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Lily Pons

Alice Joséphine Pons (April 12, 1898 – February 13, 1976), known professionally as Lily Pons, was a French-American operatic lyric coloratura soprano and actress who had an active career from the late 1920s through the early 1970s. As an opera singer, she specialized in the coloratura soprano repertoire and was particularly associated with the title roles in Lakmé and Lucia di Lammermoor. In addition to appearing as a guest artist with many opera houses internationally, Pons enjoyed a long association with the Metropolitan Opera in New York City, where she performed nearly 300 times between 1931 and 1960.

Lily Pons
Lily Pons, ca. 1937
Born
Alice Joséphine Pons

(1898-04-12)April 12, 1898
Draguignan, France
DiedFebruary 13, 1976(1976-02-13) (aged 77)
Dallas, Texas, U.S.
Resting placeCimetière du Grand Jas, Cannes
Citizenship
  • France
  • United States
Occupations
  • Opera singer
  • actress
Years active1920s–1970s
Known forMetropolitan Opera lyric coloratura soprano
Spouses
August Mesritz
(m. 1930; div. 1933)
(m. 1938; div. 1958)

She also had a successful and lucrative career as a concert singer, which continued until her retirement from performance in 1973. From 1935 to 1937, she made three musical films for RKO Pictures. She also made numerous appearances on radio and on television, performing on variety programs such as The Ed Sullivan Show, The Colgate Comedy Hour, and The Dave Garroway Show. In 1955, she topped the bill for the first broadcast of what became an iconic television series, Sunday Night at the London Palladium. She made dozens of records, recording both classical and popular music. She was awarded the Croix de Lorraine and the Légion d'honneur by the government of France.

Pons was also adept at making herself into a marketable cultural icon. Her opinions on fashion and home decorating were frequently reported in women's magazines, and she appeared as the face for Lockheed airplanes, Knox gelatin, and Libby's tomato juice advertisements. A town in Maryland named itself after her, and thereafter the singer contrived to have all her Christmas cards posted from Lilypons, Maryland. Opera News wrote in 2011, "Pons promoted herself with a kind of marketing savvy that no singer ever had shown before, and very few have since; only Luciano Pavarotti was quite so successful at exploiting the mass media."[1]

Early life and education edit

 
Lily Pons at CKAC, Montreal, 1939

Pons was born in Draguignan in Provence, to a French father, Léonard Louis Auguste Antoine Pons, and an Italian-born mother, Maria (née Naso), later known as Marie Pétronille Pons. She first studied piano at the Paris Conservatory, winning the first prize at the age of 15. At the onset of World War I in 1914, she moved with her mother and younger sister Juliette (born December 22, 1902 – died 1995) to Cannes, where she played piano and sang for soldiers at receptions given in support of the French troops and at the famous Hotel Carlton that had been transformed into a hospital, and where her mother worked as a volunteer nurse orderly.

In 1925, encouraged by soprano Dyna Beumer [nl] and August Mesritz, a successful publisher who agreed to fund her singing career, she started taking singing lessons in Paris with Alberto de Gorostiaga [es]. She later studied singing with Alice Zeppilli in New York.[2][3] On October 15, 1930, Pons married her first husband, Mesritz, and spent the next several years as a housewife. The marriage ended in divorce on December 7, 1933.[1][2]

Career edit

Pons successfully made her operatic debut in the title role of Léo Delibes' Lakmé at Mulhouse in 1928 under Reynaldo Hahn's baton, and went on to sing several coloratura roles in French provincial opera houses. She was discovered by the dramatic tenor/impresario Giovanni Zenatello, who took her to New York, where she auditioned for Giulio Gatti-Casazza, the general manager of the Metropolitan Opera. The Met needed a star coloratura after the retirement of Amelita Galli-Curci in January, 1930. Gatti-Casazza engaged Pons immediately, and she also signed a recording contract with RCA Victor.

