Jump to content

Edith Bideau

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 94.234.51.143 (talk) at 10:22, 7 March 2019. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Edith Bideau
Edith Bideau, from a 1920 publication.
Edith Bideau, from a 1920 publication.
Born
Edith Mae Bideau

November 6, 1888
Chanute, Kansas
Died1958
NationalityAmerican
Other namesE. B. Normelli, Edith Normelli
Occupation(s)singer, music educator
Years active1912-1958

Edith Bideau (November 6, 1888 — 1958), later Edith Bideau Normelli, was an American soprano singer and music educator from Kansas.

Early life

Edith Mae Bideau was from Chanute, Kansas, the daughter of Georges K. Bideau and Jennie Hale Bideau. Her father was a councilman in Chanute.[1] She earned bachelor's degrees from Baker University in Baldwin City, Kansas in 1911, where she wrote the school song, "Hail! Old Baker";[2] and from Kansas State University in 1912.[3] She pursued further music studies in Italy, and with Richard Hageman in New York.[4][5][6]

Career

Bideau taught voice and was director of the vocal department at the State Normal School in Pittsburg, Kansas from 1916 to 1919.[7][8][9] At the beginning of World War I, she was in Italy, and there were concerns for her safety.[10][11] When she returned to the United States, she gave concerts for troops stationed in Kansas.[12] She was director of music and instructor in church music at Seabury-Western Theological Seminary in Evanston, Illinois in 1935.[13] She taught voice at Iola, Kansas in 1947.[14]

Bideau was a concert and oratorio soloist in Chicago and Pittsburgh.[15] She made her New York debut in 1920, at Aeolian Hall. "Her voice is a soprano of very pure quality, a voice that is at its best in lyric matters," noted one reviewer.[16] Another witness, however, reported that "she was altogether too nervous to inspire critical confidence."[17][18] She toured the midwest as a performer in 1921.[19] On Christmas Day in 1921, she sang solos at six different events in New York City.[20] She wrote "Tone Coloring in Singing" an essay published in Étude magazine in 1955.[21]

Personal life

Edith Bideau married Swedish diplomat Carl Gustav Normelli in 1920.[22] She was widowed when Normelli died in 1957, and she died in 1958, aged 69 years; her grave is in Kansas. Kansas legislator Edwin Bideau was her great-nephew, her brother Edwin Hale Bideau's grandson.[23]

References

  1. ^ "Junior Recital of Miss Edith Bideau" The Chanute Daily Tribune (May 18, 1910): 3. via Newspapers.com
  2. ^ Catalog of Copyright Entries: Musical compositions, Part 3 (Library of Congress Copyright Office 1910): 782.
  3. ^ Kansas State College of Pittsburg, Annual Catalogue (June 1916): 18.
  4. ^ "Interesting Alpha Chis" The Lyre of Alpha Chi Omega (July 1920): 370.
  5. ^ Florence Arzelia Armstrong, History of Alpha Chi Omega Fraternity (1885-1921) (Banta Publishing 1922): 390-391.
  6. ^ "Hageman Enjoys Busiest Autumn" Musical Courier (November 6, 1919): 57.
  7. ^ C. E. W., "Edith Bideau" The Music News (September 21, 1917): 6.
  8. ^ Gene E. Vollen, "Music at Pittsburg State: Part 4: The Building of the Program" Music Notes 8(1)(Spring 1993): 1.
  9. ^ "Edith Bideau to Teach" The Daily Gazette (June 7, 1916): 3. via Newspapers.com
  10. ^ "Kansas Soloist in Europe" The Evening Herald (August 22, 1914): 1. via Newspapers.com
  11. ^ "Message from Miss Edith Bideau" The Neodesha Daily Sun (August 27, 1914): 3. via Newspapers.com
  12. ^ "To Entertain the Soldiers" Parsons Daily Eclipse (May 8, 1919): 6. via Newspapers.com
  13. ^ "Seabury-Western Theological Seminary" The Living Church Annual (1935): 80.
  14. ^ "Dr. Normelli to Teach Voice in Iola" Iola Register (July 11, 1947): 6. via Newspapers.com
  15. ^ "About the Campus" The Techne (November 1923): xlviii.
  16. ^ "Edith Bideau in Admirable Debut" Musical America (March 6, 1920): 6.
  17. ^ "Metropolitan Musings" The Musical Monitor (March 1920): 239.
  18. ^ "Edith Bideau's New York Debut" Musical Courier (February 19, 1920): 16.
  19. ^ "Edith Bideau to Take Tour" University Daily Kansan (September 29, 1921): 1. via Newspapers.com
  20. ^ "Mrs. Normelli in New York" The Chanute Daily Tribune (December 28, 1921): 4. via Newspapers.com
  21. ^ Edith Bideau Normelli, "Tone Coloring in Singing" Étude (August 1955): 22, 62.
  22. ^ "Edith Bideau Wed to Swedish Consul" Musical America (March 20, 1920): 21.
  23. ^ Edwin Bideau obituary, Topeka Capital-Journal (September 7-9, 2013).

External links