Years ago, I found an old copy of Emily Soldene's biography, and spent the next 20 years writing a vast work on that fascinating woman. A couple of weeks ago, I happened on the 1811 playbill, pictured below ... and found another fascinating English singer whose exploits and triumphs have been washed away by the buzzword 'names' of early 19th century opera ... so, here I went again ...
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FERON, Elizabeth (b London July ?1797; d Pelham Crescent, Brompton 9
May 1853)
Elizabeth Feron
was one of the most successful British sopranos to perform in Europe in the early
part of the nineteenth century, creating leading roles in new operas from the pens
of Rossini, Donizetti, Mercadante, Carafa and other maestri of the period,
before ultimately ending her career back in Britain in ‘old woman’ roles.
I cannot, alas, be
precise about her family details. Her parents were reported to be French
royalist-sympathisers who took refuge in Britain before/during/after the
Revolution. Of her mother, I know nothing, but father is much more transparent.
His name was Jean (later John) Féron (later Feron). So Elizabeth’s name was not
Fearon or Ferron or Ferrone, as various journalists would later write, it was
plain Feron.
John (b France; d
Hercules Buildings 6 February 1824) was a horse doctor, otherwise a ‘veterinary
surgeon’ and, after a variegated early career, he was to become an officer in
the military (12th and 13th regiments of light dragoons), employed to take care
of the cavalry’s mounts. His early biography is outlined, seemingly accurately,
in the preface to an address on Veterinary science, which he gave in Edinburgh
in 1796 (https://www.era.lib.ed.ac.uk/handle/1842/5264). In 1803, he published a book about
Farriery and related topics.
He moved around a bit, and I spot him at various times in London, Edinburgh, London and Coventry. It is said to have been in London (rather than Dublin or Edinburgh) that Elizabeth was born, sometime between 1792 and 1797, and her mother seemingly died soon after, for John remarried, in 1800 (29 May, Coventry), Miss Letitia Hoggins of that place. They were to have three children. Ill-fated, all three.
At some young
stage, Elizabeth evinced a talent for singing and was taken on as a juvenile
member of the company at Drury Lane. It was, if we believe her ‘accepted’
birthdate of 1797, a very young stage, for I spot her at a Benefit concert at
the Haymarket Theatre (21 October 1805) singing the bravura ‘The Soldier Tir’d’
at just eight years (as we suppose) of age.
Either before this (or, just maybe, after), John Feron put his daughter into the hands and, I suspect, the home, of Charles Cobham and his wife Amelia (née Stedman). Charles Cobham was a violinist, and also a composer. I think at this stage he was attached to the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane for, in 1804, his ballad ‘The Violet Girl’ was being sung there by Miss Tyrer. He was, anyway, a respected member of the musical fraternity. And he and his wife took over the musical (and, seemingly, the entire) education of little Elizabeth Feron.
Either before this (or, just maybe, after), John Feron put his daughter into the hands and, I suspect, the home, of Charles Cobham and his wife Amelia (née Stedman). Charles Cobham was a violinist, and also a composer. I think at this stage he was attached to the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane for, in 1804, his ballad ‘The Violet Girl’ was being sung there by Miss Tyrer. He was, anyway, a respected member of the musical fraternity. And he and his wife took over the musical (and, seemingly, the entire) education of little Elizabeth Feron.
Later, some niffy
critics would complain that Cobham had taught her to sing like a violin, all
execution and nothing else. But he certainly gave her a huge technical basis,
and if you didn’t care for the Catalani-style of impeccable vocal gymnastics,
chromatic runs, trills and Fs and Gs in alt which were her artillery, and which
were in their time ‘le dernier cri’, to many – including the composers who
wrote such music -- they were the acme of vocalisation. And nobody did them
better than Elizabeth Feron.
My next sighting
of the young Elizabeth, under the aegis of Cobham, is at York (15, 23, 25 July
1806). The local papers assured its readers that ‘Miss Feron’s abilities on the
piano-forte and as a singer in Mrs Billington’s manner are well-known in the
musical world in London and in other parts of the kingdom’, so it seems I’ve
missed something somewhere. After the event, the press agreed ‘she gave
universal satisfaction in her songs, especially ‘The Thorn’ and in a bravura
song. Her style is not inferior to Mrs Billington…’.
