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| Articles about Florence Foster
Jenkins Click on CD for audio samples
| Liner
notes from the CD The
Glory (????) of the Human Voice By Francis Robinson
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Few
artists ever gave such unalloyed pleasure as Florence Foster Jenkins, yet this
extraordinary soprano had the wisdom not to overdo a good thing. She
emphatically declined to appear in New York oftener than once a year and rarely
anywhere else except such favored centers as Washington and Newport. For years
her annual recital at the Ritz-Carlton was a private ceremonial for the select
few--her stubbornly loyal circle of clubwomen and the adventurous cognoscenti.
If the latter at times displayed an unmannerly lack of restraint they were nonetheless
faithful. Music critics covered the event in precisely the same reverse
English with which they frequently, though perhaps less intentionally, leave a
baffled public speculating as to what actually did happen the night before. Then
the word began to get around. Tickets became harder to come by than for a World
Series. Finally, on the evening of October 25, 1944, Madame Jenkins took the big
step. Forsaking the brocade atmosphere of a fashionable hotel ballroom, she braved
Carnegie Hall. There are those who claim that her death one month and
a day later was the result of a broken heart--as unlikely as the story that her
career was all a huge joke at the public's expense--a pretty expensive joke, incidentally,
since Carnegie Hall was sold out weeks in advance and grossed something like $6,000.
Moreover, the late Robert Bagar wrote in the New York World-Telegram: "She was
exceedingly happy in her work. It is a pity so few artists are. And the happiness
was communicated as if by magic to her hearers..." No, Madame Jenkins
died full of years--76 to be exact--and, it is safe to say, with a happy heart.
Neither her parents nor her husband gave any encouragement whatever
to her musical ambitions, but with her divorce and the money inherited from her
lather, a Wilkes-Barre banker and lawyer who had served in the Pennsylvania legislature,
she was free to turn her sights on new York. She broke into print in 1912 as chairman
of the Euterpe Club's tableaux vivants. She was also glad to foot the bill for
the annual spree of her Verdi Club. The lavishness of this entertainment may be
guessed from the name under which it went--"The Ball of the Silver Skylarks."
All this gave free rein to her hair for costume design, a faculty that
was to prove almost as startling as her vocal flights. No Jenkins recital
was accompanied by less than three changes. In "Angel of Inspiration"
a very substantial and matronly apparition, all wings and tinsel and tulle,
made its way through potted palms to the curve of the grand piano. Small
wonder the late Helen Hokinson was an ardent Jenkins fan.
Her method of ticket distribution was also unique and a
model of straightforward dealing. In the hands of the scalpers those coveted pasteboards
would have brought ten times the price. It is doubtful, however, if this was the
reason she insisted on personal application to the genteel midtown hotel where
she had rooms. Toying with the tickets as Rosina might with her fan she would
inquire: "Mr. Gilkey, are you a--a newspaperman?" "No. Madame
Jenkins," the applicant replied quite soberly, "a music-lover." "Very
well," the diva beamed. "Two-fifty each, please. Now would you like some sherry?"
Would he? Who wouldn't sit down for a friendly glass with this phenomenon
in the musical life of our time? It is too bad she did not record her
favorite encore, Clavelitos, a number she invariably had to repeat. A contemporary
account describes Madame Jenkins as appearing in a Spanish shawl, with a jeweled
comb and, like Carmen, a red bloom in her hair. She punctuated the rhythmic cadences
of the song by tossing tiny red flowers from her pretty basket to her delighted
hearers. On one occasion the basket in a moment of confusion followed the little
blossoms into the audience. It too, was received with spirit. Before
she would do the repeat her already overworked accompanist had to pass among the
jubilant groundlings and retrieve the prop buds and basket. The enthusiasm of
the audience at this point reached a peak that beggars description.
After a taxicab crash in 1943 she found she could sing "a higher F than ever before."
Instead of a lawsuit against the taxicab company, she sent the driver a box of
expensive cigars. Although high coloratura was Madame Jenkins' particular
province, she also ventured into the quieter realm of lieder. She opened her 1934
program with Die Mainacht of Brahms. Under the title was this quote:
O singer, if thou canst not dream, Leave this song unsung. Nobody will
ever say Florence Foster Jenkins couldn't dream. For some time there
has been wide demand for a reissue of this Florence Foster Jenkins album, but
it was felt that an attraction should be found to couple with the soprano's recordings.
