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Lanfranco Rasponi

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Lanfranco Rasponi
Lanfranco Rasponi (center) with Lillian Gish and Ramon Novarro at the Sagittarius Gallery Fabrizio Clerici exhibition in 1955
Born
Lanfranco Dwight Rasponi Dalle Teste

(1914-12-11)11 December 1914
Florence, Italy
Died9 April 1983(1983-04-09) (aged 68)
NationalityItalian
Occupations

Lanfranco Rasponi (11 December 1914 – 9 April 1983) was an Italian author, critic, and publicist. He is primarily known for his writing on opera and opera singers, especially his 1982 book, The Last Prima Donnas. Born in Florence, he was the son of an Italian aristocrat and an American mother. From the late 1940s to the early 1960s Rasponi was the publicity agent for many opera singers as well as for socialites and fashionable restaurants in New York City. For a while, he also owned the Sagittarius Gallery in Manhattan which specialised in introducing contemporary European artists. After a financial scandal in 1963, he left the United States for Italy and dedicated himself to writing. He spent his last years in Rio de Janeiro where he died at the age of 68.

Life and career

Rasponi was born in Florence, the son of Count Nerino Rasponi Dalle Teste and Caroline Montague, the daughter of a successful businessman in Chattanooga, Tennessee and divided his youth between Italy and the United States.[1] He received a BA in English from the University of California Berkeley, which he attended on an exchange scholarship, and then an MA from the Columbia School of Journalism in 1937, after which he began writing articles and reviews for the New York Times and Opera News.[2] With the outbreak of World War II, he was briefly interned as an "enemy alien", but was paroled and then removed completely from his parole restrictions when he was drafted into the US Army and stationed at Fort Lewis in Washington State.[3][4]

After the war, he resumed his career as a music journalist and also began working for the public relations firm Hope Associates which handled publicity for the Metropolitan Opera. Then in 1948 he and Frank Chapman, a former opera singer and the husband of Gladys Swarthout, formed the public relations firm Chapman–Rasponi. However, they soon fell out and Rasponi opened his own firm, Rasponi Associates. His first two clients were the opera singer Licia Albanese and the cosmetics tycoon Elizabeth Arden. He soon added other opera singers, including Renata Tebaldi, Franco Corelli, and Cesare Siepi, as well as the fashionable New York restaurants Quo Vadis and The Colony.[5][6] In 1955 Rasponi opened the Sagittarius Gallery in Manhattan as a sideline and travelled to Europe seeking out the work of artists to sell there. Artists whose work was exhibited at the gallery included Fabrizio Clerici, Horst (an old friend of Rasponi's from his army days), Cecil Beaton, and Don Bachardy.[7][8][9][10] Bachardy's lover, Christopher Isherwood, was less than impressed with Rasponi who he felt had been dismissive of Bachardy's work despite the exhibition. He wrote in his diary after the opening of Bachardy's show: "He [Rasponi] is surprisingly undistinguished, prissy and languid and clerklike, like some unpleasant official at a passport office."[11]

As a publicity agent, Rasponi also had a clientele of established New York socialites and aspiring ones. Amongst these were Ann Woodward, the wife of William Woodward;[a] Peggy Bancroft, the wife of William Woodward's nephew Thomas Bancroft;[b] the banker Mary Roebling;[14] and Rosetta Valenti who organized lavish charity balls in aid of her Renaissance for Italian Youth Foundation. Sam Aldrich,[c] who worked with Peggy Bancroft on one of her charity events, described meeting Rasponi for the first time: "Her escort was a nice-smelling, polished, pomaded young man with an obsequious air, a smooth Italian accent, and a clipboard."[16] Rasponi's association with Rosetta Valenti proved to be his undoing as a publicist. In 1963 Valenti's foundation was dissolved by the New York Supreme Court after charges were brought by the state's attorney general that the actual beneficiaries of her charity balls were herself, Rasponi, and others who helped her promote the events. Rasponi closed his public relations firm and left for Italy, never again to work in the United States.[17][18]

In the late 1960s, he published two books on the life of the jet set, The International Nomads and The Golden Oases, which featured many of Rasponi's friends and clients from his New York days.[19] He then worked on what was to prove his most enduring book, The Last Prima Donnas, a 636-page exposition on 55 great women singers of the past whom he knew and had interviewed during his time New York and later in Europe.[20] He spent the last years of his life in Rio de Janeiro because, he said, the city was "so soothing."[21] From there he wrote reviews of Brazilian opera and ballet productions for Opera News and co-wrote Dorothy Kirsten's autobiography. A Time to Sing.[22] His final book, The Last Prima Donnas, was published a few months before his death in Rio at the age of 68. He never married and was the last of the Rasponi Dalle Teste line. In 1977 he had sold the family's 17th-century palazzo in Ravenna to the city, where it has been since restored and opened to the public.[23][24]