Back in London, I
see her in 1807 ‘in charming voice’ at Weippert’s concert at the Freemasons’
Hall, as ‘the infant Catalani’ singing and playing at the Earl of Morton’s
party, at the Crown Inn, Portsmouth and Newport, Isle of Wight (Braham’s ‘Said
a Smile to a Tear’ Handel), in concert with Cobham and at Drury Lane in The Wood Demon (‘A Miss Feron was
introduced to sing a song. She surprized us by her execution, but did some
violence to our ears’), in 1808 singing C H Florio’s duet ‘Se mi credi amato
bene’ (written for Madame Mara) with a Mr Gray at Weippert’s annual, and
Catalani’s ‘Frenar vorrei le lagrime’ from Portogallo’s La Morte di Semiramide at the London Tavern, on a programme with
none other than Mrs Billington.
At this stage,
three years into her professional career, she was engaged for the Vauxhall
Gardens. I emphasise the point, because many commentators, perhaps from a
misreading of the memoirs of the Vauxhall oboeist and accompanist W T Parke,
speak of this as some kind of debut. It was only a ‘debut’ at Vauxhall, and in
his songs. I spot her there in July 1808, singing Parke’s ‘The Canary Bird’ and
‘some beautiful airs in a very sweet and finished style’. At the end of the
Vauxhall season she went down to Margate, where she delivered her Portogallo
bravura and then back to Drury Lane where she was part of the music (with
Braham) in a piece called The Siege of
Saint Quintin, singing Hook’s ‘Downy cheek so soft, so fair’.
We are told,
somewhere that her stage debut (childish appearances not counting) was in Love in a Village at Covent Garden ‘aged
14’. Well, unless the birthdate, which all (notably Oxberry) agree upon, is
wrong she didn’t, she didn’t and she wasn’t.
My first sighting of Elizabeth on the stage, in an adult role, is in
January 1809 aged, seemingly, eleven. The venues are Deal and Dover, where she
starred in some of the usual run of English soprano star-vehicles: Rosina in The Barber of Seville, Margaretta in No Song, No Supper, Adela in The Haunted Tower and, yes, Rosetta in Love in a Village. ‘Astonishing success
… In her bravura songs, her compass of voice electrified the audience. She
produced greater houses than the Young Roscius..’. The traditional English
pieces, of course, allowed for the interpolation of any amount of extra
material, so it is no surprise to see Miss Feron, at Lancaster, interpolating
her Portogallo, Braham’s ‘Said a smile to a tear’, ‘The Bird in yonder Cage
Confined’ (The Cabinet) and Corri’s
‘Deep in my breast’ (The Travellers)
into The Haunted Tower and Artaxerxes’ ‘Hope told a Flatt’ring
Tale’ into No Song, No Supper.
Back in town, with
June, the new Vauxhall season began, and Parke was ready with another ornithological
song ‘The Nightingale’. Then, a few weeks into the seaso, he came up with a hit.
‘The Romp’ was made to measure: a song sung by a schoolgirl who in a shower of
Italian, imitates ‘the Great Catalani’. Elizabeth’s cheeky ‘miniature Catalani’
went down a storm and ‘The Romp’ was called for when she went to the country.
Her old favourites still formed the basis of her repertoire, with the frilly
Mozart arrangement ‘O dolce concento’ (on Monastatos’s air from Die Zauberflöte) and Meyer’s ‘Quanta
l’anima’ – both Catalani regulars – joining them, along with John Davy and Monk
Lewis’s ‘Crazy Jane’, popularised by Mrs Mountain, Hodson’s ‘Sing on, thou Warbling
Bird’and ‘Nanny, will ye gang wi’ me’, as she travelled from Manchester to York to
Leeds and back to Manchester to play The
Cabinet, The Foundling of the Forest, Rosina, The Prize et al, around her
vocalising.
In the first half
of 1810, she was down in Canterbury, Salisbury, Plymouth and Northampton
guesting in Love in a Village, The
Mountaineers, The Haunted Tower, Rosina, The Young Hussar, The Prize et al.
‘She has not yet reached her 17th year’ gasped the local press. If ‘the’
birthdate is right, she had not yet reached her 14th. It does make you wonder.
At some stage she visited Leeds: ‘a young lady of risising musical celebrity’.
