How did one get to make records (or sing at Bayreuth) in Germany after 1933 without being a Nazi? This question or one similar arose in another thread so I thought I'd give what for me is an interesting example.
The British bass, (though he and his parents moved to South Africa in 1920) Frederick Dalrymple (1908-1988) got backing in 1930 to study in Dresden where he made something of a name for himself as a singer. He married the German singer, Ellen Winter, and they had a daughter, the charming Evelyn (b. 1939).
Dalrymple doesn't trip off the tongue easily in German, so he changed his name to Dalberg. When war broke out he was still working in Germany, and, unwilling to leave his wife and baby behind, he made the decision to continue singing in Berlin, Bayreuth and elsewhere, and managed to keep his head down and survive the war without being arrested. At the war's end he became principal bass at the Munich State Opera (I am not aware of his needing any de-nazification) and in 1951 first bass at Covent Garden.
He appears on several opera sets recorded in the 1950s, for example, Meisteringer/Karajan/1951, Ring/Kempe/1957
I think it's an extraordinary tale of survival.
PS In my ignorance and nearly forty years ago I had assumed the Dalbergs were Jewish. Fortunately, others didn't.
The British bass, (though he and his parents moved to South Africa in 1920) Frederick Dalrymple (1908-1988) got backing in 1930 to study in Dresden where he made something of a name for himself as a singer. He married the German singer, Ellen Winter, and they had a daughter, the charming Evelyn (b. 1939).
Dalrymple doesn't trip off the tongue easily in German, so he changed his name to Dalberg. When war broke out he was still working in Germany, and, unwilling to leave his wife and baby behind, he made the decision to continue singing in Berlin, Bayreuth and elsewhere, and managed to keep his head down and survive the war without being arrested. At the war's end he became principal bass at the Munich State Opera (I am not aware of his needing any de-nazification) and in 1951 first bass at Covent Garden.
He appears on several opera sets recorded in the 1950s, for example, Meisteringer/Karajan/1951, Ring/Kempe/1957
I think it's an extraordinary tale of survival.
PS In my ignorance and nearly forty years ago I had assumed the Dalbergs were Jewish. Fortunately, others didn't.
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