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Nellie
Melba 1861 - 1931 prima donna
Helen
Porter Armstrong (1861-1931), prima donna, was born on 19 May 1861
at Richmond, Melbourne, as Helen Porter Mitchell, eldest surviving
of ten children of Isabella Ann (born Dow) and David Mitchell, a
building contractor. Both parents were amateur musicians. When education
by her aunts at home was hampered by her unruly behaviour, Nellie
was sent to a boarding school at Richmond, but her adolescent years
were spent at Presbyterian Ladies' College. There she became a pupil
of Ellen Christian, a former pupil of Manuel Garcia, and a successful
English concert singer.
At eighteen Nellie retreated to the domestic and social life expected
of the eldest daughter in a wealthy family, though she was permitted,
as a social grace, to continue singing lessons, begun at school
with Pietro Cecchi, a former singer with the Lyster Opera Company.
Two years later her mother died at 48, followed shortly by the death
of the youngest sister. David Mitchell accepted a contract to build
a sugar mill at Marion near Mackay in northern Queensland, taking
Nellie with him. There she met sugar plantation manager Charles
Armstrong, sixth son of a Scottish baronet. Known as Kangaroo Charlie,
the former jackaroo was a handsome man with a wild temper. Against
her father's wishes, Nellie married Charlie in Brisbane on 22 December
1882. Primitive living conditions in the tropics, a dwindling income,
and a plethora of outbursts from Armstrong finally drove her to
leave her husband. On 19 January 1884 she left for Melbourne with
her infant son George, to begin a concert career with the artistic
and financial help of Cecchi. Her father, whose influence in her
life was and remained paramount, housed his daughter, but refused
assistance to establish a career on the stage, of which he disapproved.
In March 1886 she sailed for London with her husband and child as
part of David Mitchell's entourage when he was appointed Victoria's
Commissioner to the Indian and Colonial Exhibition in London. Mitchell
was determined that the marriage should be mended, if only in order
to preserve the facade of respectability expected of someone in
his position, and he took Nellie with him only on that condition.
She accepted the bait. She had been unable to earn the money needed
for this opportunity to open up her career. With her father reluctantly
providing a modest income, she went to Paris to become a pupil of
one of the leading singing teachers of the day, Mathilde Marchesi.
In later life Melba repudiated Cecchi's claims to having 'created'
her voice and would acknowledge only Marchesi as her teacher.
Melba's highly successful operatic debut occurred on 13 October
1887 as Gilda in Rigoletto at the Theatre de la Monnaie in
Brussels. Her London debut, in May 1888 in the title role of Lucia
di Lammermoor, was a failure. She returned to Brussels. In May
1889 she made her Paris debut as Orphelie in Hamlet to acclaim.
Under the patronage of Lady de Grey and the Princess of Wales, Melba
attempted a second Covent Garden season, opening in Romeo et
Juliette. This time she had a triumph. Based at Covent Garden,
she appeared in every season (with the exception of 1909 and 1912)
until the war, when the Garden closed for the duration and thereafter
occasionally until 1926. She first sang at La Scala and at the Metropolitan
in New York in 1893, appearing at the latter house regularly until
1901 and again in the 1904 and 1910 seasons. She was among the highest
paid singers of the day, with a fortune enhanced through financial
advice of de Rothchild, when she quit the Met., where she was unable
to dictate the terms of her engagements, for Oscar Hammerstein's
new Manhattan Opera, where she could. She appeared for Hammerstein
from 1907 until 1909 when the Manhattan failed.
Only once in her long career did Melba falter. In 1890 she met Philippe,
Duc d'Orleans, heir to the Pretender to the French throne. The affair
which ensued became public knowledge. Melba's estranged husband
sued for divorce, naming the Duc as corespondent. Though the matter
was finally dropped due to diplomatic pressure, Melba had become
notorious. Royalty and hence the aristocracy and fashionable society,
the mainstay of her support at Covent Garden, temporarily withdrew
their favours. Realising the danger, Melba separated from the Duc.
Armstrong removed George from Melba's custody and took him to America.
Melba was divorced in Texas in 1901. She did not see her son again
until he was an adult.
Melba was a coloratura with a bel canto repertoire, but in 1897,
determined to capitalise on the fashion for Wagnerian opera, she
foolishly attempted Brunnhilde (Siegfried) at the Met. Her
voice was so badly damaged that she was unable to sing for three
months.
In 1902 Melba returned to Australia on a concert tour. She was by
then internationally famous. Shortly after she left John Ezra Norton,
editor of Truth, published an open letter groundlessly accusing
her of a thousand sins including drunkenness. Melba refused to answer
the charges, her lifelong policy towards all scandal mongering.
Norton's jealous ravings cast a shadow over her reputation from
which it never recovered. Much later she was reported in Dame Clara
Butt's ghosted autobiography as advising her colleague, then about
to tour Australia, to 'sing 'em muck', it was all Australians could
understand. This time Melba denied it, but to no avail.
In 1909 Melba embarked on a country concert tour of Australia, a
queen's progress. In 1911 she returned to bring her countrymen opera
of international standard in the first of the Melba-J. C. Williamson
seasons. She repeated this in 1924 and 1928. At the outbreak of
the 1914-18 war, Melba was at Coombe cottage, the house built for
her by John Grainger, father of the composer Percy Grainger. With
Covent Garden closed she expected to remain in Australia, marooned
by the war, but in fact she spent the war years giving concerts
to raise funds for the war wounded, first in Australia and later
in America. She was appointed DBE for this work.
In 1915 she founded a women's singing school at the Albert St Conservatorium
in East Melbourne, then under the directorship of the composer Fritz
Hart, many of whose 22 operas were written with the school in mind.
The women trained by Melba, who gave her services free, became the
teachers of a new generation, extending the Melba legacy into the
future. Melba's methods were embodied in a manual, The Melba
Method, which she wrote with Fritz Hart and Mary Campbell. In
1904 Melba began a recording career which helped establish the credibility
of the gramophone, recording some 168 items, though the primitive
technology of the times makes it difficult to understand the reported
magnificence of her voice, let alone the spell she seems to have
cast over all who heard her, even in her latter years.
Melba gave her Covent Garden farewell performance on 8 June l926.
Her Australian farewells occurred in 1928. Though the phrase 'more
farewells than Nellie Melba' entered the language, she in fact gave
fewer than Patti and was merely following the custom of great singers
in Europe, a tradition not understood in Australia.
Melba died at St Vincent's Hospital, Darlinghurst, Sydney on 23
February 1931 from septicaemia, the result of facial surgery performed
in Europe shortly beforehand. She was mourned in Australia as the
greatest figure of her time, the woman who put Australia on the
cultural map.
Thérèse Radic
Thérèse Radic Melba: the Voice of Australia 1986.
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