Rose Féart Explained

Birth Date:26 March 1878
Birth Place:Saint-Riquier, France
Death Place:Geneva
Education:
Occupation:
  • Operatic singer (soprano)
  • Music educator

Rosalie Gautier (26 March 1878 – 5 October 1954), Rose Féart on stage, was a Franco-Swiss singer (soprano) and singing teacher.

Biography

Rose Fréart was born in Saint-Riquier. Her father was a sugar industrialist. Shortly after the birth of his daughter, he returned to his hometown of Argenton-sur-Creuse, where Rose Féart spent her entire childhood. She was introduced to music by the organist of, Anselme Picardeau, who detected the child's vocal qualities. Sent to Paris to continue her musical studies, she won the first prize of the Conservatoire de Musique in lyrical declamation on 2 August 1902, at the age of 24.

Her soprano voice was noticed by the Opéra de Paris who immediately engaged her.[1] Rose Féart became one of the most important opera singers for the great repertoire, especially in Wagnerian roles, and worked with composers of her time such as Massenet, Fauré, Debussy, César Franck, and André Caplet. Her career developed quickly, in operas and concerts, and lasted 20 years, in France and Switzerland as well as in other major opera houses in Europe.

She died in Geneva on 5 October 1954 aged 76.

Roles

Rose Féart then devoted herself to a career as a singing teacher at the Conservatoire de Musique de Genève where she taught until her death at the age of 76. Mezzo-soprano Hélène Morath was one of her students[3] and succeeded Rose Féart's faculty position at the Haute École de musique de Genève from 1960[4] to 1984.[5]

Iconography

Many photographs of Rose Féart in stage dress have been preserved.

Homage

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Mlle Rose Féart, de l'Opéra, immediately gave her first public concert at Argenton-sur-Creuse on 21 August 1902.
  2. Critic Rosenthal wrote: the soprano was a fascinating, delicate and fragile Mélisande, and Claude Debussy successively issued two contradictory judgments (as indeed for Dame Maggie Teyte): I heard Miss Féart, whose voice and musicality I like. (letter to X, 6 December 1908); she's ungratefully ugly, lacks poetry, and I keep regretting the sweet Miss Teyte. Of course, she sings what there is but there's nothing behind it. Between us, it's a disillusionment. (letter to J. Durand, 18 May 1909).
  3. News: de. Morath Hélène, mezzosoprano. Operissimo. 2013. (from 1937 to 1941 she studied piano playing with Alexandre Mottu at the Conservatoire de Musique de Genève and singing with Rose Féart from 1938 to 1942. In the years 1960–1984 she worked as a teacher at the Conservatory of Geneva.)
  4. News: . 1960. 13. La distribution des prix du conservatoire. corps enseignant. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304074314/http://www.letempsarchives.ch/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Search&Key=JDG%2F1960%2F07%2F01%2F13%2FAr01305.xml&CollName=JDG_1960_1969&DOCID=270795&PageLabelPrint=13&Skin=LeTempsFr&enter=true&AW=1384467816442&AppName=2&sPublication=JDG&sScopeID=All&sSorting=IssueDateID%2Cdesc&sQuery=%22H%25u00e9l%25u00e8ne%20Hungerbuhler-Morath%22&rEntityType=&sSearchInAll=true&ViewMode=HTML. 2016-03-04. (Madame Hungerbühler-Morath has been entrusted with teaching in the elementary and secondary classes while continuing to assist Mr. Mollet.)
  5. News: Journal de Genève. 1984. 19. Eric Tappy nommé au Conservatoire. chant. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20160305203054/http://letempsarchives.ch/default/scripting/articlewin.asp?appname=2&aw=1384467816442&collname=jdg_1980_1989&docid=292617&enter=true&from=search&key=jdg%2F1984%2F02%2F16%2F19%2Far01907.xml&pagelabelprint=19&rentitytype=&skin=letempsfr&spublication=jdg&squery=%22h%25u00e9l%25u00e8ne%20morath%22&sscopeid=all&ssearchinall=true&ssorting=issuedateid%2Cdesc&viewmode=html. 2016-03-05. (tenor Éric Tappy will thus take the place left vacant by Hélène Morath.)