If it is impossible to predict where the lightning of genius is going
to strike, how much less predictable is the urge to artistic endeavor. One day
with no advance warning whatever Jenny Williams and Thomas Burns walked into RCA
Victor's Custom Record Department. The records they wanted to make were to be
for their own use but eventually they agreed to the public issuance of the material
on this disc. The English translations are their own and speak for themselves
- also for the cause of opera in English. As Madame Jenkins found her
way to the recording studios from the concert hall, perhaps Miss Williams and
Mr. Burns, with the start they may surely expect from this disc, will one day
attempt to fill, in a measure, the gap left by Madame Jenkins' departure from
the musical scene. Francis Robinson Assistant Manager of the Metropolitan
Opera (1952-76) and author of "Caruso: His Life
in Pictures "
| Florence Foster Jenkins The Diva of Din
by Daniel Dixon |
 IN
THE FALL of 1944, it was announced that Florence Foster Jenkins was to lift her
voice in song from the hallowed stage of Carnegie Hall in New York. Immediately
the world of music was seized by a rare excitement. The concert was sold out for
weeks in advance, with tickets scalped for as much as $20 apiece. Madame
Jenkins' recital was the incredible climax of a bizarre career. For Madame Jenkins'
shortcomings as an artiste were nothing short of awesome. A dumpy coloratura soprano,
her voice was not even mediocre - it was preposterous! She clucked and squawked,
trumpeted and quavered. She couldn't carry a tune. Her sense of rhythm was uncertain.
In the treacherous upper registers, her voice often vanished into thin air, leaving
an audience with its ear cocked for notes with which she might just as well have
never taxed her throat. One critic dolefully described her as "the first lady
of the sliding scale." Peevishly remarked another: "She sounds like a cuckoo in
its cups." Such tart comments were heaped upon Madame Jenkins throughout
the 30-odd years that she performed in public. Yet throughout them she was immensely
popular among her colleagues. Many of the world's most distinguished musicians-
Enrico Caruso for one-regarded her with affection and respect. Audiences laughed
at her - laughed until the tears rolled down their cheeks, laughed until they
stuffed handkerchiefs in their mouths to stifle the mirth - but she was never
dismayed. Even when a song was punctured by rowdy applause (her listeners sometimes
responded to a piercing clinker with whoops of "Bravo! Bravo!") the diva simply
smiled and bowed. After all, she modestly murmured, didn't Frank Sinatra arouse
the same sort of buoyant enthusiasm among his adoring bobby soxers?
However meagerly endowed she may have been in voice, Madame Jenkins was a truly
remarkable woman. She was born Florence Foster, the daughter of a starchy Wilkes-Barre,
Pennsylvania, banker. As was customary for young girls of her station in those
culture-conscious Victorian times, she was given music lessons. Her career was
launched at the age of eight with a piano recital in Philadelphia. At 17, she
announced her wish to go abroad and take up music as a profession. But Father
Foster was one of those heavy handed gentlemen who believed that a woman belonged
at home, surrounded by teacups and servants, embroideries and children. He declined
to foot the bills. Florence had an answer to that. She eloped to Philadelphia
with Frank Thornton Jenkins, a young doctor. But it was an unhappy marriage and
divorce came in 1902. Cut off by her unyielding father, Florence scratched out
a precarious living as a teacher and pianist. In 1909, Father Foster passed away.
He had relented, it turned out, and left Madame Jenkins a comfortable estate.
With that, her career began in earnest. "Her singing instructor," said St. Clair
Bayfield, who acted as her manager for over 36 years, "was a great opera star.
But there is only one person in the world" he pointed to himself "who knows the
name." In 1912, at her own expense, Madame staged her maiden concert.
