By MARGALIT FOX
Nicolai Gedda, the Swedish
singer who rose from an impoverished childhood and a youthful career as a bank
clerk to become one of the most celebrated tenors of the 20th century, died on
Jan. 8 in Tolochenaz, Switzerland. He was 91.
The Royal Swedish Opera
confirmed his death to the news agency Agence France-Presse. Mr. Gedda’s death,
after a heart attack at his home in Tolochenaz, had not been announced by his
family until this week.
Widely admired for his
sensitive musicianship, masterly tonal control and impeccable diction in a
spate of European languages, Mr. Gedda possessed a lyric tenor voice that
shimmered like silver but was no less warm for that.
He was one of the most
versatile, and professionally long-lived, tenors of his era, with many dozens
of roles to his name in a career that lasted until he was well into his 70s — a
good two decades past a classical singer’s customary retirement age.
Nicolai Gedda performing in
Switzerland in 1970. Credit Binder/ullstein bild, via Getty Images
Mr. Gedda was ubiquitous on
recordings and in the world’s foremost opera houses and concert halls,
including La Scala in Milan and Covent Garden in London.
Over a quarter-century, he
sang 367 performances with the Metropolitan Opera, from his debut in the title
role of Gounod’s “Faust” in 1957 to his final performance, as Alfredo in
Verdi’s “La Traviata,” in 1983.
The fluid lightness of Mr.
Gedda’s voice made him especially well suited to the French repertoire: His
roles included Des Grieux in Massenet’s “Manon,” Hoffmann in Offenbach’s “Les
Contes d’Hoffmann,” Roméo in Gounod’s “Roméo et Juliette” and the title role in
Berlioz’s “Benvenuto Cellini.”
Mr. Gedda in 1998. He sang
367 performances with the Metropolitan Opera. Credit Joachim Schulz/ullstein
bild, via Getty Images
Among his Italian roles were
Nemorino in Donizetti’s “L’Elisir d’Amore,” Ernesto in his “Don Pasquale” and
Edgardo in his “Lucia di Lammermoor,” as well as the Duke of Mantua in
“Rigoletto,” Alfredo in “La Traviata” and Riccardo in “Un Ballo in Maschera,”
all by Verdi.
But the role for which Mr.
Gedda was very likely most famous was Russian: Lensky, the young poet in
Tchaikovsky’s “Eugene Onegin.”
Reviewing Mr. Gedda in a
concert performance of “Onegin” with the Boston Symphony in 1976, Richard Dyer
wrote in The Boston Globe:
“The tenor’s voicing of
Lensky’s aria — an ideal union of responsiveness to word and musical line, a
demonstration of vocal and technical mastery and varied and beautiful tone, and
an expression of wise and generous human feeling — was a classic demonstration
of why, for some of us at least, operatic singing is the highest achievement of
human art.”
Mr. Gedda’s prowess in a
Russian opera is perhaps unsurprising in light of the fact that Russian, along
with Swedish, was his native language: He was abandoned as a child by one
Russian father and reared by another.
The permutations of Mr.
Gedda’s name over time attest to the volatile nature of his childhood:
According to his memoir,
“Nicolai Gedda: My Life & Art,” published in English in 1999, he was born
in Stockholm on July 11, 1925. The son of an unwed teenage waitress, Clary
Linnea Lindstrom, and an unemployed father of Russian-Swedish parentage, Nikolai
Gädda, he was christened Harry Gustaf Nikolai Gädda.
His parents abandoned him
at birth and planned to consign him to an orphanage. But when he was six days
old, his father’s sister, Olga Gädda, intervened, determining to rear him as
her own.
A few years later, Olga
married Michail Ustinoff, a Russian-born singer, and the child became known as
Nikolai Ustinoff.
As the British newspaper
The Telegraph reported in its obituary of Mr. Gedda on Friday, Swedish
authorities deemed the couple too poor to adopt him.
“Nevertheless,” Mr. Gedda
wrote in his memoir, “they had the courage to keep me illegally.”
