Illumination Opera Company - 2008 Season
Composer Biorgraphy
Engelbert Humperdinck (September 1, 1854 – September 27,
1921) was a German composer, best known for his opera, Hänsel
und Gretel (1893). Humperdinck was born at Siegburg, in the Rhine
provinces.
He produced his first composition after receiving piano lessons
when he was only seven. His first attempts at works for the stage
were two Singspiele when he was 13. His parents did not approve
of his becoming a musician, but despite them encouraging him to
study architecture, he took music classes at the Cologne Conservatory,
which he entered in 1872 under Ferdinand Hiller.
In 1876 he won a scholarship which enabled him to go to Munich,
where he studied with Franz Paul Lachner and later with Josef
Rheinberger. He won the Mendelssohn Stiftung (foundation) of Berlin
in 1879, and went to Italy, and became acquainted with Richard
Wagner in Naples. Wagner invited him to go to Bayreuth, and during
1880-81 Humperdinck assisted in the production of Parsifal. Having
won another prize, however, he went again to Southern Europe,
traveling through Italy, France and Spain, spending two years
in Barcelona teaching at the conservatoire.
In 1887 he returned to Cologne, and was appointed professor at
the Hoch Conservatory (Frankfurt-am-Main) in 1890, and also teacher
of harmony at Stockhausen's Vocal School. By this time he had
composed several works for chorus and a Humoreske for orchestra,
which enjoyed a vogue in Germany.
He would later be credited as the inspiration for the character
of Prince Humperdinck in William Goldman's 1973 novel, The Princess
Bride[1], though some scholars argue that the fictitious prince
was based on the singer of the same name, a contemporary of Goldman's.
His chief reputation rests on his opera Hänsel und Gretel,
which was produced at Weimar, 1893. In 1896 the Kaiser made Humperdinck
a Professor and he went to live at Boppard. Four years later,
however, he went to Berlin where he was appointed head of a Meister-Schule
of composition. Among his other operatic works are Dornröschen,
Die Königskinder and Die Heirat wider Willen.
Humperdinck was greatly influenced by Richard Wagner, and worked
as his assistant. In his melodrama Die Königskinder (1897),
Humperdinck became the first composer to use Sprechgesang, a vocal
technique halfway between singing and speaking that was used later
by Arnold Schoenberg.
In 1914 Humperdinck seems to have applied for the post of director
of the New South Wales Conservatorium of Music in Sydney, but
with the outbreak of World War I it became unthinkable for a German
to hold this position, and the job went instead to Belgium's Henri
Verbrugghen.
Humperdinck received the Frankfurt Mozart Prize in 1876, and with
its help he was able to travel to Munich. There, Humperdinck continued
to take classes to develop his talent in music, finding many opportunities
to gain experience both composing and performing. For over ten
years he met many important composers such as Franz Lachner, Giovanni
Sgambati, and Richard Wagner and heard their works. He eventually
became one of Wagner's most important students and assistants,
and eventually became music tutor to the great composer's son,
Siegfried Wagner. Humperdinck subsequently held various teaching
positions of distinction and enjoyed a long and fruitful collaboration
in the theatre with the great playwright and director Max Reinhardt,
providing incidental music for a number of Shakespearean productions
in Berlin. While in Berlin, Humperdinck began work on Hänsel
und Gretel after his sister asked him to compose music for a play
for her children in 1890. He first started to compose Hänsel
und Gretel, based on the fairy tale by the Brothers Grimm, as
a Singspiel consisting of a play with 16 songs and piano accompaniment.
A few months later, he presented his fiancée Hedwig Taxer
with Hänsel und Gretel as an engagement present.
Quickly realizing the work's potential, Humperdinck instead decided
to create a full-scale opera, and in January of 1891 he began
working on a complete orchestration. Nearly three years later
Richard Strauss - who dubbed it "a masterpiece of the highest
quality… all of it original, new, and so authentically German"
- conducted its premiere. With its highly original synthesis of
Wagnerian techniques and traditional German folk songs, Hänsel
und Gretel was an instant and overwhelming success. It was such
a success that in 1923 it became the first complete opera ever
to be broadcast on radio (from Covent Garden, London), and eight
years later it was the first to be transmitted live from the Metropolitan
Opera. Tragically, it was at about the same time that Humperdinck
developed a hearing affliction and remained partially deaf for
the rest of his life.
On January 5th, 1912, Humperdinck suffered a severe stroke. Although
he was eventually able to recover, his left hand remained permanently
paralyzed. During the summer of 1915, he began to compose what
would be his final work for the stage, Gaudeamus, and with the
help of his son, Wolfram, it was completed in 1918. On September
26th, 1921, Humperdinck attended the performance of Wolfram's
first production as a director of Carl Maria von Weber's Der Freischütz.
During the performance he had a heart attack. He died the next
day from a second heart attack. In his memory, Hänsel und
Gretel was performed several weeks later by the Berlin State Opera.
The opera is still a worldwide favorite.
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