 
Pons in a costume from I Dream Too Much, 1935

On January 3, 1931, Pons, unknown in the U.S., made an unheralded Met debut as Lucia in Donizetti's Lucia di Lammermoor, and on that occasion the spelling of her first name was changed to "Lily". Her performance received tremendous acclaim. She became a star and inherited most of Galli-Curci's important coloratura roles. Her career after this point was primarily in the United States. She became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1940. From 1938 to 1958, she was married to conductor Andre Kostelanetz. In 1955, they built a home in Palm Springs, California.[4]

Pons was a principal soprano at the Met for 30 years, appearing 300 times in 10 roles from 1931 until 1960. Her most frequent performances were as Lucia (93 performances), Lakmé (50 performances), Gilda in Verdi's Rigoletto (49 performances), and Rosina in Rossini's The Barber of Seville (33 performances). She drew a record crowd of over 300,000 to Chicago's Grant Park Music Festival in 1939 for a free concert.[5]

In 1944, during World War II, Pons cancelled her fall and winter season in New York and instead toured with the USO, entertaining troops with her singing. Her husband Andre Kostelanetz directed a band composed of American soldiers as accompaniment to her voice. The pair performed at military bases in North Africa, Italy, the Middle East, the Persian Gulf, India, and Burma in 1944.[6] In places, the heat of the sun at the outdoor performances was so overbearing that Pons, always wearing a strapless evening gown, held wet towels to her head between numbers.[7]

 
Lily Pons on 8 January 1945 visiting the 24th Combat Mapping Squadron in Bengal, India

In 1945, the tour continued through China, Belgium, France, and Germany in a performance near the front lines.[8] Returning home, she toured the U.S., breaking attendance records in cities such as Milwaukee at which 30,000 attended her performance on July 20, 1945. That same month, she also appeared in Mexico City, conducted by Gaetano Merola.[9]

In 1949 Pons translated into English Jean Cocteau's screenplay and accompanying essays for The Blood of a Poet, calling his film "this great piece of French visual music."[10]

Other roles in her repertoire included Olympia in Jacques Offenbach's The Tales of Hoffmann, Philine in Ambroise Thomas's Mignon, Amina in Vincenzo Bellini's La sonnambula, Marie in Donizetti's The Daughter of the Regiment, the title role in Delibes's Lakmé, the Queen in Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov's Golden Cockerel, and the title role in Donizetti's Linda di Chamounix, (a role she sang in the opera's Met premiere on March 1, 1934). The last major new role Pons performed (she learned the role during her first season at the Met) was Violetta in La traviata, which she sang at the San Francisco Opera. Another role Pons learned, but decided not to sing, was Mélisande in Debussy's opera Pelléas et Mélisande; the reason, as she confided in a later interview, was twofold: first, because she felt soprano Bidu Sayão owned the role; and secondly, because the tessitura lay mainly in the middle register of the soprano voice rather than in the higher register. In her last performance at the Met, on December 14, 1960, she sang "Caro nome" from Rigoletto as part of a gala performance.[11]

She also made guest appearances at the Opéra Garnier in Paris, Royal Opera House in London, La Monnaie in Brussels, Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, and the Chicago Opera. Her final opera appearance was as Lucia to the Edgardo of 21-year-old Plácido Domingo in 1962 at the Fort Worth Opera.[1] On February 11, 1960, Pons appeared on NBC's The Ford Show, Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford.[12]

Although Pons continued to sing concerts after she retired, her greatest acclaim occurred in May 1972, when the news media announced that she would emerge from retirement to sing a concert at Lincoln Center under the baton of Andre Kostelanetz, her former husband. All tickets to the concert were sold within an hour of their availability. The program of the historic concert, which took place on Wednesday evening, May 31, 1972, did not include any of the coloratura arias which Pons sang in her prime, but did include ones more suited to her range at age 74. As she often did in earlier concerts, she included “Estrellita” among the songs in her program, and received a prolonged ovation after the concluding note.

Radio, television, and film edit

She starred in three RKO films: I Dream Too Much (1935) with Henry Fonda, That Girl from Paris (1936), and Hitting a New High (1937). She also performed an aria in the 1947 film Carnegie Hall.

Death edit

 
Grave, Cannes

Pons died of pancreatic cancer in Dallas, Texas, at the age of 77. Her remains were brought back to her birthplace to be interred in the Cimetière du Grand Jas in Cannes.[13] Her only direct living relative, her nephew, John de Bry (son of her sister, Juliette Pons), is an archaeologist living in Florida.