But the situation was far
from idyllic. At the slightest infraction, Mr. Gedda wrote, his foster father
would beat him with “a narrow Cossack belt that had once belonged to his
uniform.”
Mr. Gedda, who grew up
speaking Russian and Swedish, believed for years that the Ustinoffs were his
biological parents. It was not until he was an older teenager that he was told
the circumstances of his birth.
In 1929, when Michail
Ustinoff became the choirmaster of a Russian Orthodox Church in Leipzig, the
family moved there, and young Nikolai soon acquired German. His first voice
lessons were with his foster father, and by the time he was 5, he was singing
and playing the piano with facility.
In 1934, after the rise of
Hitler, the family left Germany and returned to Stockholm. He lived there with
his foster parents until he was in his early 20s, sleeping in a tiny alcove off
the kitchen of their modest apartment.
After finishing high
school, Mr. Gedda took a job as a bank clerk in Stockholm, earning extra money
as a wedding singer. (He would adopt the name Nicolai Gedda early in his
career.)
Through a customer at the
bank, he was introduced to the tenor Carl Martin Ohman, who had been a mentor
of the renowned Swedish tenor Jussi Björling. Mr. Gedda began lessons with Mr.
Ohman and later studied at what is now the Royal College of Music in Stockholm.
Mr. Gedda made his operatic
debut at 26, as the coachman Chapelou in “Le Postillon de Lonjumeau,” by the
French composer Adolphe Adam, with the Royal Swedish Opera.
His performance — notably
the aria “Mes amis, écoutez l’histoire,” with its stratospheric high D, was
rapturously received. Soon afterward, Mr. Gedda sang for Walter Legge, the
influential classical record producer at EMI.
As Opera News reported in
its obituary of Mr. Gedda, on hearing him Mr. Legge sent telegrams to the
conductor Herbert von Karajan and Antonio Ghiringhelli, who oversaw La Scala.
“Just heard the greatest
Mozart singer in my life,” his wires read. “His name is Nicolai Gedda.”
From then on, Mr. Gedda
never wanted for work. He made his La Scala debut as Don Ottavio in Mozart’s
“Don Giovanni,” conducted by Mr. Karajan, in 1953. The next year he sang Faust
at the Paris Opera and the Duke of Mantua at Covent Garden.
Mr. Gedda made his United
States debut in 1957, singing Faust with the Pittsburgh Opera. Reviewing his
Met debut, in the same role later that year, under the baton of Jean Morel,
Howard Taubman wrote in The New York Times:
“His carriage is tall and
straight and his movement buoyant. It is credible that he will attract
Marguerite. Even more impressive than his appearance is the intelligence of his
singing.”
Mr. Gedda’s other Met roles
over the years included Don Ottavio, Tamino in Mozart’s “The Magic Flute,”
Admète in Gluck’s “Alceste,” Grigory in Mussorgsky’s “Boris Godunov” and
Pinkerton in Puccini’s “Madama Butterfly.”
With the Met, he also sang
Anatol in the world premiere of Samuel Barber’s “Vanessa,” conducted by Dimitri
Mitropoulos, in 1958, and Kodanda in the United States premiere of Gian Carlo
Menotti’s “The Last Savage,” under Thomas Schippers, in 1964.
Mr. Gedda’s first two
marriages ended in divorce. His survivors include his third wife, Aino
Sellermark Gedda, the co-author of his memoir. Information on other survivors
could not be confirmed.
His recordings include many
works in the standard repertoire, along with operettas and Leonard Bernstein’s
“Candide.”
Mr. Gedda never met his
biological father. In 1977, when he was in his 50s, he met his biological mother
for the first and only time.
As he recounted in his
memoir, when he entered her apartment in a Stockholm suburb, he noticed a large
framed photograph of himself as a young singer, prominently displayed.
He realized, he wrote, that
she had purchased it from a photographic agency, as any stranger might have
done.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/02/10/arts/music/nicolai-gedda-celebrated-opera-tenor-dies-at-91.html
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