Back at Vauxhall
for a third season, she got a new Parke ‘cantata’, ‘The triple courtship’, and
another Parke piece, ‘The Little Muleteer’, including a fandango and castanets,
‘Cupid’s Row-de-dow’, ‘Hilly Ho!’, and it was then that she made her first appearance on the
stage of the King’s Theatre, London’s Italian opera. The occasions were a
couple of Benefits in which Cobham and Parke were involved and Elizabeth gave
her Mozart and Paer’s ‘Su Griselda corragio’ (Griselda).
After the season,
she ventured again to the country with the usual repertoire of country musicals
(The English Fleet, The Prize, Love in a
Village, The Cabinet, The Haunted
Tower, No Song, No Supper), ‘warbled
delightfully’ for a few nights at Manchester’s Theatre Royal, sang at the Bath
concerts, and joined the company at the Surrey Theatre, for her first regular
London theatre engagement. She appeared as Miss Rumpley in a made-to-measure
piece called The Mad Cap, in which she
introduced a good handful of her ‘pops’, as Little Pickle in a 1799 sequel to the
famous The Spoil’d Child, entitled Tag in Tribulation, as Ellen in a Lady of the Lake, Emily in Industry and Idleness, Polly in The Beggar’s Opera, et al and in a
version of Artaxerxes which seems to
have been ‘based on’ rather than the whole thing, but which allowed her to sing
both ‘In infancy’ and ‘The soldier tir’d’. On September 30 she opened a round
of her regulars at the Bristol Theatre Royal, and a few days after closing she
arrived at Covent Garden.
Her Covent Garden
‘debut’ was made on 24 October 1812, and it was not in Love in a Village, but in The
Cabinet, alongside Sinclair and Fawcett. It provoked a mixed reaction. One
paper found her short in stature, loud in voice, and over-confident in manner.
Another saw the same as ‘petite, pretty and unembarrassed’. But she was
‘rapturously applauded’, as she went on to appear in The English Fleet with Sinclair, Emery and Miss Bolton, as Eliza in
the 3 performances of the comic opera Up
to Town, in the inevitable Love in a
Village, as Alice in The Knight of
Snowdon, Amazili in The Virgin of the
Sun (‘Maid of the Mountain’), Zobeide in Fawcett and Dibdin’s spectacle, The Secret Mine, Sophia in the 3-performance
musical (music: Tom Cooke) farce Frost
and Thaw, Norah in The Poor Soldier et
al during the season.
The season over, she again took to the country but, more importantly, she got married (13 October 1812). Her husband was Joseph
Glossop ‘sometime manager of the Coburg Theatre and the son of Mr [Francis] Glossop
[of 51 Old Compton Street] who, previous to the introduction of gas, was wax
chandler to the Theatres and the Opera House’. Joseph had apparently succeeded
the previous year to his father’s business. Anyhow, Mr Joseph Glossop is
another, long story, which I shall not go into at any length except insofar as
he impinges on his wife’s career. He impinged, notably, in 1813 (9 September)
and in 1815 (29 April) when his daughters, Frances Ann and Mary Ann[e] were
born at Old Compton Street.
For something over three years, Elizabeth seems to
have remained absent from the stage, but she returned 11 September 1816, at
Drury Lane, cast as Clara in The Duenna. ‘…
her voice is very powerful and her execution scientific: her reception was the
most flattering’, reported the press. But she did not follow up: instead she
gave birth to a third daughter, Louisa (27 May 1817) who died aged 6 months.
And then somebody took a decisive step, which took
young Mrs Glossop out of the rut of endless performances of Love in a Village and The
Duenna, which were the lot of an English prima donna. I’m not quite sure
who was the actual moving spirit in her departure from England, but there were
two people (apart from the financially shaky Mr Glossop) who seem to have been
involved. One was Madame Angelica Catalani, ‘the great Catalani’, whom the
childish Elizabeth had been the baby image of. The other was a musician and
composer by the name of Vincenzo Pucitta who, the seven-year association with
the good Cobhams finished, seems to have taken on, at some stage, the role of
her teacher.
Quite when Pucitta first came to England, I am not
sure, but he and his wife were at the King’s Theatre in 1809 ('at the harpsichord and conductor of the music'), where his (fifteenth
or so) opera I Villegiatore Bizzarri was
produced 31 January, and his La Caccia di
Enrico IV on 14 March, then Le Quattro
Nazione and Pirro in June. He
also became purveyor of showy scenas to Madame Catalani, who created the title
role in his La Vestale, in Les Trois Sultanes the following year, and of Ginevra di Scozia in 1812.
