Howell Glynne

Howell Glynne (24 January 1906  24 November 1969) was an operatic bass. He was born in Britain but lived the latter years of his life in Canada, and taught singing at the University of Toronto.

Biography

He was born in Britain as Howell Glynne Jones on 24 January 1906, in Swansea, South Wales. He studied under Ben Davies and Reinhold von Warlich.

He made his operatic debut in 1931 as Sparafucile in Rigoletto.

In the 1950s he appeared at Covent Garden, London, and other venues in Boris Godunov, Fidelio, The Bohemian Girl, Der Rosenkavalier, Le coq d'or, Aida, The Midsummer Marriage and other operas,[1] Die Fledermaus[2] and La Cenerentola.[3] He appeared as Fiesco in the English revival of Simon Boccanegra, with Arnold Matters in the title role. In 1962 he sang Poo-Bah in a radio broadcast of The Mikado.[4]

He created the roles of Ford in the first professional performance of Ralph Vaughan WilliamsSir John in Love (April 1946),[5] Joseph Lavatte in Sir Arthur Bliss's opera The Olympians (1949), and in Canada, the Hon William McDougall in Harry Somers’ opera Louis Riel (1967).[6] He appeared as the Ghost in the first performance in English of Humphrey Searle's opera Hamlet, in Toronto in February 1969.[7]

His students included Stafford Dean.[8] His recordings include excerpts from Simon Boccanegra, Merrie England, The Merry Widow,[9] and a complete Tosca (as the Sacristan, to Renata Tebaldi's Tosca).

His first wife was Lena Williams. They had two children, Enid Mair Jones (born 12/24/1927) and Barbara Jean Jones (born 4/18/30). His second wife was Frieda Irons, a model. Frieda had one son by a former marriage, Michael, who legally changed his name to Michael Glynne, but was not formally adopted by Howell Glynne.

He died in a car accident in Toronto in 1969. The driver who hit him was drunk.[10]

The Royal Conservatory of Music (Canada) endows a Howell Glynne Operatic Scholarship.[11]

References

External links