Oscar Straus (composer)

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Oscar Straus (1918)
photograph by Edith Barakovich

Oscar Straus , actually Oscar Nathan Strauss (born March 6, 1870 in Vienna , † January 11, 1954 in Bad Ischl ), was an Austrian operetta composer . Along with Franz Lehár , Leo Fall and Emmerich Kálmán, he is one of the most important composers of the so-called silver operetta era .

Life

Oscar Strauss, son of the Jewish banker Leopold Strauss, later changed his last name to Straus to avoid confusion with the Strauss waltz dynasty . At the turn of the century he wrote several successful operettas , the best known of which is A Waltz Dream from 1907, and later composed on Broadway and Hollywood .

He learned from Max Bruch and had his first minor successes as Kapellmeister in Brüx and Teplitz-Schönau . In Berlin he took part in the first German music cabaret, the Überbrettl , where the young Arnold Schönberg also worked for some time after him . After the “ Anschluss of Austria ” he had to emigrate to Paris in 1939 , and later to New York and Hollywood. He only returned to Europe after the Second World War .

Katharina (1898), Louis (1895) and Leo Straus (1897–1944), who worked as a dramaturge and librettist, came from his first marriage to the violinist and concertmaster Nelly Irmen . In 1908 Straus entered into a second marriage with the singer Clara Singer (1886-1967); There were two sons from this marriage, the composer Erwin Straus (1910–1966) and the writer and director Walter Straus (1913–1945).

Straus' grave is in the Bad Ischl cemetery .

Sheet music title page for Straus' compositions for the Überbrettl

Works

Operettas

Film music

Awards

literature

  • Franz Mailer : world citizen of music. An Oscar Straus biography . Österreichischer Bundesverlag, Vienna 1985, ISBN 3-215-05645-3 .
  • Dorothea Renckhoff: Shine and Darkening. Fresh flowers for bouquet. Play. Felix Bloch Erben Theaterverlag, Berlin 1999
  • Dorothea Renckhoff: From Ischl to Ischl, what a life in major and minor. About Oscar Straus. Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger, 8/9. May 1993, supplement p. 4/5
  • Dorothea Renckhoff: No rose without thorns , The life of Oscar Straus and From the hero to the sweet tooth. The adventurous story of the Brave Soldier. in: WDR program booklet for the concert performance of Oscar Straus “The brave soldier” on November 27, 1992 in Cologne, broadcasting hall. Pp. 5-21
  • Dorothea Renckhoff: I don't compose with my fingers . The Life of Oscar Straus, and: Taming the Blond Beast? On the history of the Lustige Nibelungen . in: Oscar Straus, The Funny Nibelungs . Cologne Operetta Concerts 3, February 17, 1995, published by Westdeutscher Rundfunk Köln, pp. 7–22
  • Dorothea Renckhoff: Oscar Straus and his Lustige Nibelungen . Booklet for the CD Die Lustigen Nibelungen , Capriccio 1996, Delta Music GmbH Königsdorf
  • Oscar Straus ( memento of March 2, 2014 in the Internet Archive ), online at Exil-Archiv. , Else Lasker-Schüler-Stiftung: Burned and exiled poets / artists - for a center for the persecuted arts , Wuppertal
  • Fedora Wesseler, Stefan Schmidl (eds.), Oscar Straus. Contributions to approaching someone wrongly forgotten, Operetta Research Center Amsterdam 2017.

Web links

Commons : Oscar Straus  - collection of images, videos and audio files