Books

  • The International Nomads, 1966, Putnam (also published in Italian as I nomadi internazionali, 1967)
  • The Golden Oases, 1968, Putnam
  • The Last Prima Donnas, 1982, Alfred A. Knopf

Notes

  1. ^ Ann Woodward was a former model and showgirl who later shot and killed her husband William Woodward, Jr..[12]
  2. ^ Peggy later divorced Thomas Bancroft to marry Prince Charles d'Arenberg.[13]
  3. ^ Sam Aldrich was the son of Winthrop W. Aldrich.[15]

References

  1. ^ Armstrong, Zella (1992). The History of Hamilton County and Chattanooga, Tennessee, Vol. 1, p. 436. The Overmountain Press (reprint). ISBN 0932807917
  2. ^ Redmont, Bernard S. (1939). Who's Who Columbia Journalists, p. 182. Graduate School of Journalism, Columbia University
  3. ^ Rasponi, Lanfranco (1982). The Last Prima Donnas, p. 416. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0879100400
  4. ^ DiStasi, Lawrence (2001). Una Storia Segreta: The Secret History of Italian American Evacuation and Internment During World War II, p. 286. Heyday. ISBN 1890771406
  5. ^ Opera News (1972). Vol. 37, p. 92. Metropolitan Opera Guild
  6. ^ New York Times (12 April 1983). "Obituary: Lanfranco Rasponi" Retrieved 15 February 2016.
  7. ^ Lawford, Valentine (1984). Horst: his work and his world. p. 315. Alfred A. Knopf
  8. ^ Thompson, Jack (4 December 1955). "New Fortunes in Oil". New York Daily Mirror. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  9. ^ Isherwood, Christopher and Bachardy, Don (2013). The Animals: Love Letters between Christopher Isherwood and Don Bachardy, pp. 90; 108. Random House. ISBN 1448190576
  10. ^ St John's College, Cambridge. Papers of Sir Cecil Beaton: Reference A1/446. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  11. ^ Isherwood, Christopher (2012). The Sixties: Diaries Volume Two 1960-1969, p. 153. Random House. ISBN 1446419304
  12. ^ Darrach, Brad (16 February 1987). "Could They Get Away with Murder?". People, Vol. 27, No. 7. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  13. ^ Sloan, Robin Adams (6 November 1971). "Monaco's Princess Grace Is Serene But Not Royal". The Evening Independent, p. 10-A. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  14. ^ Rutgers University Libraries. Mary G. Roebling: Series Descriptions. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  15. ^ Travagline, Kristin (21 July 2011) "Aldrich memoir – Dancing with the Queen, Marching with King. The Saratogian. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  16. ^ Aldrich, Sam (2011). Dancing with the Queen, Marching with King: The Memoirs of Alexander "Sam" Aldrich, p. 99. SUNY Press. ISBN 143843989X
  17. ^ Cheshire, Maxine (22 December 1969). "White House May Check Charities Tricia sponsors", p. 15. The Tuscaloosa News (via The Washington Post). Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  18. ^ Mayer, Nancy (3 August 1970). "Earl Blackwell Loves Everybody, and Everybody Loves Earl Blackwell". New York Magazine, p. 30
  19. ^ Brown, Vivian (13 April 1968). "Second House Is New Status Symbol". The Evening News (via Associated Press). Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  20. ^ Eckert, Thor (9 March 1983). "Where have all the divas gone?". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  21. ^ Winship, Frederick M. (18 January 1983), "Curtain descending on prima donna, opera expert laments in a new book". UPI. Retrieved 16 February 2016.
  22. ^ Pendle, Karin and Boyd, Melinda (2012). Women in Music: A Research and Information Guide, p. 581. Routledge. ISBN 1135848130
  23. ^ Gabici, Franco (28 October 2011). "Pensato nel 1690, fu il frutto di una contesa tra fratelli". Il Resto del Carlino. Retrieved 16 February 2016 (in Italian).
  24. ^ Ravenna Festival (2016). Palazzo Rasponi dalle Teste Archived 9 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 16 February 2016 (in Italian).