At the start, she performed exclusively in such favored cities as Newport, Washington,
Boston and Saratoga Springs. Soon she had gathered about her a devoutly loyal
cluster of tone-deaf cluhwomen. Madame had stupendous energy. She founded, supported
and presided over the Verdi Club. In addition she belonged to and frequently arranged
musical benefits for many other women's organizations. In staging these affairs,
Madame Jenkins proved herself a shrewd executive and a canny promoter. Most of
her productions made money, perhaps because she herself was usually billed as
the feature attraction. The proceeds of her private recitals were generally handed
out to needy and deserving young artists, as were large chunks of her personal
fortune. "She only thought," Hayfield insisted, "of making other people happy."
When Madame had attracted the notice of a few astonished critics, she
decided that the time had come to set up headquarters in New York. It was here
that, year by year and recital by recital, her single-minded zeal was rewarded.
She became a celebrity, then a legend. Madame performed in New York at least two
times a year at Sherry's on Park Avenue, and once a year she gave a private concert
at the Ritz-Carleton Hotel - an event to which 0nly a select assortment of friends,
admirers, colleagues and critics were invited. These appearances, one newspaper
declared, were "awaited with more than the customary gusto." Upwards of 800 cheering
people were crushed into the brocaded ballroom. Gatecrashers had to be herded
away by the police. To Madame Jenkins, a song recital was more than a matter of
music. Simply to produce what she called "pure and radiant tones" was not enough.
So her audience "the lonely women and artistic men" to whom, said St. Clair Bayfield,
"she afforded so much happiness" were given beauty of atmosphere as well.
The stage was invariably smothered in flowers and greenery, it being the
diva's theory that their perfumes would mingle deliciously with the trills and
arabesques of her voice. And, in order to call forth an even deeper response to
her offerings, she made it a habit to appear in costume. One of her favorite selections,
"Angel of Inspiration," brought her before the audience in tulle and tinsel, a
rather pudgy apparition in sturdy golden wings, standing amid potted palms. In
another of her most popular renditions, a Latin number called "Clavelitos," she
rigged herself up in a vivid Spanish shawl and put a large red flower in her hair.
Archly fluttering an enormous fan, she marked the rhythmic cadences of the song
by strewing handful after handful of rosebuds among the audience. Once she got
so worked up that she tossed not only blooms, but the basket in which they were
carried, into the crowd. This caused a sensation. When her delighted listeners
roared for an encore, she had an assistant hurry out front and gather up the blossoms.
Then she repeated the whole routine. No bravura was too difficult for
Madame to challenge. Her programs regularly included some of the most strenuous
and exacting vocal works in the musical library. In addition to Mozart and Verdi
and Rachmaninoff, however, there were less demanding selections from the pen of
her steadfast accompanist, Cosme McMoon, and occasionally even an air composed
by herself. One of her most frequently repeated numbers was a song by Brahms,
subtitled on her gilt programs: "0 singer, if thou canst not dream, leave this
song unsung." At the conclusion of a concert, "flushed and happy, surrounded with
flowers," she often delivered a little speech in which she invited members of
the audience to write and tell her which songs they had enjoyed most. "It may
not be important to you," she would say, "but it is very important to me."
As her reputation mounted, it was inevitable that Madame Jenkins should be
asked to record. This she did, incomparably. And in her four immortal recordings,
she adopted a highly individual approach. "Rehearsals, the niceties of pitch and
volume, considerations of acoustics, all," wrote an official of the recording
company, "were thrust aside by her with ease and authority. She simply sang and
the disc recorded." More often than not, she would pronounce the first rough test
of a song to be "excellent - virtually beyond improvement" and order all copies
to be made from such primitive pressings. Only once did she betray any mis-givings.
On that occasion she phoned on the day following a session to say that she felt
a trifle worried about a note" at the end of an aria from "The Magic Flute," by
Mozart. But The Melotone Recording Studio's director Mera M. Weinstock gracefully
quieted her fears. "My dear Madame Jenkins," she said, "you need feel no anxiety
about any single note." She didn't. She had a superb faith in her destiny
as a diva - a faith so staunch and unswerving that it plugged her ears to the
sour notes of the truth. "When it came to singing,"accompanist McMoon once explained,
"she forgot everything. Nothing could stop her. She thought that she was a great
artist." Shyly, but firmly, she informed a Melotone executive that she had listened
to a certain aria from "The Magic Flute" as recorded by famed prima donnas Hempel
and Tetrazzini, and that her own rendition was "beyond doubt the most outstanding
of the three." To Madame Jenkins, criticism sounded like kudos, ridicule
like acclaim. Praise was detected on the lips of the most unsympathetic reviewers.
