Marguerite Namara

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Namara in Thaïs  (1919)
Namara in Thaïs  (1919)


Marguerite Namara (November 19, 1888 - November 5, 1974) was a classically trained American lyric soprano whose varied career included serious opera, Broadway musicals, film and theater roles, and vocal recitals, and who counted among her lifelong circle of friends and acquaintances many of the leading artistic figures of the first half of the twentieth century.


Contents

[edit] Childhood

She was born Marguerite Evelyn Cecilia Banks in Cleveland, Ohio, to a wealthy family with New England ties (she was descended on her father's side from Mayflower passengers John Alden and Priscilla Mullens and was a great-grandniece of Union General Nathaniel Prentice Banks, Governor of Massachusetts and Speaker of the House). Raised in Los Angeles, California from the age of five, she attended St. Vincent's School and Girls' Collegiate High School, studying piano and voice from an early age. As a teenager, she and her mother, who served as one of her early vocal coaches, made a recording for Thomas Edison, singing the Flower Duet from the Delibes opera, Lakmé.

[edit] Early operatic career

At 18, Marguerite began studying at the Milan Conservatory, debuting a year later in 1908 as Marguerite in Gounod's Faust at the Teatro Politeamo in Genoa. She fashioned her stage name of Namara from her mother’s maiden name, McNamara. From then on, she was referred to professionally as Madame Namara, and was called by family and friends as, simply, Namara (pronounced Na-MAH-ruh, the middle syllable mah rhyming with straw). Between 1910 and 1926, she appeared at the Boston Opera House, with the Chicago Opera Company (succeeding Mary Garden in Thaïs), with the Metropolitan Opera, and with the Opéra-Comique in Paris. She sang lead roles in Manon, La traviata, Tosca, Carmen, Il trovatore, Cavalleria Rusticana, and La bohème. She also starred in operetta and musical comedy: Her 1915 Broadway debut came in a Franz Lehár operetta written especially for her entitled Alone at Last. She later starred for the Shuberts in revivals of H.M.S. Pinafore and The Mikado, and for the Philadelphia Grand Opera Company in Carmen. In addition, she regularly toured nationally and in Europe with leading orchestras.

[edit] Circle of friends

Close friend of Isadora Duncan, pupil of Jean De Reszke, Manuel de Falla, and Nellie Melba, the circle in which she moved included such interesting figures of the early twentieth century as Enrico Caruso, Rudolph Valentino, Charlie Chaplin, Debussy, Rodin, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Picasso, Dos Passos, Gabriele D’Annunzio, Eleanora Duse, Amelita Galli-Curci, Marguerite d'Alvarez, Leopold Stokowski, Arturo Toscanini, Mischa Levitzki, Ed Wynn, Ivor Novello, Noel Coward, Elsa Maxwell, Maurice Chevalier, Mae Murray and Pola Negri and their husbands, the soi-disant Princes David and Serge Mdivani, Jerome Kern, Cole Porter, George Gershwin, and P.G. Wodehouse, the latter four being collaborators of her second husband Guy Bolton. During her years in Paris in the 1920s, she also studied painting with Claude Monet. Her letters to family at home indicated the lessons came in return for her singing to him.


A 1926 letter written from France by Fitzgerald noted, "Nobody was in Antibes that summer ...except me, Zelda, the Valentinos, the Murphys, Mistinguett, Rex Ingram, Dos Passos, Alice Terry, the MacLeishes, Charlie Brackett, Mause Kahn {sic}, Lester Murphy, Marguerite Namara, E.Oppenheimer {sic}, Mannes the violinist, Floyd Dell, Max and Crystal Eastman ... Just the right place to rough it, an escape from the world." [[1]][[2]]

[edit] Filmography

Stolen Moments, a 1920 silent picture in which she starred with Rudolph Valentino, was one of her few film projects, and it included a small part for her infant daughter Peggy as well. In 1932, she starred in the first musical film version of Carmen, a British Film Company picture given the unfortunate name of Gipsy Blood (sometimes billed as Gypsy Blood but usually referred to by Namara as "The Bloody Gypsy"). Her co-star was British actor Lester Matthews. Exteriors were filmed in Ronda, Spain, but the troupe recorded the music in London with the London Symphony Orchestra. Later films in which Namara played small parts included Thirty Day Princess (1934) with Cary Grant and Sylvia Sidney, and Peter Ibbetson (1935) with Gary Cooper and Ann Harding.

