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Elisabeth Kohut-Mannstein

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Elisabeth Kohut-Mannstein, also Elisabeth Kohut-Manstein, real name Elisabeth Steinmann[1] (3 May 1843 – 29 November 1926) was a German operatic soprano and voice teacher.

Life

Steinmann was born in Dresden and had a sister named Grete.[2] She was trained by her father,[3] the singing teacher Heinrich Ferdinand Mannstein, who was known under the pseudonym Heinrich Ferdinand Mannstein.[4] She adopted the stage name Elisabeth Mannstein. From 1877[5] She was married to the writer Adolph Kohut. She died on 29 November 1926 in Berlin-Grunewald and was buried at Grunewald Cemetery [de].

In her career as a singer she appeared at the court opera of St. Petersburg, at the Stadttheater Düsseldorf and at the Krolloper in Berlin. In 1870 she appeared at the German Theater in Amsterdam [de] and in Wiesbaden as guest singer.[6] Her performances as Donna Anna in Don Giovanni, as Leonore in Fidelio, in the title role in Euryanthe by Weber and as Frau Fluth in The Merry Wives of Windsor by Otto Nicolai were famous. In 1872 she was engaged at the Theater Aachen.[7] After finishing her active stage career she worked as a singing teacher in Berlin.

Miss Mannstein is beautiful, enchantingly beautiful, even outside the stage, she is reminiscent of Heine's poem: The Woman's Body is a poem written by God the Lord.

— Die Deutsche Schaubühne. Organ für Theater, Musik, Kunst, Literatur und sociales Leben. 1868, p. 68.

She had one son, Oswald Kohut (1877–1951).[8] The politician Oswald Adolph Kohut [de] was one of her grandchildren.[9]

Work

  • Die große altitalienische Gesangsschule. Introduction by Ludwig Richard Bernscht. Energetos-Ritte-Verlag, Berlin 1922. Table of contents[10]

Theatre seat

  • Premiere: Wiesbaden, 23 March 1870. Mozart: Don Giovanni. Große Oper in 2 Akten. Nach dem Italienischen frei bearbeitet. Interprets: Hermann Philippi: Don Juan. David Klein: Gouverneur Don Petro. Elisabeth Mannstein: Donna Anna. Elisabeth Řebíček-Löffler: Donna Elvira. Bodo Borchers: Don Octavio. F. Lipp: Don Juan's servant Leporello. Franz Fischer: a farm boy Masetto. Ella Guilleaume: his bride Zerline. Printer: Rudolph Bechthold. "Miss Mannstein from the German Theatre in Amsterdam as guest"
  • Premiere: Wiesbaden, 30 March 1870. Donizetti: Lucrezia Borgia. Große Oper in 3 Akten. Interprets: Hermann Philippi: Duke of Ferrara Don Alfonso. Elisabeth Mannstein: his wife Lucrezia Borgia. Bodo Borchers: young nobleman in the retinue of the Venetian envoy in Ferrara Gennaro. Hermine Otto: young nobleman in the retinue of the Venetian envoy in Ferrara Orsino. Carl Stengel: young nobleman in the retinue of the Venetian envoy in Ferrara Liveretto. Otto Dornewaß: young nobleman in the retinue of the Venetian envoy in Ferrara Gazella. Franz Fischer: young nobleman in the retinue of the Venetian envoy in Ferrara Petrucci. R. Kuhl: young nobleman in the retinue of the Venetian envoy in Ferrara Bitelozzo. David Klein: Confidant of Duchess Gubetta. Josef Peter Peretti: Officer of Duke Rustighello. Printer: Rudolph Bechthold. "Miss Mannstein from the Deutsches Theater in Amsterdam as guest".

Further reading

  • Die Musik. Monatsschrift. 19. Jg., Deutsche Verlagsanstalt. Stuttgart, Berlin, Leipzig January 1927, p. 306.[11]
  • Kohut-Mannstein, Elisabeth. In Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopädie. Volume 6, Saur, Munich 1997, ISBN 3-598-23166-0, p. 8.
  • Volker Klimpel: Berühmte Dresdner. Historisch-biographisches Handbuch bedeutender Persönlichkeiten, geboren in Dresden. Hellerau-Verlag, Dresden 2002, ISBN 3-910184-85-5, p. 91.
  • Karl-Josef Kutsch, Leo Riemens: Großes Sängerlexikon. Volume 4., extended and updated edition, Saur, Munich 2003, ISBN 978-3-598-11598-1, p. 2446. Numerised

References

  1. ^ Adreß- und Geschäftshandbuch der königlichen Haupt- und Residenzstadt Dresden 1868 „Steinmann“
  2. ^ There were two handsome, blond Germanic girls, the two Manstein's (sic!), Elisabeth and Grete. (Fritz Friedmann: Was ich erlebte! Memoiren. Volume 1. Alfred Pulvermacher, Berlin 1908, p. 173.)
  3. ^ Hugo Riemann: Musik-Lexikon. Paderborn 2015, ISBN 978-3-84608-632-2, p. 567. Numerised
  4. ^ Steinmann, Heinrich Ferdinand […] Ps. Heinrich Ferdinand Mannstein. (Wilfrid Eymer: Eymers Pseudonymen-Lexikon. Realnamen und Pseudonyme in der deutschen Literatur. Kirschbaum, Bonn 1997, ISBN 3-7812-1399-4, p. 347.)
  5. ^ He is married [read Adolph Kohut] to the well-known concert singer and singing teacher Elisabeth Mannstein (since 1877). (Richard Wrede [de], Hans von Reinfels (edit.): Das geistige Berlin. Volume 1. Leben und Wirken der Architekten, Bildhauer, Bühnenkünstler, Journalisten, Maler, Musiker, Schriftsteller, Zeichner. Photomechanical reprint of the original edition of 1897. Central antiquarian bookshop of the GDR, Leipzig 1975, p. 256).
  6. ^ Siehe Theaterzettel.
  7. ^ Deutscher Bühnen-Almanach. 36. Jg. Berlin 1872, p. 4. Numerised
  8. ^ Deutsche Biographische Enzyklopädie, Volume 6, pp. 7–8.
  9. ^ Oswald A. Kohut (Munzinger Biographie)
  10. ^ Note 3: simplified and clarified edition of the work: Das System der großen Gesangschule des Bernacchi von Bologna, […] nebst klassischen, bisher ungedruckten Singübungen von Meistern aus derselben Schule. Système de la grande méthode de chant de Bernacchi de Bologne avec des vocalises classiques jusqu'à présent inédites de maîtres de chant formés dans la même école, rédigé par H. F. Mannstein. by Heinrich Ferdinand Mannstein. (1835)
  11. ^ Die Altmeisterin der Sangeskunst Elisabeth Kohut-Mannstein, Hofopernsängerin a. D., ist in ihrem Heim in der Villenkolonie Grunewald im 83. Lebensjahr mitten aus ihrer Lehrtätigkeit durch den Tod ihren zahlreichen Schülern entrissen.Numerised