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Helen Traubel

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Occupation
  
Actress, opera singer

Name
  
Helen Traubel

Role
  
Singer


Helen Traubel Helen Traubel Records LPs Vinyl and CDs MusicStack

Full Name
  
Helen Francesca Traubel

Born
  
June 16, 1899 (
1899-06-16
)
St. Louis, Missouri

Died
  
July 28, 1972, Santa Monica, California, United States

Spouse
  
William L. Bass (m. 1938–1972), Louis Franklin Carpenter (m. 1922–1938)

Movies
  
The Ladies Man, Deep in My Heart, Gunn

Helen traubel wagner tannh user dich teure halle


Helen Francesca Traubel (June 16, 1899 – July 28, 1972) was an American opera and concert singer. A dramatic soprano, she was best known for her Wagnerian roles, especially those of Brünnhilde and Isolde.

Contents

Helen Traubel Remains To Be Seen Autographed Helen Traubel Silver

Born and raised in St. Louis, Missouri, she began her career as a concert singer and went on to sing at the Metropolitan Opera from 1937-53. Starting in the 1950s, she also developed a career as a nightclub and cabaret singer as well as appearing in television, films and musical theatre. Traubel spent her later years in Santa Monica, California, where she died at the age of 73.

Helen Traubel httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbb

Helen traubel sings after the ball


Early life

Helen Traubel Helen Traubel Soprano Short Biography

Traubel was born in St. Louis, Missouri to a prosperous family of German descent. She was the daughter of Otto Ferdinand Traubel, a pharmacist, and Clara Traubel (née Stuhr). She studied singing in her native city with Louise Vetta-Karst and later in New York City with Giuseppe Boghetti among other teachers. She made her debut as a concert singer with the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra in 1923, and in 1926 she got a first offer to join the Metropolitan Opera company after performing the aria Liebestod at the Lewisohn Stadium under conductor Rudolph Ganz. She turned down the offer in order to continue with her studies and career as a concert singer.

Opera career

Helen Traubel TIME Magazine Cover Helen Traubel Nov 11 1946 Opera

Traubel made her first appearance on the opera stage on May 12, 1937, when the composer Walter Damrosch asked her to portray the role of Mary Rutledge in the world premiere of his opera The Man Without a Country at the Met. Later that year she made her debut with the Chicago City Opera Company with whom she was active until the company went bankrupt in 1939. In 1940 she joined the roster of the Chicago Opera Company, remaining active with that company until it too went bankrupt in 1946. She sang in several performances with the San Francisco Opera in 1945 and 1947; making her debut with the company as Brünnhilde in Die Walküre on October 9, 1945 with Lauritz Melchior as Siegmund, Margaret Harshaw as Fricka, and William Steinberg conducting.

Since the Met already had two first-class Wagnerian sopranos, Kirsten Flagstad and Marjorie Lawrence, Traubel at first had difficulty finding her niche. Her debut as a regular company member was as Sieglinde in Die Walküre in 1939, the only standard role which she had previously sung, at the Chicago Opera. Flagstad left the US in 1941 to visit her homeland of Norway and could not return for political reasons. The same year, Lawrence was stricken with polio and her career was curtailed.

On February 22, 1941, Traubel sang with tenor Lauritz Melchior in excerpts from Wagnerian operas on the live broadcast concert of the NBC Symphony Orchestra conducted by Arturo Toscanini. RCA Victor later released recordings of excerpts from the concert, as well as a famous studio recording of Brünnhilde's Immolation Scene from Götterdämmerung. Traubel later triumphed in Tannhäuser and in Tristan und Isolde. She was renowned for her strong voice, which was often described as a "gleaming sword"; her endurance and purity of tone were unsurpassed, especially as Brünnhilde and Isolde. Although she longed to sing Italian opera, she never did in a complete performance, although she often included Italian arias in her recital repertoire. Towards the end of her Met career, she did add the Marschallin in Richard Strauss's Der Rosenkavalier briefly to her repertoire.

In 1948, while her Met career was at its height, US President Harry S. Truman contracted her to act as an "advisor" to his daughter, Margaret, who was hoping to launch a career as a classical singer. Traubel's 1959 autobiography, St. Louis Woman, contains an account of the three years she spent in the role, and how in the end she felt it had adversely affected her stature in the music world to have her name associated with "such a musical aspirant".

Traubel's contract at the Metropolitan Opera was not renewed in 1953 when its General Manager, Rudolf Bing, expressed disapproval of her radio and TV appearances alongside the likes of Jimmy Durante and her expressed desire to expand her lucrative career in major supper and night clubs. Traubel went on to appear at the Copacabana, as well as in many cameo television roles. After her Met career, she appeared on Broadway in the Rodgers and Hammerstein failure, Pipe Dream, playing a bordello madame with a heart of gold and the voice of Isolde. Additionally, she appeared in the films Deep in My Heart, Gunn and The Ladies Man. She also appeared opposite Groucho Marx as Katisha in a Bell Telephone presentation (abridged) of Gilbert and Sullivan's The Mikado. Traubel's last night club appearance was with Jimmy Durante at Harrah's Lake Tahoe in 1964.