In 1816, Catalani took on the management of the Paris
Italian opera, and Pucitta went too (‘Madame Catalani, as usual, prefers the
music of Pucitta to that of Mozart’). Amongst the singers whom Catalani hired
were the English Mrs Dickons (formerly Miss Poole), and then, at the dawn of
1818, ‘Madame Feron’.
An aside here. The press, on both sides of the Manche,
took the most peculiar umbrage at Elizabeth’s decision to continue to use her
maiden name for her professional career. Given the number of singers working
under noms de théâtre, I cannot understand why ‘Mistress Glossop’ should have
been expected to call herself thuswise. And this raised its head for years,
even when the Glossops had split. Very odd. Anyway, she took no notice, and her
only concession to the scribblers was to become ‘Madame’ instead of ‘Miss’
Feron.
There was a certain amount of gossip in Parisian
circles about the new singer ‘engaged as prima donna for opéra comique’ (‘an
Englishwoman married to a Frenchman’, ‘une jeune cantatrice anglaise, élève de
M Pucitta’), but I can’t find much in the way of reports of her ‘debut’. Just that it was in
the role of Marietta in Pucitta’s La Caccia
d’Enrico Quarto on 20 January (while Catalani was off concertising at Lyon)
with a second performance on 12 February.
But, anyhow, she didn’t let her reputation down. A French review said
‘[elle] a obtenu beaucoup de succès. Il y a du bien at du mal a en dire. C’est
une assez jeune femme, beaucoup trop petite pour la scène’ going on to say that
she pronouced Italian as it it were German but ‘on ne peut que donner des
eloges a son talent comme cantatrice et même comme actrice. Sa voix monte très
haut et conserve beaucoup de doucerut et de la pureté gans les cordes les plaus
élevées, sa méthode est bonne, elle chante juste …’ (Journal
de Paris).
The German press reported ‘eine kleine, allerliebste
Engländerin mit einer wahren Nachtigallenstimme, als Schauspielerin ‘unschuldig
and nichts weiter’, aber als Sängerin zon ziemlicher Ausbildung besitzt dabey
eine Höhe der Stimme die mit ihren kleinen Gestalt in umgekehrten Verhältnisse
steht … Die liebe Weibchen singt g gerade mit eben so viel Leichtigkeit als sie
braucht um sich das Schürzchen von die Augen zu halten, wenn sie verschämt
aussehen will, ein Gestus, der ihr unter allem geläustigen ist …’
‘Mad Feron fährt fort, das Publicum dieses Theaters
durch ihre Quinkeliermethode in Entzücken zu versetzen. Diese Methode hat noch
das Eigene, dass es dabey recht; hoch in die höhe und dann wieder recht tief in
die Tiefe geht. Je weiter aus einander, desto besser! Daher mag es auch wol
kommen, das dieser Frau diejeniger Singfigur, deren Natur in fortwährender
Beruhung zweyer neben einander…’
At Barilli’s Benefit, and several other performances,
she appeared as Faustina in Cimarosa’s I
nemici generosi, at the Concerts Spirituels she and Catalani sang a Pucitta
duet.
But in spite of her G in alt, in spite of the
appreciation of the German press, and apparently the French, as well, the
public stayed away on Feron nights: instead of the 4000 francs per evening box
office for Catalani’s performances, in Pucitta’s latest, La Principessa in Campagna (into which she interpolated a Pucitta
version of her famous Rode’s air and variations), Elizabeth drew only 400. But
it wasn’t for long. The eccentric and ego-centric management of Catalani, who
had surrounded herself, as usual, with mostly second rate performers, was
plunging to its end and, come the end of April 1818, the theatre closed its
doors.