Those whose remarks were uncompromisingly harsh were either shrugged
off with queenly disdain or denounced as unlettered louts. "They are so ignorant,
ignorant!" she once burst out. When, as sometimes happened, the laughter of her
audience grew so raucous that it would no longer be all overlooked, she simply
ascribed the boorish behavior to "professional jealousy" or to "those hoodlums."
The hoodlums were, of course, her "spiteful enemies." It was self-deception carried
to outlandish extremes - but it was harmless and gentle and, in its own weird
way, magnificent. Only once was her confidence observed to falter. On that occasion
she told a friend, "Some may say that I couldn't sing, but no one can say that
I didn't sing." Without question, Madame Jenkins was a star. That she
was touched with a gentle madness made no difference. For she had the unfathomable
glint and glitter about her that, wherever encountered, divides the unique from
the ordinary. Whether by intention or by accident, she was an inspired show-man.
Bayfield once said of her: "You know, on a stage a person will sometimes draw
the attention of a whole audience. There's something about her personality that
makes everyone look at her with relish. That's what Mrs. Jenkins had. You could
feel it in the applause. That's why she drew such enormous audiences to her concerts
with very little instrument in voice. People may have laughed at her singing,
but the applause was real." For years her admirers urged Madame Jenkins
to make an appearance at Carnegie Hall. And for years she resisted such suggestions.
Why? Nobody knows, exactly. But in 1944 she was 76 and there might not be many
chances left. So the momentous arrangements were made. And on October 25th, the
concert took place, with 2,000 bitterly disappointed customers turned away. It
was, of course, a thundering commercial success. As always, Madame's singing was
an irresistible burlesque. She cos-tumed herself as the "Angel of Inspiration"
and, complete to the abandoned tossing of rosebuds, offered the stylish gathering
her rendition of "Clavelitos." Unable to contain itself, the audience clutched
at its sides in agonies of mirth. The critics simply winced. The next
morning's reviews were dutifully severe. They reported, for instance, that "she
was undaunted by . . . the composer's intent," that "her singing was hopelessly
lacking in semblance of pitch," and that "only Mrs. Jenkins has perfected the
art of giving added zest by improvising quarter tones, either above or below the
original notes." Yet, on the whole, the accounts were remarkably gentle. Most
of the critics discreetly refrained from any elaboration of the diva's most grievous
defects. "Everybody," one reviewer volunteered, "had a pleasant evening." Wrote
another: "Her attitude was at all times that of a singer who performed her task
to the best of her ability." Another discerned "a certain poignancy in her delivery."
Robert Bager of the New York World-Telegram observed: "She was exceedingly happy
in her work. It is a pity so few artists are. And her happiness was communicated
as if by magic to her listeners . . . who were stimulated to the point of audible
cheering, even joyous laughter and ecstasy by the inimitable singing."
It was a typical reaction. Though most people viewed Madame Jenkins as an amusing
oddity, their mirth was very often mingled with respect. For there was a quaint
nobility about this woman that quelled derision and softened ridicule. She was
tireless. She was genuine. And she was indomitable. Neither she nor the vision
to which she clung could be squelched. More than anything else, it was this that
moved the sympathy and stirred the understanding of her listeners. She became
the comic symbol of the longing for grace and beauty that is in some way shared
by everyone who is clumsy and shy and ill-favored. In the end, after all the laughter,
Madame Jenkins was more than a joke. She was also an eloquent lesson in fidelity
and courage. That concert was her last public appearance. The effort
and excitement was too much and she fell ill. But she was content. Her mission
was fulfilled. On November 26th, just one month after her final triumph at Carnegie
Hall, the voice of Florence Foster Jenkins was stilled forever. Thanks
to John E. Smith for generously providing a copy of this article, which originally
appeared in the December 1957 issue of Coronet. More?You want more??? Of course you want more!!!!
 Theatrical
works inspired by, or based on Florence Foster Jenkins
Stage
production presented in the UK, A Comedy Drama with Arias.... |

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