Legacy edit

A village in Frederick County, Maryland, 10 miles south of Frederick, Maryland, is called Lilypons in her honor.[14]

George Gershwin was in the process of writing a piece of music dedicated to her when he died in 1937. The incomplete sketch was found among Gershwin's papers after his death, and was eventually revived and completed by Michael Tilson Thomas; it was given the simple title, "For Lily Pons".[15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22]

Pons donated Ita, her pet ocelot, to the New York Zoological Gardens when it became too dangerous to remain in her apartment in The Ansonia on Manhattan's Upper West Side. Pons had received the pet, which she believed was a baby jaguar, from a friend in Brazil. The pet and Pons were very attached to each other, but it snarled at visitors and was deemed a hazard.[23]

The 1937 Merrie Melodies cartoon The Woods Are Full of Cuckoos caricatures Pons as "Lily Swans".

In 1937 the Boston and Maine Railroad, at the suggestion of Wayne E. Whittemore of the Hobbs Junior High School in Medford, Massachusetts, named its locomotive 4108, a 4-8-2 Mountain in her honor and invited her to a ceremony at North Station to dedicate 4108 and other Mountain locomotives whose names were chosen by New England schoolchildren. [24]

In Stephen Frears's 2016 film Florence Foster Jenkins, Pons is played by Aida Garifullina.

There is a line of depression-era glassware, originally created in the 1930s, known as "Lily Pons." It comes in several colors and takes the shape of lily pads and lily flowers.[25]

Recordings edit

External audio
  Lily Pons performing:
"Ombre Legere" (Shadow Song) from "Dinorah" and
"The Mad Scene" from Lucia di Lammermoor
in 1948
Here on archive.org

Pons left a significant legacy of recordings, on the Odeon (1928-29), RCA Victor (1930-40), and Columbia (1941-54) labels, and included excerpts from Il barbiere di Siviglia, La bohème, Les contes d'Hoffmann, Die Entführung aus dem Serail, Die Zauberflöte, Lakmé, Mireille, Le nozze di Figaro, Parysatis, Rigoletto, Alessandro, Le coq d'or, Dinorah, Floridante, Lucia di Lammermoor, Mignon, L'enfant et les sortilèges, La fille du régiment, Linda di Chamounix, La perle du Brésil, Porgy and Bess, I puritani, Il re pastore, Roméo et Juliette, La sonnambula, Le timbre d'argent, La traviata, Le toréador, Zémire et Azor, as well as songs by Debussy, Duparc, Fauré, Gounod, and Milhaud.

Pons also starred in complete recordings of Die Fledermaus (as Adele, 1950-51) and Lucia di Lammermoor (1954).

References edit

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Fred Cohn (October 2011). "Tiger Lily". Opera News. 76 (4).
  2. ^ a b Drake & Beall Ludecke 1999, p. 24.
  3. ^ Edwin Schallert (October 28, 1951). "Broadway Songstress, Captured by Films, Looks to Rosy Future". Los Angeles Times.
  4. ^ Meeks, Eric G. (2012). The Best Guide Ever to Palm Springs Celebrity Homes. Horatio Limburger Oglethorpe. p. 282. ISBN 978-1479328598.
  5. ^ Macaluso, Tony; Bachrach, Julia S.; Samors, Neal (2009). Sounds of Chicago's Lakefront: A Celebration Of The Grant Park Music Festival. Chicago's Book Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-9797892-6-7.
  6. ^ "Lily Pons Here". The Last Roundup. Delhi: Carl Warren Weidenburner. April 11, 1946. Archived from the original on June 30, 2012. Retrieved October 19, 2010.
  7. ^ Drake & Beall Ludecke 1999, p. 186.
  8. ^ Drake & Beall Ludecke 1999, p. 151.
  9. ^ Drake & Beall Ludecke 1999, p. 82.
  10. ^ Pons, Lily. "Translator's Note" in Jean Cocteau, The Blood of a Poet. New York: Bodley Press, 1949, p. ix.
  11. ^ Gala performance, Metropolitan Opera House, 14 December 1960
  12. ^ . www.ernieford.com. Archived from the original on December 21, 2010. Retrieved November 25, 2010.
  13. ^ Cannes Tourist Office
  14. ^ . AllRefer.com. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved December 8, 2009.
  15. ^ "Gershwin: Rhapsody In Blue, Preludes for Piano, Short Story, Violin Piece, Second Rhapsody, For Lily Pons, Sleepless Night, Promenade by Los Angeles Philharmonic & Michael Tilson Thomas". June 23, 1985 – via itunes.apple.com.
  16. ^ "For Lily Pons, for piano (Gershwin… &#124); Recording Details and Tracks". AllMusic.
  17. ^ "George Gershwin, Michael Tilson Thomas, Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra – Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue / Second Rhapsody For Orchestra with Piano / Klavier / Preludes Unpublished Piano Works". amazon.com. 1985.
  18. ^ "Melody No. 79 "For Lily Pons"(Arr. M. Tilson Thomas for Piano) by Michael Tilson Thomas;Los Angeles Philharmonic on Amazon Music". amazon.com.
  19. ^ Ericson, Raymond (August 18, 1985). "Gershwin Stars in a Display of American Musical Variety". The New York Times.
  20. ^ Jablonski, Edward; Stewart, Lawrence D. (August 22, 1996). The Gershwin Years: George and Ira. Hachette Books. p. 362. ISBN 9780306807398.
  21. ^ "For Lily Pons (Gershwin Melody #79)" performed by the Los Angeles Philharmonic & Michael Tilson Thomas on Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue, Preludes for Piano, Short Story, Violin Piece, Second Rhapsody, For Lily Pons, Sleepless Night, Promenade, by Sony Classical/Legacy.
  22. ^ "Recommended Recordings of Music by George Gershwin (Music Feature)". music.minnesota.publicradio.org.
  23. ^ Twomey, Bill (February 20, 2015). "Met Opera's Lily Pons leaves pet at Bronx Zoo". Bronx Times-Reporter. p. 48.
  24. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMqctR3Xn-c
  25. ^ "Lily Pons". www.carnivalheaven.com. Retrieved January 15, 2021.