[edit] Later career

In the early 1930s, her singing voice strained from overwork, she appeared in the London cast of the Ivor Novello play, Party which opened in London on 23 May 1932. With the onset of the Depression, she returned to Hollywood and began teaching voice, counting the actors Ramón Novarro and Frances Drake among her pupils. Subsequent theatrical performances on Broadway and on tour included supporting parts in Enter Madame, Night of Love, Claudia, and Lo and Behold. During the 1940s and 50s, her voice mellowed to that of a mezzo-soprano and she enjoyed modest success on the concert recital circuit, singing occasionally on radio. On tour, many of her costumes were designed by her friend and patroness, heiress Natalie Hays Hammond, daughter of the real adventurer who discovered King Solomon's Mines.

[edit] Marriages

She was married three times: from 1910-1916, to her manager Frederick H. Toye (1887-1930), with whom she had a son, Frederick Namara Toye (1913-2005); from 1917-1926, to the playwright Guy Bolton (1884-1979), with whom she had a daughter,Peggy Bolton|Marguerite Pamela "Peggy" Bolton (1916-2003) (The names Peggy and Pamela were chosen to honor the baby's godfather P.G. Wodehouse, whose first name was Pelham); and from 1937 until her death, to landscape architect Georg Hoy (1899-1983). In between her second and third husbands, she was involved in relationships with artist and film director Harry Lachman (1886-1975) and, later, with writer Mindret Lord (1903-1955).

[edit] Later life

In the 1940s and 50s, she divided her time between New York City and Europe. In the early 1960s, she and her third husband retired to a secluded ranch house on several acres in California's Carmel Valley, where she painted prolifically and recorded her last album in 1968, the year she turned 80. She died on November 5, 1974, in Marbella, Spain, two weeks shy of her 86th birthday. In addition to her two children, she was survived by two grandchildren, Elizabeth Namara Toye Williams and Frederick D. Toye, and by five great-grandchildren, Laurel Baker Tew, Robert Baker, Victoria Toye, Frederick E.O. Toye, and Christopher Baker.

[edit] Sources

  • The private papers and archives of Marguerite Namara in her family's possession
  • "Beautiful Society Bud Has Rare Ability as Composer," Los Angeles Examiner, 1907
  • Bolton and Wodehouse and Kern: The Men Who Made Musical Comedy, by Lee Davis, New York: James H. Heineman, Inc., 1993 ISBN 0-87008-145-4
  • Bring On The Girls, by P.G. Wodehouse and Guy Bolton, New York: Simon & Schuster, 1953
  • Forsaken Altars: An Autobiography, by Marguerite D'Alvarez, London: Rupert Hart-Davis, 1954
  • Here Lies Leonard Sillman -- Straightened Out at Last, by Leonard Sillman, New York: Citadel Press, 1962
  • "Los Angeles Music: Frederick H. Toye," by Belford Forrest, Society Magazine, December 27, 1913, 23-25
  • "Madame Namara Makes Comeback In Concert Here," Chicago Tribune, January 17, 1940
  • "Makes Operatic Debut In Genoa," The Cleveland News, 1908
  • Melba, by John Hetherington, New York: Farrar, Strauss, & Giroux, 1967
  • Metropolitan Opera Annals, by William H. Seltsam, New York: H.W. Wilson Company, 1957
  • "Multifaceted Star Namara Marks 80th Birthday With New Recording," by John Woolfenden, Monterey Peninsula Herald, August 13, 1968
  • "Music in the Home," The Cleveland News, 1923
  • The Musician's International Director and Biographical Record, New York: Shaw Publishing Company, 1950
  • My Life, An Autobiography, by Isadora Duncan, Garden City Publishers, 1927
  • "Namara Returns to Recital Stage," New York Times, January 25, 1940
  • "Opera Honors Won By Local Girl," by Archie Bell, The Cleveland News, 1923
  • "Postlude," by Ray C.B. Brown, The Washington Post, January 17, 1940
  • Rudolph Valentino, The Man Behind the Myth, by Robert Oberfirst, New York: Citadel Press, 1962
  • "She Too Longs For The Day When She Can Retire On A Farm," by Virginia Tracy, St. Louis Globe-Democrat, May 19, 1954
  • Who's Who in the East, Chicago: Marquis Press, 1957

[edit] External links