Other

A baseball fan, Traubel was once the part owner of her hometown team, the St. Louis Browns. She wrote two murder mysteries, The Ptomaine Canary (serialized in US newspapers via Associated Press) in 1950 and The Metropolitan Opera Murders (1951), which feature a soprano heroine, Elsa Vaughan, who helps solve the mystery, as well as being a thinly-disguised portrait of Traubel herself.

Her later years were devoted to caring for her second husband and former business manager, William L. Bass, whom she had married in 1938. (Her first husband, was Louis Franklin Carpenter, a St. Louis car salesman. The couple married in 1922 but soon separated.) Helen Traubel died of a heart attack in Santa Monica, California, aged 73, and was interred in the Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery in Los Angeles.

For her contribution to the recording industry, Helen Traubel has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6422 Hollywood Blvd. In 1994 she was inducted into the St. Louis Walk of Fame.

Filmography

Actress
1967
Gunn as
Mother
1964
Valentine's Day (TV Series) as
Muriel Farrow / Muriel
- Farrow's Fling (1965) - Muriel
- Mad, Mad Momma (1965) - Muriel Farrow
- The Sweet Smell of Wampum (1965) - Muriel Farrow
- The Baritone Canary (1964) - Muriel Farrow
1961
The Ladies Man as
Miss Helen N. Wellenmellon
1960
The Bell Telephone Hour (TV Series) as
Katisha
- The Mikado (1960) - Katisha
1954
Deep in My Heart as
Anna Mueller
1954
The Red Skelton Hour (TV Series) as
Queen Isabella
- Columbus and Isabella (1954) - Queen Isabella
Soundtrack
1954
Deep in My Heart (performer: "You Will Remember Vienna", "Leg Of Mutton (Some Smoke)", "Softly, As In A Morning Sunrise (Reprise)", "Auf Wiedersehn", "Stouthearted Men")
Self
1963
The Jack Paar Program (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #2.13 (1963) - Self
1962
I've Got a Secret (TV Series) as
Self - Guest
- Episode dated 30 April 1962 (1962) - Self - Guest
1961
Here's Hollywood (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.130 (1961) - Self
1960
The Jerry Lewis Timex Show (TV Special)
1959
The Tonight Show Starring Jack Paar (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #2.143 (1959) - Self
- Episode #2.135 (1959) - Self
- Episode #2.126 (1959) - Self
1959
The Patti Page Oldsmobile Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.22 (1959) - Self
1958
The Garry Moore Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Dorothy Collins, Wally Cox, Helen Traubel (1958) - Self
1958
The Milton Berle Show (TV Series) as
Self / Self - Cameo
- Episode dated 26 November 1958 (1958) - Self
- Episode dated 19 November 1958 (1958) - Self - Cameo
1958
The Jerry Lewis Show (TV Movie) as
Self
1958
The George Gobel Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #4.10 (1958) - Self
1958
The Pat Boone-Chevy Showroom (TV Series) as
Self
- Helen Traubel (1958) - Self
1957
Perry Como's Kraft Music Hall (TV Series) as
Self
- Kay Thompson, Helen Traubel, The Look TV Award guests (1957) - Self
- Edie Adams, Joey Bishop, Peter Palmer, Helen Traubel (1957) - Self
1956
The Ed Sullivan Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Edward G. Robinson, Helen Traubel, Edith Piaf, Jean Carroll, Janos & Bogyo, Gene Rowlands, Nancy Pollack, Martin Balsam, Pat Benoit (1956) - Self
- Episode #9.30 (1956) - Self
- Episode #9.27 (1956) - Self
1955
The Red Skelton Hour (TV Series) as
Self - Award for Most Promising Newcomer
- Look Magazine Movie Awards Show (1955) - Self - Award for Most Promising Newcomer (credit only)
1954
The Jimmy Durante Show (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.5 (1954) - Self
1954
Red Skelton Revue (TV Series) as
Self - Singer
- Episode #1.6 (1954) - Self - Singer
1954
What's My Line? (TV Series) as
Self - Mystery Guest
- Helen Traubel (1954) - Self - Mystery Guest
1954
Person to Person (TV Series documentary) as
Self - Opera Soprano
- Episode #1.22 (1954) - Self - Opera Soprano
1950
All Star Revue (TV Series) as
Self - Guest Opera Soprano / Self - Guest Opera Singer / Self - Opera Soprano
- Episode #3.32 (1953) - Self - Guest Opera Soprano
- Episode #2.17 (1951) - Self - Guest Opera Singer
- Episode #2.5 (1951) - Self - Guest Opera Soprano
- Host: Jimmy Durante; Guests: Helen Traubel, The Baird Marionettes, Harris & Anders, Jack Albertson, Dort Clark, Eddie Jackson, Jack Roth, Jules Buffano (1951) - Self - Opera Soprano
- Host: Jimmy Durante; Guests: Helen Traubel, Candy Candido, Shaw and Lee, George Moore, Eddie Jackson, Jack Roth (1950) - Self - Guest Opera Soprano
1949
The Voice of Firestone (TV Series) as
Self
- Episode #1.26 (1950) - Self
- Episode #1.20 (1950) - Self
- Episode #1.4 (1949) - Self

References

Helen Traubel Wikipedia