Rosine Bloch (7 November 1844 – 1 February 1891)[1]
was a French operatic mezzo-soprano of Jewish descent who had a successful stage career in Europe between 1865 and 1891. She not only possessed a beautiful, warm, and lyrical voice but was also a remarkably beautiful woman physically. Although most of her career was spent performing at the Opéra in Paris, she also appeared in stages in Belgium, Monaco, and England.
^Pierre 1900, p. 701: "née à Paris, 7 nov. 1844", "† Monte Carlo (Nice?), 1 fév. 1891". Other sources differ with regard to her dates and places of birth and death. Walsh 1981, p. 374: "(1832? 1844? 1849?–1891)"; Kutsch and Riemens 2003, p. 454: "* 1832 Bischheim (Departement Bas-Rhin). † 1891 Nizza"; The Musical Times (1 March 1891) reports that she "died at Nice on February 1, aged 42", consistent with 1848 as her year of birth.
RosineBloch (7 November 1844 – 1 February 1891) was a French operatic mezzo-soprano of Jewish descent who had a successful stage career in Europe between...
Paris: 22 March 1880, sung in French, with Gabrielle Krauss as Aida, RosineBloch as Amnéris, Henri Sellier as Radamès, Victor Maurel as Amonasro, Georges-François...
contralto RosineBloch, in order to spare her voice for the role of Fidès in a revival of Meyerbeer's Le prophète. He hoped to replace Bloch with the soprano...
relationship with his secretary, later stepmother, Rosine (Johnson), whom Gil has always despised. He accuses Rosine of killing his father while he was traveling...
the version with piano accompaniment during his lifetime. In the 2010s, Rosine Seringe, Poulenc's niece, gave dispensation to Felicity Lott and Graham...
in Drammen, Norway to the businessman Christen Nielsen and his wife Anna Rosine Keyser. His mother was from the Keyser family from Frankfurt am Main. When...