Elizabeth headed for the French provinces –
Marseilles, Lyon, Bordeaux. I imagine Pucitta went too, but again the French
press is uninformative. But in 1819 she crossed the border and, immediately,
becomes more visible to me, a couple of centuries down the line. 7 April she
(and he) was at Strasbourg, 14 April at Frankfurt, later at the Hôtel de
Pologne, Dresden, 3 May at the Leipzig Gewandhaus where the advertisements read
‘Alle Gesangstücke sind von der Composition des Herrn Pucitta, und werden von
Mad Feron vorgetragen’. The programme confirmed: Cavatine aus der Oper Enrico IV; Arie aus der Oper La principessa in campagna; Scene und
Arie aus der Oper La Vestale; Arie
mit Variationen. Cavatina ‘Deh calma l’affano’ aus der Oper I1 medico per forza; Arie ‘Come quest
anima’; Variationen über das Thema ‘Nel cor piu non mi sento’; Grosse Scene und
Arie aus der Oper La principessa in
campagna; La Tyrolienne mit Variationen. A whole evening –two actually -- of
Pucitta!
On 28 May she appeared at the Berlin Saal des Hofjägers
where she added some non-Pucitta pieces to her programmes – Portogallo’s
‘Frenar vorrei le lagrime’ (La morte di
Semiramide), Mozart’s ‘Dolce concento’ – through a series of performances, and
in September she spent the whole month in Vienna in concerts at the Redoutensaal
and the Theater an der Wien.
And then she crossed another border. This time into
Italy. As prima donna for the season at the Scala of Milan. The season began
with La Principessa in Campagna (3
April), with Elizabeth in the Catalani role of the said Princess alongside
Gaetano Crivelli and Nicola de Grecis. The Italians marvelled at her facility
of execution – notably in the chromatic scales into the alt register, in which
they declared she outshone Mrs Billington and Catalani herself. Not everyone,
however, was so impressed. The lofty Henri Beyle (ka Stendahl) sniffed: ‘Madame Féron
réussit ici auprès de la canaille de la musique par des gammes ascendantes et
descendantes et chromatiques’. He was sufficiently ‘canaille’ to sniff just as
loudly at Rossini and La gazza ladra.
Elizabeth followed up in the selfsame Gazza Ladra (22 April), and then created her first Italian
opera, singing the role of Inès in Carafa’s I
due Figaro (6 June 1820). She also appeared in Generali’s 1-act farsa Adelina (17 June).
From Milan, Elizabeth moved on for the
Fiera season to Brescia, again with Crivelli and a rising bass by the name of
Giovanni de Begnis (not the famed Giuseppe). The three appeared in Pucitta’s Aristodemo, and in Orlandi’s Rodrigo
di Valenza into which a new showpiece cavatina (probably by Pucitta) was
introduced for her benefit. The press announced that she had signed with
Pucitta for four years, but the truth was that her Pucitta era was coming to an
end.
For Carnevale 1820-1, she was engaged as
prima donna at the Fenice, Venice, again with Crivelli and with a certain G
Pasta as second prima donna. They opened with Giuseppe Nicolini’s La Conquista di Granada in which Elizabeth
played Zulema opposite Pasta in pants, and equipped with ‘schlüssvariationen by Pucitta’. The piece
was not successful, but Madame Feron was and, when they switched to Stefano
Pavesi’s Arminio, things picked up.
During 1821, she played at Bologna in Mercadante’s Maria Stuarda (29 May), a revised Arminio and a Ginevra di
Scozia which seems to have owed its score to Mayr rather than Pucitta, and
at Trieste’s Teatro Nuovo in another Nicolini piece Annibale in Bitinia with Crivelli and Benedetta Rosmunda Pisaroni. At Carnevale
1821-2, I pick her up at Turin’s Teatro Regio in a tacked-together piece called
Eduardo e Cristina in which she sang
an aria by Carafa, a Venetian cavatina, a duet from Mayr’s Zoraide with tenor Nicola Tacchinardi, another with Pasta and, to
top it all, a bravura by Pucitta with variations by Mercadante. She and Pasta
followed up it with an I Riti d’Efeso
credited to Farinelli.
The next stop was the Teatro San Carlo in Naples.
Elizabeth shared the post of prima donna with the important but struggling Joséphine
Fodor, alongside Andrea Nozzari, Giovanni David, G-B Rubini and Luigi Lablache.
She seems to have appeared in Mercadante’s Scicipione
in Carthagine and yet another rewrite of Arminio (16 February 1823), and featured opposite Nozzari in three
new operas – as Obeide in Mercadante’s Gli
Sciti (18 March), Amalie in Donizetti’s Alfredo
il grande (2 July) and Cimene in Sapienza’s Rodrigo – and several old ones – Julia in Spontini’s La Vestale, Medea in Mayr’s Medea. She sang the title-role in the
premiere of Donizetti’s cantata Aristea, and
when the pasticcio 1-acter La Fondazione
di Partenope was produced (12 January 1824) with Lablache and Fodor in the
lead roles, Elizabeth sang the supporting role of Igea.