Sources

External links edit

lily, pons, internet, celebrity, lele, pons, alice, joséphine, pons, april, 1898, february, 1976, known, professionally, french, american, operatic, lyric, coloratura, soprano, actress, active, career, from, late, 1920s, through, early, 1970s, opera, singer, s. For the internet celebrity see Lele Pons Alice Josephine Pons April 12 1898 February 13 1976 known professionally as Lily Pons was a French American operatic lyric coloratura soprano and actress who had an active career from the late 1920s through the early 1970s As an opera singer she specialized in the coloratura soprano repertoire and was particularly associated with the title roles in Lakme and Lucia di Lammermoor In addition to appearing as a guest artist with many opera houses internationally Pons enjoyed a long association with the Metropolitan Opera in New York City where she performed nearly 300 times between 1931 and 1960 Lily PonsLily Pons ca 1937BornAlice Josephine Pons 1898 04 12 April 12 1898Draguignan FranceDiedFebruary 13 1976 1976 02 13 aged 77 Dallas Texas U S Resting placeCimetiere du Grand Jas CannesCitizenshipFranceUnited StatesOccupationsOpera singeractressYears active1920s 1970sKnown forMetropolitan Opera lyric coloratura sopranoSpousesAugust Mesritz m 1930 div 1933 wbr Andre Kostelanetz m 1938 div 1958 wbr She also had a successful and lucrative career as a concert singer which continued until her retirement from performance in 1973 From 1935 to 1937 she made three musical films for RKO Pictures She also made numerous appearances on radio and on television performing on variety programs such as The Ed Sullivan Show The Colgate Comedy Hour and The Dave Garroway Show In 1955 she topped the bill for the first broadcast of what became an iconic television series Sunday Night at the London Palladium She made dozens of records recording both classical and popular music She was awarded the Croix de Lorraine and the Legion d honneur by the government of France Pons was also adept at making herself into a marketable cultural icon Her opinions on fashion and home decorating were frequently reported in women s magazines and she appeared as the face for Lockheed airplanes Knox gelatin and Libby s tomato juice advertisements A town in Maryland named itself after her and thereafter the singer contrived to have all her Christmas cards posted from Lilypons Maryland Opera News wrote in 2011 Pons promoted herself with a kind of marketing savvy that no singer ever had shown before and very few have since only Luciano Pavarotti was quite so successful at exploiting the mass media 1 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Radio television and film 4 Death 5 Legacy 6 Recordings 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and education edit nbsp Lily Pons at CKAC Montreal 1939Pons was born in Draguignan in Provence to a French father Leonard Louis Auguste Antoine Pons and an Italian born mother Maria nee Naso later known as Marie Petronille Pons She first studied piano at the Paris Conservatory winning the first prize at the age of 15 At the onset of World War I in 1914 she moved with her mother and younger sister Juliette born December 22 1902 died 1995 to Cannes where she played piano and sang for soldiers at receptions given in support of the French troops and at the famous Hotel Carlton that had been transformed into a hospital and where her mother worked as a volunteer nurse orderly In 1925 encouraged by soprano Dyna Beumer nl and August Mesritz a successful publisher who agreed to fund her singing career she started taking singing lessons in Paris with Alberto de Gorostiaga es She later studied singing with Alice Zeppilli in New York 2 3 On October 15 1930 Pons married her first husband Mesritz and spent the next several years as a housewife The marriage ended in divorce on December 7 1933 1 2 Career editPons successfully made her operatic debut in the title role of Leo Delibes Lakme at Mulhouse in 1928 under Reynaldo Hahn s baton and went on to sing several