Maria Tănase

Maria Tănase
Born 25 September 1913
Bucharest, Romania
Died 22 June 1963 (aged 49)
Bucharest, Romania
Nationality Romanian
Occupation Singer, actress
Years active 1935–1963
Spouse(s) Clery Sachelarie (m. 1950–63) (her death)

Maria Tănase (Romanian pronunciation: [maˈri.a təˈnase]; 25 September 1913 – 22 June 1963) was a Romanian singer and actress. Her music ranged from traditional Romanian music to romance, tango, chanson and operetta.

Tănase has a similar importance in Romania to that of Édith Piaf in France or Amália Rodrigues in Portugal.[1] In her nearly three-decade-long career, she became widely regarded as Romania's national diva, being admired for her originality, voice, physical beauty and charisma. In Romania, she is still regarded as a major cultural icon of the 20th century.[2][3][4] In 2006 she was included to the list of the 100 Greatest Romanians of all time by a nation-wide poll.

Among her songs are Cine iubește și lasă (1937), Leliță cârciumăreasă (1939), Bun îi vinul ghiurghiuliu (1938), Doina din Maramureş (1956), Ciuleandra (1956) and Până când nu te iubeam.[5]

Biography

Born in Bucharest suburb of Cărămidarii de Jos, or Cărămidari, Maria Tănase attended Primary School number 11 from Tăbăcari. Her father, Ion Coanda Tănase, was a master gardener and a florist, also owner of a big nursery on the outskirts of Bucharest, which employed female workers from different various regions of Romania. These women, in turn, would share traditional folk songs and tales which deeply enthralled little Maria, which was to leave a permanent mark on her.

She made her stage debut in Cărămidarii de Jos, at the "Ion Heliade Rădulescu" High School. In 1934, she joined the "Cărăbuş" Theatre of Constantin Tănase with the help and advice of newspaper writer Sandu Eliad, who, at that time was her partner.[6] Her real debut took place on 2 June 1937 with the stage name Mary Atanasiu in the musical hall theatres, Alhambra and Gioconda. Shortly after, she started to develop a local and international following. She represented Romania at the International Exhibition in Paris in 1937, as well as at the 1939 New York World's Fair. On 20 February 1938[7] her voice was heard for the first time on the radio. In that year, she made her first recordings for the Romanian Radio Society, which contributed to her fame. Unfortunately, these early recordings are said to have been destroyed by the "authorities" during the first months of the National Legionary State, the time when Maria Tănase was also banned from performing in public.[8]

During World War II, together with George Enescu, George Vraca and Constantin Tănase, she was making stage tours singing in front of soldiers injured on the battlefield. In December 1943, she sang at the Christmas festivities at the Royal Cavalry Regiment, where King Michael I of Romania, Ion Antonescu, Mihai Antonescu and all the members of the government were present as guests. In 1944 Maria Tănase took time to sing in Edmond Audran's operetta "Mascota" (The Mascot).

Tănase on a 2003 stamp of Moldova

After World War II, she performed in Review Ensemble Theatre and "Constantin Tănase" Satirical and Musical Theatre. She had parts in the plays "The Living Corpse" by Leo Tolstoy in 1945, and "Horia" by Mihai Davidoglu in 1956. In 1946 she held the main part in the musical comedy "The Hollywood Sphinx", by Ralph Benatzky. She sang in the movie "Romania" in 1947, and in 1958 she performed in both "Ciulinii Bărăganului" (The Thistles of the Bărăgan), and the short-reel film "Amintiri din Bucureşti" (Memories from Bucharest). During these years Maria was also touring a lot, she had over forty trips only to New York City.

In 1952, Maria Tănase was offered a position at the Music School No. 1 in Bucharest, in the newly created traditional folk song department; 1962 found her guiding "Taraful Gorjului" (The Gorj Folk Music Band) in Târgu Jiu and the artists from "taraf", at her own request.

On 1 May 1963, after a concert in Hunedoara, she was forced to cancel her tour and any other performances due to sickness. On 22 June 1963, she died of cancer. She was buried at the Bellu cemetery in Bucharest, Romania.

In 1955, Maria Tănase received the State Prize and in 1957 she was honored with the medals "Ordinul Muncii" (The Order for Activity), "Premiul de Stat" (The State Award), and the title "Artistă Emerită" (Honoured Artist of the Republic) for her contributions to the arts.

However, within her lifetime, she had also been fondly remembered by many Romanians as their own Edith Piaf, the legendary French singer who, like Maria, had also achieved worldwide fame by way of her own extensive repertoire of French cabaret songs. Where Maria was born in September 1913, Edith Piaf's birth came a couple of years soon afterward, in December 1915. They both died in 1963: Maria died in June, three months short of her 50th birthday, whereas Edith Piaf died in October, two months away from her 48th. Throngs of people had filled the streets of Bucharest and Paris respectively, on the days of their deaths, to memorialize the two ladies who helped make the folk music of their own respective countries a worldwide phenomenon.

