Fritzi Jokl (23 March 1895 – 15 October 1974) was an Austro-American operatic dramatic coloratura soprano.
Life
Born in Vienna, Jokl's vocal training took place with the wife of the piano virtuoso Moriz Rosenthal, Mrs. Rosenthal-Ranner, among others. She received her first engagement in 1917 at the Oper Frankfurt. She stayed there until 1922 and sang many coloratura parts. Afterwards Jokl changed for one season to the Landestheater Darmstadt (today Staatstheater Darmstadt), in order to finally sing under the conductor Eugen Szenkar at first at the Theater des Westens (until 1925), then at the Cologne Opera (until 1926) to sing. The success there brought her an engagement at the Salzburg Festival (1928) she was Despina), a guest engagement at the Covent Garden Opera in London and finally a firm contract as first coloratura soprano at the Bavarian State Opera. Also guest appearances at the Vienna State Opera (1930) and in Amsterdam (1932) prove their prominent position. A planned move to the Kroll Opera House in Berlin in 1932 did not come about because of its closure, so she returned to the Landestheater Darmstadt, where she was dismissed as a Jew after the seizure of power by the National Socialists in spring 1933.
She still made some appearances at events of the Jüdischer Kulturbund under the conductors Joseph Rosenstock and Hans Wilhelm Steinberg[1] and a tour of France with a travelling stage. Then Jokl had to emigrate to the USA via Austria in 1936.
The Metropolitan Opera in New York turned down an engagement for the singer because her part was already occupied by Lily Pons and Bidu Sayão.[2] Jokl subsequently ended her career and only performed in private. She settled in New York and married the author and journalist Jack Siegel.
In Darmstadt, a plaque was erected in the foyer of the Staatstheater in June 2011 in memory of the displaced Jewish employees of the Institute, including Jokl.[3]
Jokl died in New York City at age 79.
Roles
Oper Frankfurt
- Rosina in Barbier von Sevilla
- Urbain in Les Huguenots
- Oscar in Un ballo in maschera
- Blondchen in Die Entführung aus dem Serail
- Sophie in Der Rosenkavalier
Berliner Volksoper
- Konstanze in Die Entführung aus dem Serail
- Norina in Don Pasquale
- Violetta in La Traviata
Staatsoper München
- Zerbinetta in Ariadne auf Naxos (under the direction of the composer Richard Strauss)
- Gilda in Rigoletto
- Nedda in Der Bajazzo
- Olympia in The Tales of Hoffmann
- Marzelline in The Marriage of Figaro
- Rosalinde in Die Fledermaus
Covent Garden Opera
- Najade and Zerbinetta in Ariadne auf Naxos
- Waldvogel in Siegfried
Salzburger Festspiele 1928
- Despina in Così fan tutte
Berliner Kulturbund
- Susanna in Figaro
- Olympia in The Tales of Hoffmann
- Micaela in Carmen
Other roles
- Königin der Nacht in The Magic Flute
- Susanna in The marriage of Figaro
- Cenerentola in Aschenbrödel oder der Triumph der Güte
- Galathea in the opera of the same name
- Inez in L'Africaine
- Le Rossignol in the opera of the same name
Discography
- Lebendige Vergangenheit – Fritzi Jokl. Preiser/Naxos, Vienna 1999
- Fritzi Jokl Heritáge 1924–1928. Dante Musikwelt-Tonträger 1998
- Four Famous Sopranos of the Past (Schöne, Jokl, Eisinger and Szabo). Preiser/Naxos, Vienna 1998
- Aus Münchens Operngeschichte, darin: Fritzi Jokl singt Don Pasquale: Auch ich versteh’ die feine Kunst. Preiser/Naxos, Vienna 1999
- ABC der Gesangskunst, Teil 6, Fritzi Jokl singt: Alessandro Stradella: Seid meiner Wonne stille Zeugen und Die Hugenotten: Nobles Seigneurs salut (Ihr edlen Herr’n allhier). Cantus-Line (DA Music), Diepholz 2002
Further reading
External links
- Literature by and about Fritzi Jokl in the German National Library catalogue
- Fritzi Jokl discography at Discogs
References
- ↑ Verstummte Stimmen. Die Vertreibung der „Juden“ aus der Oper 1933 bis 1945. Der Kampf um das Hessische Landestheater Darmstadt on WorldCat
- ↑ Fritzi Jokl on cantabile-subito.de
- ↑ echo-online.de (Darmstädter Echo) 4 June 2011
- ↑ Fritzi Jokl in Großes Sängerlexikon. Third, extended and updated edition. Berlin 2000, p. 2264