Ester Ferrabini

Ester Ferrabini (October 12, 1885 – July 28, 1984) was an Italian opera singer.

Ester Ferrabini, from a 1922 publication.
Ester Ferrabini as Carmen, from a 1917 publication.
Ester Ferrabini, from a 1917 publication.

Early life

Ester Ada Maria Ferrabini was born in Venice, the daughter of Marcello Ferrabini, a college professor, and Lucina Pivetta Ferrabini. She studied voice with Angelina Ortolani Tiberini.[1]

Career

Ferrabini had her opera debut in 1905, in Brescia. She toured North America with the Ruggero Leoncavallo company in 1906, and moved to the United States in 1908. She was associated with the roles of Mimi in La bohème and the lead role in Carmen.[2] She toured the American West in 1917[3] with Maggie Teyte and Nina Morgana in the La Scala Grand Opera Company.[4][5] She also sang in Mexico City in 1917.[6] Her last opera performance was as Carmen in 1924, in Boston, though she performed at a benefit concert for Italian war veterans in Boston in 1925.[1] She also made at least two recordings.[7]

Ferrabini lived in Montreal for two years, while her husband was musical director of the National Opera Company of Canada.[8] She then lived in Boston, where her husband was conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra.[9] She joined the faculty of the Boston Conservatory in 1920, when her husband became president of that institution.[10]

Arthur Fiedler, another Boston conductor, recalled Ferrabini fondly, saying "She was a very good singer, lovely voice. She was a very attractive woman, tall and majestic, good figure, not at all dumpy, domineering, but very understanding, very feminine."[1] Architect Edgar Irving Williams wrote to his brother William Carlos Williams about seeing Ferrabini perform in 1906: "Never was I more smitten, I was all in. Talk about your concentrated blends of beauty, form, and sound. Ach Gott! She is perfection. What a head, neck, shoulders, pose, and what a voice."[11]

Personal life

Ester Ferrabini married fellow musician Agide Jacchia in 1911; their daughter Elsa was born in 1912. Ferrabini returned to the opera stage within weeks of Elsa's birth, and had Elsa on stage with her in a production of Madama Butterfly in 1917. In 1928 she moved back to Italy with her husband, who died in 1932. In widowhood, Ferrabini lived with her daughter and grandchildren, at Santa Margherita Ligure, a village near Portofino. Ester Ferrabini died there in 1984, aged 98 years.[1]

gollark: What about "the car has crashed and the computer's mangled remains no longer work"?
gollark: It'd be basically impossible to write it to work reliably in that.
gollark: You mean machine code?
gollark: A self-driving car in any language at all could crash. The Python one probably less because it allows less mucking about and is easier to work on.
gollark: O(🌕)

References

  1. Jim McPherson, "Out of the Shadows: Ester Ferrabini" Opera Quarterly 17(1)(Winter 2001): 28-42.
  2. "New Carmen Appears: Ester Ferrabini a Dramatic Heroine in San Carlo Production" New York Times (September 6, 1917): 8.
  3. "Mme. Ferrabini With La Scala Company" Pacific Coast Musical Review (October 6, 1917): 8.
  4. "La Scala Opera Wins Approval in San Francisco" Musical Courier (November 8, 1917): 28.
  5. "La Scala Opera in Seattle" Musical America (October 27, 1917): 48.
  6. "Mme. Ferrabini to Sing in Opera in Mexico City" Musical America (June 23, 1917): 37.
  7. A 1910 recording of Ester Ferrabini on wax cylinder, in the William R. Moran collection, UCSB Cylinder Audio Archive.
  8. "Grand Opera Comes to the Princess" The Gazette (September 9, 1916): 3. via Newspapers.com
  9. "Ester Ferrabini's Boston Success" Musical Courier (July 5, 1917): 16.
  10. "Boston Conservatory Celebrates Women’s History Month with Nod to Founder Julius Eichberg’s Work for Gender Equality" Boston Conservatory at Berklee (March 14, 2017).
  11. Letter dated October 24, 1906, The Letters of William Carlos Williams to Edgar Irving Williams, 1902-1912 (Associated University Presse 2009): 106. ISBN 9780838641484
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