It was reported that she was to go, with Fodor, to
Vienna, for impresario Barbaja, but I spot her next again in Naples, singing at
the Teatro Fondo, before, at the end of the year, returning to Milan and to La
Scala where Mr Glossop had taken over the franchise. I see her in La Vestale, as Donna Aristea in the
‘farsa giocosa’ Il Trionfo della Musica (6
January 1825), in the newly-celebrated Semiramide,
seemingly in Generali’s I Bacchanali di
Roma and Rossini’s Moïse, as well
as taking the role of Zerlina in some performances of Don Giovanni alongside a bass named Guglielmo Guglielmi, otherwise
William Williams of England.
And. In Naples, 12 June 1825, she gave birth to a son,
Augustus Glossop.
Later in 1825, she joined the company at the Teatro Carolino,
Palermo, under the direction of Donizetti. Apparently, expressly to create his
new opera, Alahor in Granata. She
played in Aureliano in Palmira, L’Inganno
felice, Il Trionfo della musica before the production of Donizetti’s work
on 7 January 1826, with Berardo Winter and Antonio and Marietta Tamburini. But
soon after Elizabeth found that the Sicilian climate ‘did not agree with her’
and departed for the mainland.
During 1826, I see her playing Palmide in Il Crociato in Egitto at Reggio Emilia (also I Convenienze Teatrali),
at Lugo, Sinagaglia and at Modena (‘cantante di grande bravura fornita di voce sonora ed estesa ottenne un successo
d' entusiasmo’) where she also took part, during the autumn, in the premiere of
Antonio Gandini’s Il Disertore.
Her marriage, in the meanwhile, had come unstuck.
Dudley Cheke, in his excellent book on the Deméric family (Joséphine and Emilie), suggests that Augustus may not have been
Glossop’s child and that the erring may have been on Elizabeth’s side, but the
more likely answer is that Glossop just walked out and ‘wed’ (the probably
pregnant) Joséphine Deméric, amid a festival of lies, without bothering to
divorce Elizabeth. She would remain Mrs Glossop to the end of her life. Anyway,
exit Mr Glossop from this story into that, equally musical, of the Deméric family.
In 1827, Elizabeth returned to La Scala where she played
L’inganno felice, Il Trionfo della Musica,
and created the role of Elisa in an unfortunate Felice Frasi piece La Selva di Hermanstadt (2 June), then
to Verona where she played in Otello
with Gentili and Ferdinando Lauretti, and to the Teatro della Concordia in
Cremona for Mose in Egitto. She was
signed to return to Venice for more Il
Crociato, but she did not go. She quit Europe, and returned to Britain,
where, in December, she reappeared at Drury Lane – at the enormous fee of 40
pounds a night -- in the role of Florimanti in Isidore de Merida, a semi-pasticcio rehash of Storace’s old The Pirates, with Braham as her leading
man.
She
scored a decided hit with her old Neapolitan air with variations, and she and
Braham triumphed in a duet ‘Hunter, let thy bugle blow’, penned by the tenor,
and the musical mish-mash turned out far more successfully than it might have.
Through the season, she appeared as Floretta in The Cabinet (‘fully
sustained her high reputation’ ‘her abilities as an actress are quite
unrivalled amongst the singers of the present day’) and Florella in the Rossini pasticcio, The Turkish Lovers,
visited Brighton (‘impossible
to imagine anything more enchanting’), sang in Bishop’s Concerts of Ancient
Music, in the Oratorios (‘Sull aria’ with Pasta, ‘Porgi la destra amata’,
‘Blest Hope’, ‘Hunter let thy bugle blow’, ‘Confusa e l’alma mia’ (Alahor), etc) and at the Guildhall in Moses.
