Albani, Emma
EMMA ALBANI, the stage name of MARIE, LOUISE EMMA CECILE
LAJEUNESSE (born 1847), Canadian singer, who was born at Chambly, in the
province of Quebec, on the 27th of September 1847. She made
her first public appearance in Montreal, at the age of seven, and
afterwards studied in the United States, Paris and Italy. In 1870 she
made her first appearance at Messina, and after two successful seasons
appeared in London in 1872 with the Royal Italian Opera. Later she
abandoned opera for oratorio. and sang at all the principal festivals.
She has made several tours of Canada and of the United States, and in
1886 sang at the opening of the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London
the ode written by Tennyson for the occasion. She frequently sang
before Queen Victoria, the German emperor and others of the crowned
heads of Europe, and received numerous marks of their esteem. In 1897
she was awarded the gold Beethoven medal by the London Philharmonic
Society, “as a mark of appreciation of her exceptional genius and
musical attainments, and of her generous and artistic nature.” She
married in 1878 Ernest Gye, the theatrical manager. Her stage name of
Madame Albani was taken from that of an extinct Italian family. |
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