Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Fanny Heldy

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Fanny Heldy

Role
  
Soprano

Spouse
  
Marcel Boussac


Fanny Heldy Belgian Soprano Fanny Heldy Traviata Quel Trouble Folie Folie


Died
  
December 13, 1973, Paris, France

Albums
  
Fanny Heldy, Airs d'operas et d'operas-comiques (Mono Version)

Similar People
  
Germaine Lubin, Marcel Journet, Georges Thill, Andre Pernet, Fromental Halevy

Soprano fanny heldy louise depuis le jour 1929


Fanny Heldy (29 February 1888 - 13 December 1973) was a lyric soprano opera singer.

Contents

Fanny Heldy FERNAND ANSSEAU e FANNY HELDY Carmen Parle moi de ma mre 1927

Born Marguerite Virginie Emma Clémentine Deceuninck in Ath (some sources say Liège), Hainaut, Belgium. She graduated from the Liège Conservatoire. Heldy made her professional debut as a substitute in the premiere of Ivan the Terrible, by Raoul Gunsbourg (at the La Monnaie, 26 November 1910). Between 1914 and 1918 she sang a number of major roles at Opéra de Monte-Carlo, making her first Paris appearance at the Opéra-Comique in 1917 as Violetta in La traviata. She portrayed Juliette in Charles Gounod's Roméo et Juliette at the Paris Opéra in 1920.

In 1923, she made the historic (some say first) recording of the Jules Massenet opera Manon for Pathé Records. The orchestra was conducted by Henri Büsser, and Heldy sang with tenor Jean Marny as Chevalier des Grieux. In December of that year, she sang the title role in Esclarmonde by Massenet during the opera's revival at the Paris Opéra.

For more than twenty years, Heldy was France's leading opera star, while gaining international recognition through her performances at La Scala in Milan and at the Royal Opera House in London. In 1936 she participated in the movie Opéra de Paris (directed by Claude Lambert).

She retired in 1939, residing at Château de Mivoisin, a 36 square kilometre property located 1½ hours south of Paris in Dammarie-sur-Loing, Loiret.

She married business tycoon Marcel Boussac, whose holdings included the House of Dior. A thoroughbred horse racing fan, her husband operated one of the most successful stables in racing history and she owned several stakes race winners herself.

Heldy died in 1973 and was buried in the Cimetière de Montmartre in the Montmartre Quarter of Paris. The "Prix Fondation Fanny Heldy" is awarded to one soprano each year for recording excellence.

Belgian soprano fanny heldy traviata quel trouble folie folie 1929


References

Fanny Heldy Wikipedia