Margarete Klose


Margarete Klose,, was a German operatic mezzo-soprano. Her "official" year of birth was 1902.

Life

Klose was born and died in Berlin. She lost her father early in life and had to earn her living as a secretary, until a colleague recommended her to the Klindworth-Scharwenka conservatory, where she got a thorough musical education.
Klose made her début in 1926 at Ulm theatre in a supporting role of Emmerich Kálmán's operetta Countess Maritza. Her next role was Azucena in Giuseppe Verdi's Il trovatore. For the next three years Klose sang in Ulm and Kassel, before joining the Nationaltheater Mannheim in 1929.
In 1932, Klose went back to Berlin where she was engaged alternately at Berlin State Opera and Deutsche Oper Berlin.
In addition she was a celebrated guest e.g. at Vienna State Opera, the Royal Opera House Covent Garden, La Scala in Milan, Sächsische Staatsoper Dresden, Nationaltheater München, Hamburgische Staatsoper, Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, La Monnaie in Brussels, in San Francisco, and Los Angeles.
From 1936 to 1942, Klose regularly sang at the Bayreuth Festival every summer, where she became popular especially in the role of Brangäne in Tristan und Isolde. She also sang at the Richard Wagner-Festival in Sopot and the Salzburg Festival.
When the great Wagner soprano Frida Leider gave her farewell concert in Berlin in 1946, Klose was her partner on stage.
In 1961, Margarete Klose retired from the stage and concentrated fully on her teaching activities. In the summer she regularly gave master classes at the Salzburg Mozarteum.
In 1968, she died suddenly at the age of 69.

Significance

During the 1930s and 1940s, Klose was considered the leading German mezzo, internationally sought after, especially as a Wagner singer. In addition, she sang a lot of Verdi and Richard Strauss and was famous as a Bach and Lieder singer.
Klose worked with all the great singers and conductors of her time and was a favorite of Wilhelm Furtwängler, who engaged her for his famous last recording, Wagner's Die Walküre in 1954.