Clementine von Schuch-Proska

Clementine Edle von Schuch-Proska, née Procházka, (12 February 1850 – 8 June 1932) was an Austrian operatic coloratura soprano, who became an audience favourite and an honorary member of the Dresden Court Opera as Kammersängerin.

Clementine von Schuch-Proska

Life and activity

Grave of Ernst von Schuch and Clementine von Schuch-Proska at the Radebeul-West Cemetery

Born in Sopron, Prochazka studied at the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Wien with Mathilde Marchesi. Immediately afterwards, in 1873, she was engaged to sing the debut role of Norina in Donizetti's Don Pasquale as coloratura soprano in Dresden at the Semperoper, where she became an audience favourite. In 1878, she received the appointment of Royal Chamber Singer.

Schuch-Proska had been married since 1875 to the conductor Ernst von Schuch (1846-1914). They took up residence in 1882 in Niederlößnitz in Weintraubenstraße (renamed in 1883 at their own request to Schuchstraße 15/17).

Guest appearances took her to Vienna in 1875 with the opera Lo speziale by Joseph Haydn, and later as an opera and concert singer at leading German theatres (Vienna Court Opera in 1881, 1882 and Berlin in 1881 as well as Zurich City Theatre in 1880) as well as to Moscow and St. Petersburg. At the Covent Garden Opera in London in 1884 she sang Eva in Wagner's Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg and Ännchen in Weber's Der Freischütz.[1] The composer Pittrich, as Kammersängerin 1891, dedicated two of his early works written in Dresden to her the "Wiegendlied" and the song "Mägdlein, nimm dich in Acht"[2] which became "immediately popular".[3]

After her official retirement in 1894 with her former debut role as Norina in Donizetti's Don Pasquale,[1] she still performed occasionally as a guest in Dresden until 1898, when she was made an honorary member. She was raised to the peerage by the Austrian Emperor in 1898 with her husband Ernst von Schuch. She was also awarded the medal "Virtuti et Ingenio" for her artistic achievements.[4]

Schuch-Proska died in Kötzschenbroda, today Radebeul) at the age of 82. She is buried together with her husband in the Friedhof Radebeul-West, near her daughter Liesel.

Her daughter Liesel Schuch-Ganzel (1891-1990), the youngest of five children, and her elder sister Käthe (1885-1973; also née Ullmann and Schmidt respectively)[5] also embarked on singing careers. The son Hans von Schuch (1886-1963), became a well-known cellist. His daughter Clementine von Schuch (1921-2014) also became an opera singer.[1]

Roles

Honours and awards

In 1898, the Kammersängerin and her husband Ernst Schuch were raised to hereditary nobility by the Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph I with the title Edle von. At her stage farewell in the same year, which she gave with one of her signature roles, Norina in Donizetti's Don Pasquale, she was appointed honorary member of the Dresden Court Opera by the King Albert of Saxony.

Schuch received several awards in the course of her work:[6]

  • Saxony: Great Golden Medal Virtuti et ingenio (1887)
  • Vereinigte herzogliche Häuser (Sachsen-Altenburg, Sachsen-Coburg und Gotha und Sachsen-Meiningen): Verdienstkreuz des Saxe-Ernestine House Order (1885)
  • Austria-Hungary: Golden Medal for Art and Science (1881, (predecessor of the K.u.k. Österreichisches Ehrenzeichen für Kunst und Wissenschaft), Civilian Medal of Honour (1881)
  • Italy: Gold mMdaille of Amadeus Herzog von Aosta (1884)
  • Romania: Medaille Bene Merenti I. Classe (1888)[7]

Artist family

The parents Ernst and Clementine von Schuch were followed by two further generations of musically gifted descendants:

Further reading

  • Erika Eschebach (ed.), Andrea Rudolph (ed.): Die Schuchs. Eine Künstlerfamilie in Dresden. Sandstein Verlag, Dresden 2014, ISBN 978-3-95498-098-7.
  • C. Höslinger: "Schuch Clementine von". In: Österreichisches Biographisches Lexikon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Vol. 11, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna 1999, ISBN 3-7001-2803-7, p. 280 f. (Direct links to "p. 280", "p. 281")
  • Karl-Josef Kutsch, Leo Riemens: Großes Sängerlexikon. CD-ROM-Version (3. erweiterte Auflage (1997–2000)), vol. 4, 3158; vol. 6, 597.

References

  1. "Schuch-Proska Clementine von". Operissimo. 4 June 2015. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
  2. Musikverlag Schott, Mainz 1891, title entry, Austrian National Library: Hofmeister: Musikalisch-literarischer Monatsbericht, vol. : 1891, p. 378 (September-Heft); numbered: ÖNB-ANNO-Buch
  3. Georg Pittrich" in Roeder, Ernst: Das Dresdner Hoftheater der Gegenwart. Biographisch-kritische Skizzen der Mitglieder. E. Person's Verlag, Dresden/Leipzig, 1896, pp. (271-280) 274;
  4. Kathrin Wallrabe (ed.): Clementine von Schuch-Proska, née Proska. In Frauenzimmer - Frauen im Zimmer? collection of texts. Stadt Radebeul, Radebeul 2005, p. 43.
  5. Gabriella Hanke Knaus (2007), "Schuch, Ernst Edler von", Neue Deutsche Biographie (NDB) (in German), 23, Berlin: Duncker & Humblot, pp. 619–620; (full text online)
  6. Erika Eschebach (ed.), Andrea Rudolph (ed.): Die Schuchs. Eine Künstlerfamilie in Dresden. Sandstein Verlag, Dresden 2014, ISBN 978-3-95498-098-7, p. 55.
  7. Schuch-Proska Clementine von on Operissimo
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