Helga Dernesch (b.
February 3,
1939 in Vienna
) is an
Austrian
soprano and mezzo soprano. Her career has taken her
through four successive phases: from
mezzo-soprano to
lyric soprano to
dramatic soprano and after about 1980 back
to mezzo again (see also
Voice type).
"Her voice had great richness and power, and her strikingly
handsome stage appearance and intense acting made her a compelling
performer."
Life and career
Dernesch
studied at the Vienna Hochschule für Musik
before making her debut in 1961 singing Marina in
Boris Godunov in
Berne
. She continued to sing in Berne from 1961 to
1963, in Wiesbaden
1963-1965 and in Cologne
from 1965-1968. She made her first appearance in Bayreuth
(as Wellgunde in Der Ring des Nibelungen) in
1965. Two years later she was singing Elisabeth in
Tannhäuser there.
She made her first appearance at the
Salzburg Easter Festival in 1969.
With
Scottish Opera she performed
Gutrune (1968), her first
Leonore (1970), the
Marschallin (1971),
Brünnhilde,
Isolde,
Ariadne, and
Cassandra.
She has
also appeared in most of the world's other great opera houses,
including Zürich
, Amsterdam,
Glyndebourne
, London
, Paris
, San Francisco,
New York and Chicago in such roles as Leonore,
Sieglinde and Brünnhilde in Die
Walküre, Isolde, The Dyer's Wife in Die Frau ohne Schatten,
Clytemnestra in Elektra,
Kabanicha in Káťa
Kabanová, The Countess in Pique Dame, and Larina in
Eugen Onegin.
She continued to sing regularly at the
Bavarian State Opera where she sang the
Marschallin in 1979 and created the role of Goneril in the premiere
of
Aribert Reimann's
Lear in 1978, a role she also sang in
several other German houses and for
San Francisco Opera in 1981. In October
2000, she created the title role in another Reimann opera,
Bernarda Albas Haus in Munich.
She made her
Metropolitan Opera
debut in 1985 as Marfa in
Khovanshchina and subsequently sang
Prince Orlofsky in
Die
Fledermaus (1986), Herodias in
Salome, Fricka in
Das Rheingold and
Die Walküre, Waltraute in
Götterdämmerung, and the
Nurse
Die Frau ohne
Schatten (all during the 1989-1990 season). She returned
to Met in 1994 for performances as Madame de Croissy in
Dialogues des
Carmélites and Adelaide in
Arabella, and in 1995 as Leocadia Begbick in
Rise and Fall
of the City of Mahagonny.
In 1998 she sang
Herodias for the
Los Angeles Opera, and in 2009 she
appeared as Grandmother Buryjovka in
Jenufa at the
Bavarian State Opera.
She is married to the Austrian
tenor Werner Krenn (b. 1943).
Recordings
- During the late 1960s, Dernesch was a favorite interpreter of
Herbert von Karajan, with whom
she recorded Siegfried,
Götterdämmerung,
Tristan und Isolde, and
Fidelio - in each case she sang the
main female role. While she may not have been able to demonstrate
power and steel like her colleague Birgit
Nilsson on these recordings, her great emotional expression and
her good vocal technique are shown to full advantage. A further
highpoint in her discography is her recording of
Tannhäuser with Georg
Solti.
- There exists a live recording of Scottish Opera's 1971
Rosenkavalier sung in English, with Dernesch as the
Marschallin, Dame Janet Baker as
Octavian and Elizabeth Harwood as
Sophie, from the King’s Theatre, Glasgow, conducted by Alexander Gibson.
References
Other sources
- Part of the information in this article is based on a
translation of its German equivalent.
- The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music article about
Dernesch is available at [274225]