Rosina Buckman
was born in Blenheim , New Zealand ,
on 16 March 1881, the second child of Henrietta Matilda Chuck, a skilled singer
and organist, and her carpenter husband, John Buckman. Rosina showed early
signs of a well-above-average singing voice, receiving her initial training
from her mother. After the family's move to Apiti, Manawatu, in 1898, she was
given more formal lessons by James Grace, choirmaster of the Methodist church
in nearby Palmerston North. Grace realised that his young pupil's talents were
such that tuition in Britain was essential
and arrangements were made for her to study in Birmingham with
the conductor Charles Swinnerton Heap. After his death in 1900 she moved to the Birmingham and
Midland Institute's school of music to study under the celebrated voice teacher
George Breedon. A fellow student regarded her as pleasant, but not inclined to
mix freely. Rosina Buckman's clear coloratura soprano and fine sense of the
dramatic were soon attracting much favourable public and critical attention,
and after leaving the school in July 1903 she was able to support herself by
taking concert engagements. A serious illness intervened, however, and the
consequent lack of income caused her to accept an offer from her parents to pay
her fare to New Zealand .
She arrived home in March 1904 and almost immediately embarked on a tour with
the American baritone Hamilton Hodges. Other appearances followed until she
made her operatic début on 25 September 1905 in the Wellington production
of Alfred Hill's light opera A Moorish maid. As the magnetic chieftainess, La
Zara, she proved that in addition to a finely developed singing voice she
possessed all the other essentials for a successful future in opera. Buckman
continued to extend her stage experience in Australia and New Zealand ,
becoming sufficiently well respected by 1910 to be included in an opera company
being formed by J. C. Williamson to tour both countries. She sang Suzuki, the
second soprano role, in Puccini's Madame Butterfly, and Mercedes and later Micaela
in Bizet's Carmen, eliciting such praise that in the next year she was invited
by Nellie Melba to join a company she was forming to support her own operatic
performances in Sydney and Melbourne. Melba and her leading tenor, John
McCormack, were highly impressed with Buckman's singing and after much
persuasion from each of them she eventually returned to Britain in
mid 1912. There she soon obtained work, including an engagement conducted by
Thomas Beecham. An audition at the Royal Opera House Covent Garden led to
supporting roles in a special Wagner series in early 1914. This was followed by
the normal summer repertoire in which she made her début on 20 April as Musetta
to Melba's Mimi in Puccini's La Bohème; she went on to sing in three other
operas. Although not effusive, the London critics
were encouraging. However, war was declared only seven days after the season
ended andCovent
Garden was
closed for the duration. The following year Beecham formed an opera company of
his own from British singers he believed to be the finest of the day and he
selected Rosina Buckman as a principal dramatic soprano. Playing long seasons
of opera in London and in the
provinces throughout the war, Beecham's group achieved new heights of
performance and became recognised as reaching a degree of excellence that has
seldom been surpassed. Now a prima donna in her own right, Buckman was soon to
be described as one of the company's ablest and most versatile members. She
sang most of the standard repertoire and although acclaimed for all her work,
her most significant successes were in the title role of Madame Butterfly and
as Isolde in Wagner's Tristan and Isolde, the latter being considered by many
critics as the best ever given in English. On one occasion she continued singing
during an air raid, until the manager of the theatre forcibly cleared the
stage. By this time, too, she had become an established recording artist,
experts claiming that she had a true recording voice with especially clear
enunciation. Her catalogue of recordings is extensive and covers many operatic
arias and duets along with a large number of ballads and concert songs. With
the post-war reopening of Covent Garden in
May 1919, Buckman alternated the leading role in La Bohème with Nellie Melba.
Among other operas atCovent Garden over
the next 12 months she also played Madame Butterfly in a performance in English
which was said to be a revelation to the regular subscribers in that, for once,
the occupants of the stalls and boxes did not chatter. On 24 December 1919 in London Rosina Buckman married the tenor Emile
Maurice d'Oisly. Together and separately they sang throughoutBritain with many leading orchestras and in distinguished celebrity
concerts. After the British National Opera Company was formed in 1922 they
became highly regarded regular performers. In that same year Buckman returned
to New
Zealand for several months and gave a series of joint recitals with her
husband. The programmes of operatic excerpts, art songs and ballads attracted
huge audiences and she was fêted wherever she appeared, the comprehensive tour
rapidly developing into a celebratory homecoming triumph. The remainder of the
decade saw a gradual decrease in Buckman's performances until in the 1930s she
had given up public appearances and was teaching at the Royal Academy of Music,
taking some private pupils as well. A special welcome was reserved for any
students from her homeland: her upbringing, education, early music training and
the nurturing her burgeoning career had received in New
Zealand were obviously important to her. She always kept in close contact
with her family, and in her concert programmes she had been proud to
demonstrate her origins in the authenticity she brought to her singing of
Alfred Hill's Maori songs, one set of which the composer had dedicated to her.