Maria Tănase's grave on what would have been her 100th birthday (at Bellu Cemetery, Bucharest)
Year Title Label
1994 Greatest Hits Intercont Music
1994 Maria Tănase Volume I Electrecord
1997 Maria Tănase Volume II Electrecord
2000 Maria Tănase Volume III Electrecord
2000 Malediction d'Amour Oriente Musik
2001 Ciuleandra Oriente Musik
2002 Magic Bird – The Early Years Oriente Musik
2007 Maria Tănase part I Jurnalul Național
2007 Maria Tănase part II Jurnalul Național
2008 Discul de aur Jurnalul Național
2011 Anii '30–'40 Electrecord
2013 Cântece populare. 1953–1961 Editura Casa Radio

Legacy

In 1939, after meeting Tănase for the first time, Constantin Brâncuși told her: "When I hear you singing, Maria, I would be able to carve for each song of ours a Bird in Space!"[9][10] He regarded her as a "symbol of all Romanians".[11]

Famous Russian soprano Lydia Lipkowska was also fascinated by her artistry: "No one managed to impress me so deeply with the interpretation of traditional songs and pop music pieces in the way she did. Her voice penetrates me, stirs me, disturbs me so strongly that I always leave as if I tasted a miraculous potion; I feel like I don't have control over my own feelings!"[12]

Nicolae Iorga famously called her "Pasărea măiastră" ("The Magic Bird").[13]

Mihail Sadoveanu considered her "the first authentic rhapsodist" of the Romanians.[14]

The character of Floricica in the first novel of Olivia Manning's Fortunes of War trilogy is supposed to have been based upon Maria Tănase.[15]

British musician Nigel Kennedy with Polish Kroke band celebrated her legacy with a recording titled "Tribute to Maria Tănase", which was included on his 2003 album East Meets East.[16] The musical themes of this track are Maria Tănase's song Luncă, luncă (Meadow, Meadow) and Gheorghe Zamfir's Sârba bătrânească.

The 2009 Laureate of the Nobel Prize in Literature, Herta Müller, has spoken many times about the influence that Maria Tănase had on her: "When I first heard Maria Tănase she sounded incredible to me, it was for the first time that I really felt what folklore meant. Romanian folk music is connected to existence in a very meaningful way. However, German folklore was not at all inspiring for me."[17]

In 2013, musical group Pink Martini named Maria Tănase one of their greatest inspirations.[18]

In 2013 Romanian singer Oana Cătălina Chiţu who lives in Berlin, published album Divine with songs from the repertoire of Maria Tănase.

On 25 September 2013, Google Romania celebrated Maria Tănase's legacy with a doodle, which marked what would have been her 100th birthday.[19]

References

  1. "Maria Tanase". Mondomix. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  2. "Institutul Cultural Român din Berlin aduce un omagiu muzical cântăreței Maria Tănase". Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  3. "Bălănescu Quartet aduce un tribut Mariei Tănase în Australia". Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  4. "Nathalie Joly". Journal La Terrasse.fr. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  5. ro:Discografia Mariei Tănase
  6. Maria Roşca, "Maria Tănase", p. 35, Editura Muzicală, Bucureşti, 1988
  7. Maria Roşca, "Maria Tănase", p. 38-43, Editura Muzicală, Bucureşti, 1988
  8. Maria Roşca, "Maria Tănase", p. 89, Editura Muzicală, Bucureşti, 1988
  9. "Maria Tanase a fost iubita lui Brancusi". agenda.ro. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  10. "Maria Tănase: 100 de ani de la naşterea "pasării măiastre" a neamului românesc – Lumea Satului". Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  11. "Maria Tănase şi Édith Piaf – povestea unor vieţi în oglindă". Catchy. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  12. Roșca, Maria (1988). Maria Tănase. Bucharest: Editura Muzicală. p. 147
  13. "Maria Tănase: 100 de ani de la naşterea "pasării măiastre" a neamului românesc – Lumea Satului". Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  14. "Maria Tănase: 100 de ani de la naşterea "pasării măiastre" a neamului românesc – Lumea Satului". Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  15. Carmen Andraş, "Olivia Manning şi Bucureştiul interbelic – Auto-cenzura ideologică şi/sau afectivă", Centrul de cercetare a imaginarului.
  16. "Nigel Kennedy ~ Songs List". OLDIES.com. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  17. ""Lume, lume, soro lume" – Maria Tănase şi cîntecele ei". Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  18. "Today is the 100th birthday of one of our greatest inspirations, Maria Tănase!…". Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  19. Gabriela Vatu (25 September 2013). "Google Celebrates Birthday of Iconic Romanian Singer with Doodle". softpedia. Retrieved 14 November 2014.

Further reading

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maria Tănase.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.