Joan Hammond
Born | Joan Hilda Hood Hammond 24 May 1912 |
---|---|
Died | 26 November 1996 | (aged 84)
Years active | 1936-1965 |
Dame Joan Hilda Hood Hammond, DBE, CMG (24 May 1912 – 26 November 1996) was an Australian operatic soprano, singing coach and champion golfer.
Early life
Joan Hilda Hood Hammond was born and baptised in Christchurch, New Zealand.[1] Her father, Samuel Hood, was born in England. He married his first wife, Edith, then left her and took up with Hammond's mother, Hilda Blandford, by whom he also had two sons in England. He informally added "Hammond" to his name and they represented themselves as "Mr and Mrs Samuel H. Hammond" although they were not married at the time.[2]
Hammond was born in May 1912, not long after the family had arrived in New Zealand. She was six months old when her family moved again, to Sydney, Australia. Her parents finally married in Sydney on 25 May 1927, the day after her 15th birthday, although there is no evidence Samuel's first wife had died by that time, or that they had ever divorced.[3]
Hammond attended Pymble Ladies' College and excelled in both sports and music. She studied violin and singing at the New South Wales State Conservatorium of Music in Sydney, and played violin for three years with the Sydney Philharmonic Orchestra before studying singing in Vienna in 1936.[4]
Golfer
Hammond won the women's junior golf championship for New South Wales in 1929, and the women's amateur state championship in 1932, 1934, and 1935.[4][5] When she became well known as a golfer, she started to sign her name as "Joan Hood Hammond", and newspaper articles would sometimes hyphenate this as "Joan Hood-Hammond"; however, she later dropped the "Hood".[6]
Opera
An encounter with Lady Gowrie, the wife of the then Governor of New South Wales, Lord Gowrie, made the young Joan Hammond's dreams of studying in Europe possible. She would often refer to Lady Gowrie as her "guardian angel". Hammond's fellow golfers in New South Wales raised enough money for her to leave Australia in 1936 to study in Vienna. She also studied with Dino Borgioli in London. She toured widely, and became noted particularly for her Puccini roles. She returned to Australia for concert tours in 1946, 1949 and 1953, and starred in the second Elizabethan Theatre Trust opera season in 1957.[4] She undertook world concert tours between 1946 and 1961. Her autobiography, A Voice, a Life, was published in 1970.
Dame Joan Hammond appeared in the major opera houses of the world – the Royal Opera House, La Scala, the Vienna State Opera and the Bolshoi. Her fame in Britain came not just from her stage appearances but from her recordings. She made famous the aria "O mio babbino caro" from Puccini's opera Gianni Schicchi. Recorded in English under the title "O My Beloved Father", it earned Hammond a Gold Record award for 1 million sold copies on 27 August 1969.[7] Her recording of "O, Silver Moon" from Dvořák's Rusalka was also a huge seller. A prolific artist, Hammond's repertoire also encompassed Verdi, Handel, Tchaikovsky, Massenet, Beethoven, as well as folk song, art song, and lieder. [citation needed]
Later life
A heart attack in 1965 forced Hammond to retire from the stage. Her final performance was at the funeral of her "guardian angel", Lady Gowrie, on 30 July 1965, at St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle. This occasion was also memorable for the fact that Hammond was the first woman ever granted royal permission to sing in that chapel.[8]
Hammond retired to Australia. She became patron and a life member of the Melbourne-based Victorian Opera Company (since 1976, the Victorian State Opera – VSO), founded in 1962 by Leonard Spira. She was the VSO's artistic director from 1971 until 1976 and remained on the board until 1985. Working with the then general manager, Peter Burch, she invited the young conductor Richard Divall to become the company's Musical Director in 1972.[9] She joined the Victorian Council of the Arts, was a member of the Australia Council for the Arts opera advisory panel, and was an Honorary Life Member of Opera Australia. She was important to the success of both the VSO and Opera Australia.
