Florence Macbeth’s Soprano Voice Carried Her from Mankato to the World
Florence Macbeth: 1889-1966 (Maternal Second Cousin 2x Removed)
Florence
Macbeth’s lovely soprano voice led her from rural Mankato, Minnesota to opera
houses around the world. Her musical creativity won her admiration from varied
critics and audiences.
Florence
was born January 12, 1889 in Mankato, Minnesota to parents Charles James
Macbeth and Alice Amanda Monfare Macbeth. Charles Macbeth owned a meat-packing
company and traded in livestock, and it appears the family was reasonably
well-off. She was their only child.
Her
parents noted Flossie’s (Florence’s nickname) exceptional singing voice and
hired a local voice instructor named Nettie Snyder when Florence was eleven. In
an interview years later, Snyder recalled, “I’ll never forget the first time I
saw Flossie. Her father came to me, leading a little girl, and said, ‘Mrs.
Snyder, here’s a little girl we think can sing. Won’t you listen to her?’ She
had on a little plaid kilted skirt that came to her knees, for she was only 11
years old then. She sang, and she sang high F, I might add, as perfectly then
as she sings it now.” (From MankatoLife article cited below).
In 1902, the
Macbeths enrolled Florence in a rather exclusive girls’ boarding school in
Faribault, Minnesota. St. Mary’s Hall offered a curriculum that qualified
graduates for admission into elite colleges such as Wellesley and University of
Chicago, and promised “superior advantages in Music and Art,” which must have pleased
the Macbeths and twelve-year-old Flossie.
Florence
graduated from St. Mary’s Hall in 1907. She was accepted at Wellesley College
in Massachusetts, and in 1909 her parents drove east to drop her off for her
freshman year. En route, the family stopped at a friend’s home for dinner.
Florence was asked to perform for the dinner guests, one of whom was a
professional voice teacher, Yeatman Griffith. He was impressed with Florence’s
voice, and persuaded her parents to defer college and have Florence train with
him instead.
The gamble
paid off. As Mnopedia reported, Florence “made her concert debut in July 1912
in Scheveningen, the Netherlands, and her European operatic debut in 1913 in
Darmstadt, Germany.” Her proud parents were there to see her debut. She sang in
several countries, including a performance with the London Symphony at Queen’s
Hall.
Florence returned
to the United States and was signed by the Chicago Grand Opera Company. She made
her American debut singing the part of Rosina in Rossini’s “The Barber of
Seville”. She performed with the Chicago Grand Opera for fourteen years while
also traveling for additional engagements across the United States and Canada.
Her fame as a coloratura soprano spread, and she became known as the Minnesota
Nightingale. She made several recordings with the Columbia Grafonola Company in
1916—a precursor to the Columbia Record Company. Recordings of some of her performances
can be found on YouTube today. I have cited two such recordings below.
World War
I impacted Florence’s life in a unique way: she met her first husband during
the war. Years later in an interview with the British press, Florence recalled
learning that a British officer, Captain Edward Whitwell, part of the British
War Mission, was looking for a lady to sing at a recruiting event in New Jersey
in 1918.
“’There’s
only one I can recommend,’ said Mr. David Bispham, of Covent Garden Opera, who
was assisting him, ‘and that is Miss Macbeth. I think she would be very pleased
to do it.’”
Florence
agreed to sing, and she hit it off with the former RAF pilot. She married
Edward Whitwell in La Porte, Indiana on December 8, 1922. The couple never had
children, and Florence continued to travel and perform while Edward built a
career as a boxing promoter in New York City. Sadly, he had a stroke in the
late 1930s, causing them to move to Los Angeles for Edward’s health. Following
another stroke, Edward died on April 12, 1942.
Florence
had retired from performing by the late 1930s. She continued to live in Los
Angeles following her husband’s death, working as a singing teacher. According
to the Schrader article cited below, Florence met a rather famous fan of hers
at an L.A. tea party: novelist James M. Cain. Cain was the author of renowned
novels including Double Indemnity, The Postman Always Rings Twice,
and Mildred Pierce, all of which were made into very successful movies.
Cain married Florence September 22, 1947.
The couple
moved to University Park, Maryland. Florence’s health began to suffer, and for
over a decade she rarely left home. She died on May 5, 1966 at the age of seventy-seven.
While
Florence Macbeth’s talent and creativity took her around the world and while
she socialized with the wealthy and famous, she continued to love her hometown
of Mankato, Minnesota. She asked
that her body be returned there, and she was buried next to her first husband
in Mankato’s Glenwood Cemetery. An article quoted Florence as writing in 1952, “It
is all home, the place where I was born, where I dreamed dreams that came true,
and where, when my time comes to pass, I shall come to sleep near dear ones and
dear friends, and that is a serene comfort.”
Photo by Alan Brownsten on Findagrave
Sources:
Gardner,
Leroy. "Macbeth, Florence Mary (1889–1966)." MNopedia, Minnesota
Historical Society.
http://www.mnopedia.org/person/macbeth-florence-mary-1889-1966 (accessed June
10, 2024).
Photo
of Florence Macbeth at piano, taken c.
1915-1920. Library of Congress. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/ggb2006006178/
Publicity
photograph of Florence Macbeth taken on June 24, 1913. Library of Congress. https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2014693507/
Publicity
photograph of Florence Macbeth taken on June 24, 1913.Library of Congress. http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/ggb2005013535/
78 rpm
recording of Florence Macbeth singing When I Was Seventeen. Columbia Exclusive
Artist. Aug 1922.(Accessed June 10, 2024.
https://archive.org/details/78_when-i-was-seventeen_florence-macbeth_gbia0413959a
78 rpm
recording of Tarantella Napoletana (Rossini) by Florence Macbeth. Columbia.
1923. (accessed June 10, 2024). https://archive.org/details/78_tarantella-napoletana_florence-macbeth-rossini_gbia0210416b
“Florence
Macbeth, the Minnesota Nightingale” by Julie Schrader. Mankato LIFE. Feb. 11,
2019. https://www.mankatolife.com/february8-schrader/
https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7767629/florence-mary-macbeth?
No comments:
Post a Comment