Elizabeth returned
to the stage for more Drury Lane concerts (‘O ciel quai fieri palpiti’ by
Pacini, duo ‘Se tu m’ami’ Rossini with Pasta, variations on Mercadante’s ‘Sento
brillarmi in seno’ ‘Should he Upbraid’, ‘Sweet bird’, ‘Ah qual colpo’, ‘Sing ye
to the Lord’) and for a production of Artaxerxes
in which she played Mandane alongside Braham. She appeared at Bath, for the
New Musical Fund (‘bravura is her forte’) the Melodists, in concert for Mr
Nicholson and for Bochsa, in a brace of Benefits …
She moved to the
English Opera House for the off-season, and there a section of the press
decided to have a go at her, railing at her trademark variations and semi-tone
runs as ‘detestable barbarisms’ and bringing out the old sneers at her name.
When she took the part of Despina in the English Cosi fan tutte (Tit for Tat)
with Abby Betts, Harriet Cawse, Joseph Wood, Thorne and Henry Phillips, the
same critic loaded all his remarks about the singers, and having admitted ‘Madame Feron
gave some respectability to the Soubrette’, went on to pick: ‘But we wish she
would have mercy on our ears in a small house, and not strain her voice,
naturally of a very piercing quality, till it becomes thoroughly unmusical. Her
shakes, too, may be economised with a great saving of labour to herself…’
The
next production, The Pirate of Genoa,
was a failure, and her final contribution was a piece called The Quartette or Interrupted Harmony, in
which she played with Tom Wrench and Miss Goward and sang ‘Sento brillarmi’ for
good measure.
Then
tragedy struck again. Letitia Feron was travelling on the outside of a coach
with her 19-year-old married daughter, Letitia Connolly. When she turned to
speak to the young woman, she was gone. She was lying dead on the road.
It
was time to move on again. This time, it was to be America. Stepmother,
Elizabeth and baby Augustus sailed for New York, and, there, Elizabeth made her
debut at the Park Theatre, on 27 November, as Floretta in The Cabinet. She remained in America until April 1833, playing
largely the old English repertoire – Rosina in The Barber of Seville, Susanna in The Marriage of Figaro, Mrs Ford in The Merry Wives of Windsor, Mandane in Artaxerxes, Elvira in Masaniello,
Cinderella, Jean de Paris, Amenaide
in Tancredi, Der Freischütz – around
the country: a far cry from the
creative years she had spent in Italy. But she was liked: 'As a singer, Madame Feron is unrivalled in this country. She possesses a soprano voice of great compass and extraordinary brilliancy ... pure Italian school ... she executes the most difficult passages with a rapidity and precision to which we have not heard any other vocalist attain .. the perfection of the art' (The North American Magazine).
She
had been singing for some thirty years, in theatres including those of the main
operatic centres, and including the most famous opera houses of the world. In
1834, she added one more operatic notch to her belt. London’s Italian Opera at
the King’s Theatre. Returned to England, she appeared in concert and at the
Oratorios (Jephtha’s Vow) before
Laporte opened the Opera (1 March) with a production of La Gazza Ladra. Castelli, Curioni, Giubilei and Josephine Anderson
were cast in this ‘before the stars arrive’ production, with Elizabeth in the
role of Ninetta ‘especially written for her by Rossini’ as the Morning Chronicle quoth mendaciously. It
wasn’t a total success for her. Although her range and agility were intact, the odd critic demurred, she was unable to sustain the notes of her middle register.
So, with suitable acknowledgements to her abilities and achievements, they concurred
that she was (now) not quite up to it in such a vast auditorium. The Times disagreed and found her 'in excellent voice'.
She
continued to Manchester for a scheduled season and sang in Il Barbiere di Siviglia and Semiramide,
but the season was disrupted by the ‘fans’ of a certain Madame Galvani (‘a
thin and feeble mezzo-soprano’) and Elizabeth returned to London, where I see
her last at Curioni’s concert on 7 July.
In
1835, she returned to Italy where she sang at Schio in the role of Norma alongside Genero and Carolina
Vittadini, at Piacenza for Carnevale (Beatrice
di Tenda, Il Barbiere di Siviglia with Rode’s variations), but the Italian
critics more or less agreed with London. When she gave her Norma at Milan’s Teatro Re (24 August 1837), their reviews were a
bit hesitant: ‘La Feron, conosciuta nell’arte, ha degli acuti robustissimi,
canta con espressione, ma la sua voce …’.