coloratura roles in French provincial opera houses She was discovered by the dramatic tenor impresario Giovanni Zenatello who took her to New York where she auditioned for Giulio Gatti Casazza the general manager of the Metropolitan Opera The Met needed a star coloratura after the retirement of Amelita Galli Curci in January 1930 Gatti Casazza engaged Pons immediately and she also signed a recording contract with RCA Victor nbsp Pons in a costume from I Dream Too Much 1935On January 3 1931 Pons unknown in the U S made an unheralded Met debut as Lucia in Donizetti s Lucia di Lammermoor and on that occasion the spelling of her first name was changed to Lily Her performance received tremendous acclaim She became a star and inherited most of Galli Curci s important coloratura roles Her career after this point was primarily in the United States She became a naturalized citizen of the United States in 1940 From 1938 to 1958 she was married to conductor Andre Kostelanetz In 1955 they built a home in Palm Springs California 4 Pons was a principal soprano at the Met for 30 years appearing 300 times in 10 roles from 1931 until 1960 Her most frequent performances were as Lucia 93 performances Lakme 50 performances Gilda in Verdi s Rigoletto 49 performances and Rosina in Rossini s The Barber of Seville 33 performances She drew a record crowd of over 300 000 to Chicago s Grant Park Music Festival in 1939 for a free concert 5 In 1944 during World War II Pons cancelled her fall and winter season in New York and instead toured with the USO entertaining troops with her singing Her husband Andre Kostelanetz directed a band composed of American soldiers as accompaniment to her voice The pair performed at military bases in North Africa Italy the Middle East the Persian Gulf India and Burma in 1944 6 In places the heat of the sun at the outdoor performances was so overbearing that Pons always wearing a strapless evening gown held wet towels to her head between numbers 7 nbsp Lily Pons on 8 January 1945 visiting the 24th Combat Mapping Squadron in Bengal IndiaIn 1945 the tour continued through China Belgium France and Germany in a performance near the front lines 8 Returning home she toured the U S breaking attendance records in cities such as Milwaukee at which 30 000 attended her performance on July 20 1945 That same month she also appeared in Mexico City conducted by Gaetano Merola 9 In 1949 Pons translated into English Jean Cocteau s screenplay and accompanying essays for The Blood of a Poet calling his film this great piece of French visual music 10 Other roles in her repertoire included Olympia in Jacques Offenbach s The Tales of Hoffmann Philine in Ambroise Thomas s Mignon Amina in Vincenzo Bellini s La sonnambula Marie in Donizetti s The Daughter of the Regiment the title role in Delibes s Lakme the Queen in Nikolai Rimsky Korsakov s Golden Cockerel and the title role in Donizetti s Linda di Chamounix a role she sang in the opera s Met premiere on March 1 1934 The last major new role Pons performed she learned the role during her first season at the Met was Violetta in La traviata which she sang at the San Francisco Opera Another role Pons learned but decided not to sing was Melisande in Debussy s opera Pelleas et Melisande the reason as she confided in a later interview was twofold first because she felt soprano Bidu Sayao owned the role and secondly because the tessitura lay mainly in the middle register of the soprano voice rather than in the higher register In her last performance at the Met on December 14 1960 she sang Caro nome from Rigoletto as part of a gala performance 11 She also made guest appearances at the Opera Garnier in Paris Royal Opera House in London La Monnaie in Brussels Teatro Colon in Buenos Aires and the Chicago Opera Her final opera appearance was as Lucia to the Edgardo of 21 year old Placido Domingo in 1962 at the Fort Worth Opera 1 On February 11 1960 Pons appeared on NBC s The Ford Show Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford 12 Although