324:, who was present, observed, "Madame Sherrington's method was always of the safest; and she has the advantage, not common among artists, of being a clever and sensible woman." "And, save once, when she pulled down the pitch during an unaccompanied chorus, and so made the entry of the organ an appalling catastrophe, there was no falling off to complain of." She received "a hearty spontaneous reception which she acknowledged with all her old grace." The work itself was a complete failure. On 1 November 1894 Lemmens-Sherrington came out of retirement to sing for the last time in public, in
19:
109:
100:, René Poelaert, (1874–1946), stockbroker, director of the Central Mutual Fund and Public Funds, 5, Place de la Liberté, born 16 July 1874 in Brussels and died in Schaerbeek 12 December 1946, son of Constant Poelaert, lawyer at the Court of Appeal of Brussels (1827- 1898) and Ernestine Jacobs (1835–1882).
82:
Madame
Lemmens' voice is pure, brilliant and mellow: its compass exceeds two octaves and a half, with singular facility of vocalisation. With much natural feeling and artistic expression, Madame Lemmens possesses a refined and graceful style, and is altogether one of the most accomplished singers of
288:
and other skilled musicians, whose acute sense caused a phenomenon as yet unexplained—namely, that the musical sounds are reproduced in a higher key, half a tone being the difference. While M. Lemmens and his accomplished wife were singing a duet into the branched mouthpiece something caused them
152:. The duet with Reeves, "When lovers are parted" and Marian's song "True love, true love in my heart" (the theme of which ran through the whole score) were "exquisitely warbled" and received enthusiastic applause. It was so successful that Reeves and Sherrington got a better box office even than
72:. She began her London career on the concert platform, building a reputation as a concert singer in the second half of the 1850s. After successes in the Netherlands and France she sang in London for the first time in 1856, and was invited to return in successive years. In 1859
340:
commented that though the voice was not as rich and powerful as it had been twenty years earlier, "an artist is always an artist, and in everything she sang last night, Madame
Sherrington displayed the skill of an artist by her finished vocalisation."
95:
in 1878. They had two sons, who became engineers, and two daughters. One of them, Maggy
Lemmens born in London on 7 September 1874 and died in Brussels on 29 March 1962, married a nephew of the architect
37:. After engagements in mainland Europe she made her London debut in 1856. Her singing career was mostly in concert, but in the first half of the 1860s she appeared in opera at
630:
344:
Her last years were spent in retirement at 7 Rue
Capouillet, Brussels, where she lived with two sisters. She died there on 9 May 1906, at the age of 71.
625:
297:
At the time of her husband's death, in 1881, Lemmens-Sherrington was appointed professor of singing at the
Brussels Conservatory, and in 1891 at the
33:
prominent from the 1850s to the 1880s. Born in northern
England, she spent much of her childhood and later life in Belgium, where she studied at the
645:
306:
640:
312:
In early 1889, just short of the 33rd anniversary of her first appearance in London, she appeared at the Royal Albert Hall in a performance of
635:
274:. She was also among the first artists to have her singing voice recorded, including a duet with her husband. A description drawn from
136:, the English season to run concurrently with an Italian season on alternate nights. The singers engaged were Lemmens-Sherrington (
64:, England, in 1834. When she was a child her family moved first to the Netherlands and then to Belgium. She studied singing at
284:
on Good Friday 1878, "...both duets and solos were successfully tried by Madame
Lemmens-Sherrington, M. Lemmens, Signor Foli,
44:
After she retired from performing, Lemmens-Sherrington became a teacher, at her old music college in
Brussels, and at the
620:
270:. In the same year Lemmens-Sherrington was one of the original group of musicians to be awarded the Gold Medal of the
302:
49:
571:
69:
251:). After this her career was principally on the concert platform; she frequently sang with Santley, Patey,
223:. For the next two seasons she appeared in the Italian Opera at Covent Garden, appearing as Donna Elvira (
74:
271:
121:
187:
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336:
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88:
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45:
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34:
369:. No. 5752 (EARLY SPORTS ed.). New South Wales, Australia. 21 July 1906. p. 8
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8:
365:
321:
276:
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129:
61:
281:
173:
116:
Lemmens-Sherrington's stage debut was in 1860, in the first production of a new opera,
207:, in the second year of the English production, in the cast with Santley (introducing
212:
38:
266:
In 1871 she and her husband made an extensive tour with the popular French baritone
301:. From that time onwards she frequently resided in England. She also taught at the
241:
197:
In
January to March 1864, at Her Majesty's, Lemmens-Sherrington sang Marguerite in
157:
145:
578:
149:
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360:
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both to laugh, and this incident was faithfully reproduced by the machine"
285:
267:
168:
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108:
260:
256:
137:
575:, Oxford University Press, 1912, online edition retrieved 17 April 2014
235:
65:
211:), Reeves (distinguished in Act 1) and Marchesi (Mephisto). In the
92:
29:(4 October 1834 – 9 May 1906) was an English concert and operatic
30:
148:(Locksley). The orchestra was conducted on English nights by
453:(Belford, Clarke & Co, Chicago & New York 1888), 28.
132:
as the vehicle for an attempt to launch an
English Opera at
259:, at the popular "ballad concerts" under the management of
553:(Constable and Company, London 1937), pp. 90-91, 342-343.
464:
Student and Singer—The Reminiscences of Charles Santley
87:
In 1857 she married the Belgian organist and composer
551:
London Music in 1888-89 as heard by Corno di Bassetto
602:
186:, but the bailiffs moved in, and on transfer to
567:"Lemmens-Sherrington, Madame Helen (1834–1906)"
334:at a concert in Manchester honouring Hallé.
