Barbara Kemp

Barbara Kemp (12 December 1881 17 April 1959) was a German soprano and opera singer. After a successful stage career, she retired to teach and also directed performances at the Berlin State Opera.

Barbara Kemp

Life and career

Barbara Kemp was born in Cochem, Germany and studied singing at the Strasbourg Conservatory. She made her debut in Strasbourg in 1903 in the role of the priestess in Aida.[1] She continued singing roles at local theaters and by 1913 she was employed at the Berlin Hofoper. She interpreted the role of Senta at the Bayreuth Festival in 1914 and performed at the Vienna State Opera from 1924-27. Her sister, Josefine Kemp, also had a successful operatic career.[2]

Kemp married opera composer and Berlin State Opera director Max von Schillings in 1923, but continued her performing career. She sang at the Metropolitan Opera from 1922–24, making her debut in the leading role in her husband's opera Mona Lisa. The first run of Mona Lisa included five performances, which were also repeated the next year. Kemp also interpreted the roles of Kundry and Isolde at the Met.

Kemp retired from the stage in 1932, and afterward worked as a singing teacher and director at the Berlin State Opera, producing the opera Mona Lisa and Ingwelde.[1][3] Recordings of Kemp include Der Rosenkavalier in 1927, and also a performance at the Berlin State Opera in 1928. She died in Berlin.

gollark: Sure. Although it's still hard to distinguish whether that's a "science" thing or a "weird societal factors" thing.
gollark: I think those just became uncool due to other factors of some kind; there are plenty of Christians etc.
gollark: Actually, "abounded" would probably mean "unbounded", "a" generally negates things.
gollark: America's central government is also much more powerful than the EU and it has more shared cultural institutions maybe.
gollark: IIRC the total population is less than Europe too.

References

  1. Warrack, John Hamilton; West, Ewan (1996). The concise Oxford dictionary of opera. p. 461.
  2. "The Record collector". 49. 2004. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  3. "BARBARA KEMP Sings Opera". Archived from the original on 20 June 2012. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
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