Rozsi Varady Explained

Rozsi Varady (March 4, 1902 − December 19, 1933) was a concert cellist who was popular in both the United States and Europe.[1]

Biography

She was born in Budapest; her father was Wilhelm Varady. She graduated from the Royal Academy of Budapest and was the first woman to receive the academy's "Artist Diploma".[2] She studied with Pablo Casals. She debuted in America in 1921, and was invited to perform at a State Dinner at the White House before President and Mrs. Harding on February 2, 1922.[3] Varady appeared as a soloist and together with Clemens Krauss in 1926 at the Salzburg Festival.

In 1929 she married Joseph Anthony, an author and editor. Varady also became a naturalized US citizen in 1929. She died at the Park Central Hotel in New York on December 19, 1933, of heart disease.

Footnotes

  1. News: Rozsi Varady Anthony. 21 December 1933. New York Times. March 6, 2015. 21.
  2. Clarke & Miller (1923), p. 174.
  3. News: President Host to Chief Justice Taft . New York Times . February 3, 1922 . May 2, 2015.

References