Maria Müller


Maria Müller was a Czech-Austrian operatic soprano.

Life and career

Müller was born in Terezín, Bohemia ion 29 January 1898. She studied in Vienna with Erik Schmedes, and debuted in Linz in 1919 as Elsa in Lohengrin. She also sang at the Deutsches Theater in Prague in 1921-1923 and at the Staatsoper, Munich in 1923-1924.
On 21 January 1925, she made her debut at the Metropolitan Opera as Sieglinde in
Die Walküre. The next day, Olin Downes wrote in The New York Times: “young Czech soprano...was warmly welcomed. She has a fresh and youthful voice, a little small for the demands of her role, much grace and sincerity as an actress. Not often is the figure of Sieglinde so human, so tender and so appealing to the beholder." The same year she sang Donna Elvira in Don Giovanni. She sang a total of 196 performances at the Metropolitan Opera between 1925 and 1935. She sang there in a number of American premieres including Franco Alfano's Madonna Imperia, Pizzetti's Fra Gherardo, also in the opera Švanda the Bagpiper by the Czech-American composer Jaromír Weinberger, and Simon Boccanegra. Concerning Met opening nights, in 1930 she sang the lead in "Aida" and in 1932 she sang Amelia in "Simon Boccanegra".
In 1930-1939, she was a regular Wagnerian singer in Bayreuth. Some of her major roles were Eva in
Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg in 1933, plus Sieglinde and Elsa in 1936. The New York Herald Tribune wrote in 1936 from Bayreuth: "Müller's voice is fresher and more beautiful than when she was at the Metropolitan".
At Salzburg, she appeared as Eurydice, Reiza and Donna Elvira. She made her Covent Garden debut as Eva in 1934, and sang Sieglinde in the 1937 Ring Cycles. Her large repertory included the title roles in
Die agyptische Helena, Jenůfa and Gluck’s Iphigénie en Tauride, Djula in Gotovac's Ero the Joker, Pamina, Tosca and Marguerite''. Müller possessed a warm, vibrant voice and sang with a rare purity of tone.
After World War II she retired to live at Bayreuth, where she died on 15 March 1958.

Recordings