It
seemed that the end was nigh. In a way, it was. But Elizabeth Feron had more
than another decade to strut the stage. She was back home by April 1841, for we
can pick her up in the 1841 census at number 12 Price’s Terrace, Southwark,
with Augustus ‘aged 15’, her stepmother, and the family of a cabinet-maker,
seemingly called Isaac Violon. And then, in 1842, she is back on the stage.
No
longer a prima donna, but in the little role of the motherly Teresa to the La Sonnambula of Eugénie Garcia (26
December 1842), as Claudine in La Gazza
Ladra behind Emma Albertazzi, as Martha Clayton in a Little Red Riding Hood, composed by her daughter, Mary Ann[e] a’Beckett
and Madame Dorval in the vaudeville The
Flower of Lucerne at the Princess’s Theatre. The Princess’s Theatre was
under the management of John Medex Maddox, who had accompanied Elizabeth on her
American tour, so the young Augustus was also engaged. The following season she
was Henrietta in I Puritani and ‘from
her musician-like style of performance gave considerable importance to a
trifling part’ and Mathéa, behind Dolores Nau, in The Syren. And she played umpteen more performances as Teresa, a role
she would still be playing at the Princess’s in 1849, alongside Louisa Pyne. In
between, she appeared as the Abbess in Le
Duc d’Olonne, the Marchioness de Birkenfeld to Anna Thillon’s La Vivandière, Dame Kishler in The Blind Sister et al.
In
the 1851 census, Elizabeth can be seen living at 9 Waterloo Road, in the
company of a woman called Charlotte Jagger. Augustus, who had gone bankrupt in
July 1848, is no longer there. Letitia is living down the road at no 21, with
the widow of her son John, who had died at the age of 39 (b London c1801; d
Waterloo Rd November 1840).
‘Mysterious
death in the Waterloo Road’ headlined the press in November 1852. ‘Eccentric’
Charlotte Jagger had been found dead in her rooms, opposite the Royal Oak
Hotel. The coroner decreed that she had voluntarily starved herself to death.
A
few months later, Elizabeth, too, passed on. ‘Widow of the late Joseph Glossop’
said the notices. I wonder how the Deméric family felt about that.
Daughter Mary Anne (b London 29 April 1815; d Kishnaghur, Bengal 11 December 1863) also lived a life around music and the theatre, and composed an amount of ballads and not-very-distinguished theatre music, often in collaboration with her husband, the well-known writer Gilbert Abbott a’Beckett. Agnes Sorel produced at the St James’s Theatre 14 December 1835 and Little Red Riding Hood played at the Surrey (1842) and at the Princess’s were her two principal works. She also supplied three songs for Priscilla Horton and James Hudson in Mark Lemon’s play The Young Pretender (28 November 1846). The press opined you could scarcely tell one from another. Miss Horton also sang her music in a shortlived piece called Mabel’s Curse (27 March 1837) written by another lady, Anna Maria Fielding Hall, at the St James’s.
After
a’Beckett’s death she married George Jones Esq of the Middle Temple, but died
the following year, aged 48.
I had lost Frances, but the biographer of Maddox, Terry Jenkins, hasn't. Frances took up singing too, and can be seen in a number of concerts in the 1830s ('Miss Glossop'). She also produced a daughter, Fanny Gapper Granville. Frances duly turns up in the censi ('Frances Anne Granville') until her death 18 January 1881 at 4 rue de Montenotte, Les Ternes, Paris. Fanny junior ('born St Omer') can be seen in the 1891 census, aged 54, but she died, unmarried, in Paris's Boulevard Pereire 22 January 1898. She left L387 8s 0d to be administered by cousin Albert a'Beckett.
Very interesting article about singer I had never heard of!
ReplyDeleteYou state that manager of Princess Theatre @1842 onwards was Thomas Maddox. Is this a typo? I think he was John Medex Maddox (Maddox being anglicized version of his surname).
You also state that he accompanied Mme Féron to USA - do you have citations/references etc. for this?
Am trying to discover more about Maddox's early life.
Terry Jenkins (ex-opera singer and LOC student)
Well, hello Terry!
ReplyDeleteLong time since YEOMEN. I was just thinking last night, that was in effect and unofficially my first job as a caster!
Oh dear, I am forever mixing up Alberts and Alfreds .. don't say I've got a John Thomas problem!
Write to me at ganzl@xtra.co.nz and we will get this sorted
Cheers, Kurt