WHAT THE AMERICAN GIRL SHOULD KNOW ABOUT AN OPERATIC CAREER
MME. FRANCES ALDA (MME. GATTI-CASAZZA)
REGULARITY AND SUCCESS
To the girl who aspires to have an
operatic career, who has the requisite vocal gifts,
physical health, stage presence and most
important of all a high degree of intelligence,
the great essential is regular daily work. This
implies regular lessons, regular practice, regular
exercise, regular sleep, regular meals in
fact, a life of regularity. The daily lesson
in most cases seems an imperative necessity.
Lessons strung over a series of years merely because
it seems more economical to take one lesson a week
instead of seven rarely produce the expected results.
Marchesi, with her famous wisdom on vocal matters,
advised twenty minutes a day and then not more than
ten minutes at a time.
For nine months I studied with the
great Parisian maestra and in my tenth month I made
my debut. Of course, I had sung a great deal before
that time and also could play both the piano and the
violin. A thorough musical knowledge is always
valuable. The early years of the girl who is
destined for an operatic career may be much more safely
spent with Czerny exercises for the piano or Kreutzer
studies for the violin than with Concone Solfeggios
for the voice. Most girls over-exercise their
voices during the years when they are too delicate.
It always pays to wait and spend the time in developing
the purely musical side of study.
MODERATION AND GOOD SENSE
More voices collapse from over-practice
and more careers collapse from under-work than from
anything else. The girl who hopes to become a
prima donna will dream of her work morning, noon
and night. Nothing can take it out of her mind.
She will seek to study every imaginable thing that
could in any way contribute to her equipment.
There is so much to learn that she must work hard
to learn all. Even now I study pretty regularly
two hours a day, but I rarely sing more than a few
minutes. I hum over my new roles with my accompanist,
Frank La Forge, and study them in that way. It
was to such methods as this that Marchesi attributed
the wonderful longevity of the voices of her best-known
pupils. When they followed the advice of the
dear old maestra their voices lasted a long, long
time. Her vocal exercises were little more than
scales sung very slowly, single, sustained tones repeated
time and again until her critical ear was entirely
satisfied, and then arpeggios. After that came
more complicated technical drills to prepare the pupil
for the fioriture work demanded in the more florid
operas. At the base of all, however, were the
simplest kind of exercises. Through her discriminating
sense of tone quality, her great persistence and her
boundless enthusiasm, she used these simple vocal
materials with a wizardry that produced great prime
donne.
THE PRECIOUS HEAD VOICE
Marchesi laid great stress upon the
use of the head voice. This she illustrated to
all her pupils herself, at the same time not hesitating
to insist that it was impossible for a male teacher
to teach the head voice properly. (Marchesi herself
carried out her theories by refusing to teach any
male applicants.) She never let any pupil sing above
F on the top line of the treble staff in anything
but the head voice. They rarely ever touched
their highest notes with full voice. The upper
part of the voice was conserved with infinite care
to avoid early breakdowns. Even when the pupils
sang the top notes they did it with the feeling that
there was still something in reserve. In my operatic
work at present I feel this to be of greatest importance.
The singer who exhausts herself upon the top notes
is neither artistic nor effective.
THE AMERICAN GIRL’S CHANCES IN OPERA
The American girl who fancies that
she has less chances in opera than her sisters of
the European countries is silly. Look at the lists
of artists at the Metropolitan, for instance.
The list includes twice as many artists of American
nationality as of any other nation. This is in
no sense the result of pandering to the patriotism
of the American public. It is simply a matter
of supply and demand. New Yorkers demand the
best opera in the world and expect the best voices
in the world. The management would accept fine
artists with fine voices from China or Africa or the
North Pole if they were forthcoming. A diamond
is a diamond no matter where it comes from. The
management virtually ransacks the musical marts of
Europe every year for fine voices. Inevitably
the list of American artists remains higher.
On the whole, the American girls have better natural
voices, more ambition and are willing to study seriously,
patiently and energetically. This is due in a
measure to better physical conditions in America and
in Australia, another free country that has produced
unusual singers. What is the result? America
is now producing the best and enjoying the best.
There is more fine music of all kinds now in New York
during one week than one can get in Paris in a month
and more than one can get in Milan in six months.
This has made New York a great operatic and musical
center. It is a wonderful opportunity for Americans
who desire to enter opera.
THE NEED FOR SUPERIOR INTELLIGENCE
There was a time in the halcyon days
of the old coloratura singers when the opera singer
was not expected to have very much more intelligence
than a parrot. Any singer who could warble away
at runs and trills was a great artist. The situation
has changed entirely to-day. The modern opera-goer
demands great acting as well as great singing.
The opera house calls for brains as well as voices.
There should properly be great and sincere rivalry
among fine singers. The singer must listen to
other singers with minute care and patience, and then
try to learn how to improve herself by self-study
and intelligent comparison. Just as the great
actor studies everything that pertains to his rôle,
so the great singer knows the history of the epoch
of the opera in which he is to appear, he knows the
customs, he may know something of the literature of
the time. In other words, he must live and think
in another atmosphere before he can walk upon the
stage and make the audience feel that he is really
a part of the picture. Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree
gave a presentation that was convincing and beautiful,
while the mediocre actor, not willing to give as much
brain work to his performance, falls far short of
an artistic performance.
A modern performance of any of the
great works as they are presented at the Metropolitan
is rehearsed with great care and attention to historical
detail. Instances of this are the performances
of L’Amore di Tre Re, Carmen,
Boheme, and Lohengrin, as well as such
great works as Die Meistersinger, and Tristan
und Isolde.
PHYSICAL STRENGTH AND SINGING
Few singers seem to realize that an
operatic career will be determined in its success
very largely through physical strength, all other factors
being present in the desired degree. That is,
the singer must be strong physically in order to succeed
in opera. This applies to women as well as to
men. No one knows what the physical strain is,
how hard the work and study are. In front of
you is a sea of highly intelligent, cultured people,
who for years have been trained in the best traditions
of the opera. They pay the highest prices paid
anywhere for entertainment. They are entitled
to the best. To face such an audience and maintain
the high traditions of the house through three hours
of a complicated modern score is a musical, dramatic
and intellectual feat that demands, first of all,
a superb physical condition. Every day of my life
in New York I go for a walk, mostly around the reservoir
in Central Park, because it is high and the air is
pure and free. As a result I seldom have a cold,
even in mid-winter. I have not missed a performance
in eight years, and this, of course, is due to the
fact that my health is my first daily consideration.