Ferrier, Kathleen (Mary)
Ferrier, Kathleen (Mary)
Ferrier, Kathleen (Mary), remarkable English contralto; b. Higher Walton, Lancashire, April 22, 1912;d. London, Oct. 8, 1953. She grew up in Blackburn, where she studied piano and began voice lessons with Thomas Duerden. In 1937 she won 1st prizes for piano and singing at the Carlisle Competition; she then decided on a career as a singer, and subsequently studied voice with J.E. Hutchinson in Newcastle upon Tyne and with Roy Henderson in London. After an engagement as a soloist in Messiah at Westminster Abbey in 1943, she began her professional career in full earnest. Britten chose her to create the title role in his Rape of Lucretia (Glyndebourne, July 12, 1946); she also sang Orfeo in Gluck’s Orfeo ed Euridice there in 1947 and at Covent Garden in 1953. She made her American debut with the N.Y. Phil. on Jan. 15, 1948, singing Das Lied von der Erde, with Bruno Walter conducting. She made her American recital debut in N.Y. on March 29, 1949. Toward the end of her brief career, she acquired in England an almost legendary reputation for vocal excellence and impeccable taste, so that her untimely death (from cancer) was greatly mourned. In 1953 she was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire and received the Gold Medal of the Royal Phil. Soc.
Bibliography
N. Cardus, ed., K. K, A Memoir (London, 1955; 2nd ed., rev., 1969); W. Ferrier, The Life of K. F. (London, 1955); C. Rigby, K. F. (London, 1955); W. Ferrier, K. F., Her Life (London, 1959); P. Lethbridge, K. F. (London, 1959); M. Leonard, K.: The Life ofK. F.: 1912–1953 (London, 1988); J. Spycket, K. F. (Lausanne, 1990); P. Campion, F.: A Career Recorded (London, 1992);B. Mailliet Le Penven, La voix de K. F.: Essai (Paris, 1997).
—Nicolas Slonimsky/Laura Kuhn/Dennis McIntire