Norina Matchabelli

Norina Matchabelli
Born Eleanora Erna Cecilia Gilli
(1880-03-03)3 March 1880
Florence, Italy
Died 15 June 1957(1957-06-15) (aged 77)
Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, U.S.
Other names Maria Carmi
Occupation Actress
Perfumer
Title Princess
Religion Meher Baba
Spouse(s) Karl Vollmöller
Prince Georges V. Matchabelli

Princess Norina Matchabelli (born Eleanora Erna Cecilia Gilli; March 3, 1880 – June 15, 1957) was co-founder of the perfume company Prince Matchabelli, a stage and screen actress, publisher, and a disciple of Indian spiritual teacher Meher Baba. Her stage name was Maria Carmi.

Acting career as Maria Carmi

Gilli was born in Florence, Italy, the daughter of confectioner Luigi Gilli, originally from Samedan, and his wife Emma Troll from Winterthur. She was the youngest of five children and spent her youth in Florence and Fiesole.

She began her stage career at Max Reinhardt's acting school at the Deutsches Theater and belonged to his company from 1907 to 1909. Under the stage name Maria Carmi, she played in Italian and German theater and in silent films.

Her most notable performance was as the Madonna in the original spectacle-pantomime play The Miracle written by Karl Vollmöller whom she married in 1904. The play was originally produced in Germany. It opened in London on 23 December 1911 at the Olympia Arena.[1] On 23 December 1923 it was revived in New York City on Broadway, then went on a tour of Detroit, Milwaukee and Dallas.

In the New York version she alternated nightly with Lady Diana Manners, another international beauty of the period.[2] In all Norina gave over 1,000 performances of the play.[3]

Princess and perfume

After divorcing Vollmöller, Norina married Georges V. Matchabelli, the Georgian prince and diplomat, in Stockholm, Sweden, in 1917.[4] Georges was the Georgian ambassador to Italy until the 1921 Bolshevik takeover of Georgia, and lived in Rome. The couple moved to the United States in 1923. Georges was an amateur chemist and with Norina co-founded the now-famous perfume company Prince Matchabelli in 1926. In 1933, the couple divorced. Georges died in 1935 and in 1936 Norina sold the company to Saul Ganz for $250,000.[5]

Meher Baba

In 1931 Matchabelli met Spiritual teacher Meher Baba and became a devotee. She introduced many notable figures of the day to Meher Baba including Gabriel Pascal,[6] Mercedes de Acosta[7] and Karl Vollmöller (her first husband). She also founded the periodical Meher Baba Journal in 1938.[8]

In the early 1940s Matchabelli co-founded the Meher Spiritual Center with Elizabeth Chapin Patterson in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, U.S.[9]

In the 1940s Norina Matchabelli gave a series of well-attended public talks in Carnegie Hall, New York City and other places in which she said she was delivering "thought-transmission" messages directly from Meher Baba. When speaking, the personal "I" switched to "I, Meher Baba." This startled some of Meher Baba's followers and they questioned Baba on it in India, but he did not appear concerned.[10]

Death

Norina Matchabelli died at Youpon Dunes, Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, in 1957, aged 77. Her ashes were interred close by Meher Baba's samadhi on Meherabad Hill, near Ahmednagar, India. Her grave marker bears the inscription: Princess Norina was and will ever remain Baba's.[11]

Filmography

Maria Carmi in The Miracle, 1912)

References

  1. Boosey & Hawkes
  2. New York Times, 24 January 1924
  3. Awakener Magazine, Vol 20, #2 (1983).
  4. United States Petition for Citizenship, Southern District of New York, 17 May 1932.
  5. New York Times profile, 2 June 1986.
  6. Kalchuri, Bhau, Lord Meher, Manifestation, Inc. 1986, p. 1861
  7. Kalchuri, Bhau, Lord Meher, Manifestation, Inc. 1986, p. 1940
  8. Baba, Meher, Discourses, Revised 6th Ed. 2007, Sheriar Foundation, Vol. IV, Supplement, A History of the Discourses
  9. Meher Spiritual Center : A Brief History
  10. Heroines of the Path
  11. Meher Baba Trust Website, avatarmeherbaba.org; accessed 7 August 2014.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maria Carmi.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.