Hammond embarked on a second career as a voice teacher after her performance career ended. In 1975, she was appointed the head of the voice faculty at the Victorian College of the Arts, where she remained until her retirement seventeen years later in 1992. In that time she trained an extraordinary number of Australian singers who had successful careers in Australia and on the international stage. Among her notable pupils are soprano Cheryl Barker and baritone Peter Coleman-Wright.[10]
In 1983, her home at Aireys Inlet was destroyed by the Ash Wednesday bushfires and she lost all her possessions including the memorabilia of a lifetime.[11]
Death
She died in 1996 in Bowral, New South Wales, aged 84, never having married, and was buried in the Bowral General Cemetery. Joan Carden sang at Hammond's funeral and memorial concert, both of which were held in Melbourne.[citation needed]
Honours
In the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1953, she was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for her singing.[12]
In the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1963 she was promoted to Commander (CBE).[13] In the Queen's Birthday Honours of 1974 she was promoted within the order to Dame Commander (DBE) for distinguished services to singing.[14]
In the New Year's Day Honours of 1972 she was made a Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (CMG) for services to young opera singers.[15]
Legacy
She received the Sir Charles Santley Award from the Worshipful Company of Musicians, London in 1970 as "Musician of the Year". [citation needed] In 1986, the Victoria State Opera created the Dame Joan Hammond Award with Moffatt Oxenbould as its inaugural recipient.[4][16]
In 1989, the Hammond residence at Deakin University was opened by her and named in her honour.[17]
References
- ^ Hardy, p. 10
- ^ Hardy, pp. 8–9
- ^ Hardy, p. 22
- ^ a b c d MS 8648, Papers of Dame Joan Hammond, National Library of Australia.
- ^ Golf NSW-Women's NSW Amateur Championship Honour Roll
- ^ Hardy, pp. 28, 30
- ^ Hammond, p. 238
- ^ Dame Joan Hilda Hood Hammond CBE CMG Archived 12 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine at White Hat
- ^ Richard Divall
- ^ Hamilton, George (24 November 2012). "The Australian golf protege who became a million-selling sopranoDiva: Joan Hammond had an Irish fairy godmother in Lady Gowrie". Independent.ie. Retrieved 23 January 2021.
- ^ White Hat Archived 12 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 17 October 2014
- ^ Australian Government Honours site: OBE
- ^ Australian Government Honours site: CBE
- ^ Australian Government Honours site: DBE
- ^ Australian Government Honours site: CMG
- ^ "Moffatt Oxenbould" Archived 18 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine at Opera Australia
- ^ Hammond Opening (Plaque outside dorm). Building EA, Deakin University: Deakin University Residences. 1989.
Sources
- Hammond, Joan. A Voice, a Life. Victor Gollancz (1970); ISBN 0-575-00503-3
- Hardy, Sara. Dame Joan Hammond: Love and Music. Allen & Unwin (2009); ISBN 978-1-74175-083-6
- D. Brook, Singers of Today (Revised Edition) Rockliff, London (1958), pp. 104–109.
- Hardy, Sara (June 2009). "The sporting Diva: Dame Joan Hammond" (PDF). The National Library Magazine. 1 (2): 28–30. Archived from the original on 26 May 2015. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
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External links
- Hammond, Joan Hood (1912–1996), profile and further links
- Joan Hammond – programs and related material at the National Library of Australia
- "Dame Joan Hammond", full interview transcript by Robin Hughes, recorded on 28 January 1992. Transcript held at Australian Biography.
- 1912 births
- 1996 deaths
- Australian female golfers
- Australian operatic sopranos
- Australian Companions of the Order of St Michael and St George
- Australian Dames Commander of the Order of the British Empire
- Disease-related deaths in Australia
- People from Christchurch
- Singers awarded knighthoods
- Sporting dames
- Sydney Conservatorium of Music alumni
- 20th-century Australian singers
- 20th-century opera singers
- 20th-century women opera singers
- People educated at Pymble Ladies' College