215:at Covent Garden she appeared in Macfarren's
353:
305:, where one of her pupils was the contralto
91:, who founded the School of Church Music at
438:The Life of Sims Reeves, Written by Himself
631:Royal Philharmonic Society Gold Medallists
440:(Simpkin, Marshall, London 1888), 220–228.
412:A Dictionary of Modern Music and Musicians
377:– via National Library of Australia.
518:, Saturday 27 April 1878, page 6, col. 4.
626:19th-century British women opera singers
172:. Immediately after this, with Santley,
107:
17:
646:Academics of the Royal College of Music
514:See, e.g., 'The Wonderful Phonograph',
603:
591:"Sir Charles Hallé's Grand Concerts",
561:
559:
477:The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera
466:(Edward Arnold, London 1892), 206–207.
219:(also shared with Parepa-Rosa) and in
641:Royal Conservatory of Brussels alumni
390:
388:
386:
384:
176:and others, she appeared briefly in
556:
469:
280:shows that at a private hearing at
41:and other leading London theatres.
13:
636:Musicians from Preston, Lancashire
381:
14:
657:
303:Royal Manchester College of Music
50:Royal Manchester College of Music
572:Dictionary of National Biography
492:(Isaac Pitman, London 1909), 34.
585:
543:
538:The Record of Singing Volume II
530:
521:
508:
495:
103:
540:(Duckworth, London 1979), 157.
482:
456:
451:The Mapleson Memoirs 1848–1888
443:
430:
417:
401:
394:"Madame Lemmens Sherrington",
292:
60:Helen Sherrington was born in
1:
475:H. Rosenthal and J. Warrack,
347:
55:
579:UK public library membership
516:The Worcestershire Chronicle
7:
396:The Illustrated London News
160:on the alternate nights in
112:Lemmens-Sherrington in 1859
75:The Illustrated London News
10:
662:
527:Eaglefield-Hull 1924, 293.
272:Royal Philharmonic Society
122:George Alexander Macfarren
621:English operatic sopranos
505:(Ryder, London 1946), 70.
423:"Her Majesty's Theatre",
414:(Dent, London 1924), 293.
27:Helen Lemmens-Sherrington
22:Helen Lemmens-Sherrington
490:Reminiscences of My Life
479:(OUP, London 1974), 219.
427:, 15 October 1860, p. 12
398:, 20 August 1859, p. 179
233:), Élisabeth de Valois (
595:, 2 November 1894, p. 5
593:The Manchester Guardian
337:The Manchester Guardian
89:Jacques-Nicolas Lemmens
408:Arthur Eaglefield Hull
299:Royal Academy of Music
221:Rose, or Love's Ransom
192:Euphrosyne Parepa-Rosa
190:her role was taken by
128:). This was chosen by
113:
85:
46:Royal Academy of Music
23:
134:Her Majesty's Theatre
111:
80:
70:Brussels Conservatory
35:Brussels Conservatory
21:
316:'s Flemish oratorio
366:The Australian Star
322:George Bernard Shaw
277:The Daily Telegraph
253:Antoinette Sterling
213:Royal English Opera
144:, Mr Parkinson and
130:Edward Tyrrel Smith
503:Royal Philharmonic
361:"Songs And Singer"
282:The Crystal Palace
255:, Sims Reeves and
188:Drury Lane Theatre
174:Janet Monach Patey
114:
48:in London and the
24:
577:(subscription or
245:) and Prascovia (
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436:J. Sims Reeves,
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379:
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357:
248:L'Ă©toile du nord
242:Robert le diable
158:Antonio Giuglini
154:Thérèse Tietjens
146:John Sims Reeves
140:), Mme Lemaire,
661:
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449:J.H. Mapleson,
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359:
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183:The Amber Witch
142:Charles Santley
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98:Joseph Poelaert
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12:
11:
5:
659:
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565:Davey, Henry.
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307:Edna Thornton
304:
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283:
279:
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269:
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262:
258:
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250:
249:
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243:
239:), Isabella (
238:
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227:), Adalgisa (
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150:Charles Hallé
147:
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126:John Oxenford
124:(libretto by
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78:said of her:
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39:Covent Garden
36:
32:
28:
20:
16:
592:
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537:
532:
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510:
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488:C. Santley,
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476:
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463:
462:C. Santley,
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437:
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411:
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395:
371:. Retrieved
364:
355:
343:
335:
329:
317:
314:Peter Benoit
311:
296:
275:
268:Jules Lefort
265:
246:
240:
234:
228:
225:Don Giovanni
224:
220:
216:
209:Dio possente
208:
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196:
181:
169:Don Giovanni
167:
163:Il trovatore
161:
117:
115:
104:Stage career
86:
81:
73:
59:
43:
26:
25:
15:
616:1906 deaths
611:1834 births
549:G.B. Shaw,
293:Later years
261:John Boosey
257:Signor Foli
138:Maid Marian
68:and at the
605:Categories
536:M. Scott,
501:R. Elkin,
348:References
236:Don Carlos
118:Robin Hood
56:Early life
581:required)
425:The Times
217:Helvellyn
66:Rotterdam
373:25 April
331:Creation
286:M. Manns
93:Mechelen
83:the day.
318:Lucifer
178:Wallace
62:Preston
31:soprano
199:Gounod
326:Haydn
230:Norma
204:Faust
120:, by
375:2019
166:and
156:and
328:'s
201:'s
180:'s
607::
569:,
558:^
410:,
383:^
363:.
320:.
309:.
263:.
194:.
52:.
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