Two Hearts in Waltz Time – with Eisinger as Anni Lohmeier and with the popular actor Willi Forst in a leading role. This film was the first foreign language film to be released with subtitles in the United States.[7] Two further leading film parts followed in 1931: Leopoldine in Die lustigen Weiber von Wien and the title role in another Zelnik-version of Die Försterchristl, now with sound and singing.[8][9]
Although very popular with the Berlin audience, Eisinger was forced to leave Germany because of her Jewish origins shortly after the Machtergreifung by the Nazi party in 1933. She could not sing any longer in any theatre of the German capital. She took refuge in Czechoslovakia and went to sing in the opera houses of Prague, Amsterdam and Bruxelles – and once again at the Salzburg Festival. In 1933, in addition to Cherubino and Papagena she was invited to sing a role in a Richard Strauss opera. It was to be her last appearance in Salzburg. She sang Hermione in the first production of the second version of Die ägyptische Helena.
Eisinger continued to sing at Prague State Opera until 1937, but already in 1934 she was invited by German emigrants Fritz Busch and Carl Ebert to participate at the first Glyndebourne Festival. Unknown to British audiences, she sang Despina in Mozart's Così fan tutte and scored a great personal success. Thereafter she became a firm favourite at the festival, debuting as Blonde in Die Entführung aus dem Serail and as Papagena in Die Zauberflöte in 1935, returning there each year but one, until the outbreak of the Second World War forced the festival to close down.[3] The 1935 Glyndebourne recording of Così fan tutte, conducted by Fritz Busch, gives an idea of Eisinger's voice, her stylish singing and her delightful personality. Although she did not appear at the Festival in 1936, the artist sang the Aquarellen waltz, op. 258, by Josef Strauss at a concert in Glyndebourne this year – with 600 of John Christie's employees and tenants present, to commemorate the birth of Christie's son George on 31 December 1934. Due to its success, the concert had to be repeated.
In 1936 the impresario C. B. Cochran, who had been entranced by her Papagena in Glyndebourne, engaged her for the revue Follow the Sun at the Adelphi in London. There she sang the always much applauded song Love is a Dancing Thing, a popular number by Howard Dietz and Arthur Schwartz. Cochran was praised to engage Miss Eisinger by The Sunday Times: ″A beautiful little lady [with a] small but charming voice″.[This quote needs a citation] Her partner was the baritone Gerald Nodin.[14] In December of the same year, Eisinger debuted at the Royal Opera House as Gretel in Humperdincks Hänsel und Gretel, with Maggie Teyte as Hänsel, sung in German language. A week later she sang Adele in Die Fledermaus (in English), "winning a particular triumph" with the song Mein Herr Marquis.[3]
For the next three seasons, Eisinger returned to Glyndebourne, where she added Susanna and Barbarina in Le nozze di Figaro to her Glyndebourne repertory while still continuing to sing her other roles. By now she was permanently living in England. In 1939 Eisinger sang Ilya in a university production of Mozart's Idomeneo at Cambridge and acted in Beatrice Saxon Snell's musical Georgian Springtime at the Embassy Theatre in London – with Geoffrey Dunn, Frederick Ranalow, and George Skillan in the cast.[15] In 1940, when Glyndebourne toured The Beggar's Opera, she took over Polly Peachum from Audrey Mildmay who had contracted Rubella during the London run. Furthermore, she participated in the movie comedy Young Man's Fancy and was invited by BBC to sing in Die Fledermaus and in Arlecchino, a single act opera by Ferruccio Busoni.[16]
When Glyndebourne closed down, Eisinger withdrew from the stage.
Thereafter she was heard only in broadcast concerts on BBC.
Private life
In 1932 Eisinger married the physician Gerhard Schönewald (1905–1981), called Gert. The couple emigrated to London and had two daughters, Susanne (born in 1944) and Emily-Ruth (1946). The couple later divorced.
Così fan tutte (Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart), role of Despina. Glyndebourne Festival Opera Company conducted by Fritz Busch. HMV DB 2652 bis DB 2673 – Glyndebourne, June 1935
Josef Kaut: Die Salzburger Festspiele 1920–1981, Mit einem Verzeichnis der aufgeführten Werke und der Künstler des Theaters und der Musik von Hans Jaklitsch, Salzburg: Residenz Verlag 1982, ISBN3-7017-0308-6, pp. 258, 261, 265, 268 and 269.
Jürgen Kesting: Die großen Sänger. Volume 2. Verlag Hoffmann und Campe, Hamburg 2008, p. 700.
References
^Registry Office Berlin-Schöneberg II, marriage certificate no. 48, January 27, 1932
^Musik: Joh. Strauss, Text nach dem Französischen bearb. v. C. Rößler u. M. Schiffer; Neugestaltung v. Max Reinhardt, musikal. Einrichtung von Erich Wolfgang Korngold, see Johann Strauß auf operone.de
^Opening night was 10 March 1932. "The plot bears clear parallels with the rise of Nazism in Germany". Therefore the opera was banned after Hitler came into power.
^"Scene 18. Kleine Acrobat (Lyric by Howard Dietz): The Acrobat – Gerald Nodin. His Partner – Irene Eisinger. Gerald Nodin's and Irene Eisinger's costumes designed by Ernst Stern. Executed by B. J. Simmons & Co., Ltd.", see Cast list
Cornforth, Peter. "Bio". mischaspoliansky.com. Retrieved 6 February 2023. ... The music was delightful, and the book and lyrics witty and satirical. It also contained a trio, the first lines of which were Sie kommt, sie naht! (She comes, she's getting nearer!) But with 'a clever shift of musical accents,' the astute listener would hear "Sie naht, sie kommt" – the exact pronunciation of 'Nazi.' (viii)
Wulf Konold: Deutsche Oper, einst und jetzt: Überlegungen und Untersuchungen zu Geschichte und Gegenwart des deutschen Musiktheaters. Verlag Bärenreiter, 1980, ISBN3-7618-0627-2, p. 59.
Wilhelm Kosch among others (editors): Deutsches Theater-Lexikon. Biographisches und bibliographisches Handbuch. Vol. 1: A - Hurk. Verlag Ferd. Kleinmayr, Klagenfurt/ Wien 1960, DNB: 551896833.
Carolin Stahrenberg (ed.): "Hot Spots von Cafe bis Kabarett: musikalische Handlungsräume im Berlin Mischa Spolianskys 1918–1933 (= vol. 4 of Populäre Kultur und Musik, ISSN1869-8417). Waxmann Verlag, 2012. ISBN3830975201, 336 pages, specifically pp. 244–265. Description of Cabaret Opera on pp. 245–246, note 437 (see Spoliansky, Goodbye Trouble, p. 84, i.e. unpublished autobiography)
Thomas Staedeli: Irene Eisinger. Portrait of the artist with a photograph.
Eva Weissweiler: Ausgemerzt! Das Lexikon der Juden in der Musik und seine mörderischen Folgen. Dittrich, Berlin 1999, ISBN3-920862-25-2.