1914 London Covent Garden
1919 London Covent Garden
RECORDINGS FOR SALE
Columbia, London 1915?
Rigoletto (Verdi): Fairest daughter of the graces with d'Oisly, Clegg & Austin L1025 6674
Faust (Gounod): Prison scene with d'Oisly & Ranalow L1025 6683
Columbia, London 1916?
Traviata (Verdi): Far from the busy throng with d'Oisly L1400 6936
Amico Fritz (Mascagni): Cherry duet with d'Oisly L1400 6982
Bohème (Puccini): Lovely Maid in the moonlight with d'Oisly L1076 6927
Bohème (Puccini): Lovely Maid in the moonlight with d'Oisly L1076 6927
Madam Butterfly (Puccini) (sung in English) with Rosina Buckman (Butterfly), Tudor Davies (Pinkerton), Frederick Ranalow (Sharpless); Nellie Walker/Gladys Peel (Suzuki), Sydney Coltham (Goro), Edward Halland (Bonze/Yamadori), Bessie Jones (Kate Pinkerton. Chorus: Gladys Peel, Edna Thornton, Ruby Heyl, Walter Glynne, Sydney Coltham, Leonard Hubbard and Bessie Jones with the Royal Albert Hall Orchestra, cond. Eugène Goossens.
108. What a sky! What a sea! - Butterfly arrives w. TD, SC, FR & Ch.
Cc4436-2, 4 April 1924, 2-04521, D894
109. What might your age be? w. TD , SC , FR & Ch.
Cc4437-2, 4 April 1924, 2-04522, D895
110. I should like to be (Marriage of Butterfly) w. TD, SC & EH
Cc4439-1, 4 April 1924, 2-04523, D895
111. Dear Madam Butterfly (The Bonze curses Butterfly) w. TD, SC, EH, FR & Ch.
Cc4438-2, 4 April 1924, 2-04524, D896
112. Dearest, weep no more (Pinkerton reassures Butterfly) w. TD, NW & Ch.
Cc4485-1, 16 April 1924, 2-04525, D896
113. Child from those eyes (Love duet - Part 1) w. TD
Cc4440-2, 4 April 1924, 04357, D897
114. They say that in your country (Love duet - Part 2) w. TD
Cc4441-2, 4 April 1924, 04358, D897
115. And Izaghi and Izanami w. NW
Cc4358-1, 14 April 1924, 04359, D898
116. One fine day w. NW
Cc4363-4, 16 March 1924, 04360, D898
117. Come, she’s here (Letter from Pinkerton) w. SC & FR
Cc4359-2, 14 March 1924, 04361, D899
118. We were saying (Yamadori presses his suit on Butterfly) w. SC, EH & FR
Cc4362-2, 14 March 1924, 04362, D899
119. You hear me (Sharpless tries to read the letter) w. SC, EH & FR
Cc4361-2, 14 March 1924, 04363, D900
120. How can I tell her? (Sharpless urges her to accept Yamadori) w. FR
Cc4360-2, 14 March 1924, 04364, D900
121. Look here then (Butterfly shows Sharpless ‘Trouble’) w. FR
Cc4401-2, 21 March 1924, 04365, D901
122. Sharpless leaves, his news untold w. NW, SC & FR
Cc4402-2, 21 March 1924, 04366, D901
123. Look! ‘Tis a man-of-war (Butterfly rejoices) w. NW
Cc4403-2, 21 March 1924, 04367, D902
124. The Flower duet w. NW
Cc4405-2, 21 March 1924, 04368, D902
125. Bring me now my wedding garment
Cc 4486-2, 16 April 1924, 03835, D903
126. Tis daylight w. NW
Cc4488-2, 16 April 1924, 04369, D904
127. Who is it? (Sharpless arrives with Pinkerton) w. NW, TD & FR
Cc4336-2, 10 March 1924, 04370, D904
128. Is it not as I told you? (Sharpless recalls his warnings) w. BJ, NW, TD & FR
Cc4484-2, 16 April 1924, 2-04526, D905
129. He’s here! (Butterfly learns the truth from Kate Pinkerton) w. BJ & NW
Cc4406-2, 21 March 1924, 04371, D905
130. Forgive me? (Kate pleads with Butterfly) w. BJ, GP & FR
Cc4404-6, 23 June 1924, 04372, D906
131. Death of Butterfly w. TD
Cc4487-2, 16 April 1924, 04373, D906
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