Pons continued to sing concerts after she retired her greatest acclaim occurred in May 1972 when the news media announced that she would emerge from retirement to sing a concert at Lincoln Center under the baton of Andre Kostelanetz her former husband All tickets to the concert were sold within an hour of their availability The program of the historic concert which took place on Wednesday evening May 31 1972 did not include any of the coloratura arias which Pons sang in her prime but did include ones more suited to her range at age 74 As she often did in earlier concerts she included Estrellita among the songs in her program and received a prolonged ovation after the concluding note Radio television and film editShe starred in three RKO films I Dream Too Much 1935 with Henry Fonda That Girl from Paris 1936 and Hitting a New High 1937 She also performed an aria in the 1947 film Carnegie Hall Death edit nbsp Grave CannesPons died of pancreatic cancer in Dallas Texas at the age of 77 Her remains were brought back to her birthplace to be interred in the Cimetiere du Grand Jas in Cannes 13 Her only direct living relative her nephew John de Bry son of her sister Juliette Pons is an archaeologist living in Florida Legacy editA village in Frederick County Maryland 10 miles south of Frederick Maryland is called Lilypons in her honor 14 George Gershwin was in the process of writing a piece of music dedicated to her when he died in 1937 The incomplete sketch was found among Gershwin s papers after his death and was eventually revived and completed by Michael Tilson Thomas it was given the simple title For Lily Pons 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Pons donated Ita her pet ocelot to the New York Zoological Gardens when it became too dangerous to remain in her apartment in The Ansonia on Manhattan s Upper West Side Pons had received the pet which she believed was a baby jaguar from a friend in Brazil The pet and Pons were very attached to each other but it snarled at visitors and was deemed a hazard 23 The 1937 Merrie Melodies cartoon The Woods Are Full of Cuckoos caricatures Pons as Lily Swans In 1937 the Boston and Maine Railroad at the suggestion of Wayne E Whittemore of the Hobbs Junior High School in Medford Massachusetts named its locomotive 4108 a 4 8 2 Mountain in her honor and invited her to a ceremony at North Station to dedicate 4108 and other Mountain locomotives whose names were chosen by New England schoolchildren 24 In Stephen Frears s 2016 film Florence Foster Jenkins Pons is played by Aida Garifullina There is a line of depression era glassware originally created in the 1930s known as Lily Pons It comes in several colors and takes the shape of lily pads and lily flowers 25 Recordings editExternal audio nbsp Lily Pons performing Ombre Legere Shadow Song from Dinorah and The Mad Scene from Lucia di Lammermoor in 1948 Here on archive orgPons left a significant legacy of recordings on the Odeon 1928 29 RCA Victor 1930 40 and Columbia 1941 54 labels and included excerpts from Il barbiere di Siviglia La boheme Les contes d Hoffmann Die Entfuhrung aus dem Serail Die Zauberflote Lakme Mireille Le nozze di Figaro Parysatis Rigoletto Alessandro Le coq d or Dinorah Floridante Lucia di Lammermoor Mignon L enfant et les sortileges La fille du regiment Linda di Chamounix La perle du Bresil Porgy and Bess I puritani Il re pastore Romeo et Juliette La sonnambula Le timbre d argent La traviata Le toreador Zemire et Azor as well as songs by Debussy Duparc Faure Gounod and Milhaud Pons also starred in complete recordings of Die Fledermaus as Adele 1950 51 and Lucia di Lammermoor 1954 References editNotes a b c Fred Cohn October 2011 Tiger Lily Opera News 76 4 a b Drake amp Beall Ludecke 1999 p 24 Edwin Schallert October 28 1951 Broadway Songstress Captured by Films Looks to Rosy Future Los Angeles Times Meeks Eric G 2012 The Best Guide Ever to Palm Springs Celebrity Homes Horatio Limburger Oglethorpe p 282 ISBN 978 1479328598 Macaluso Tony Bachrach Julia S Samors Neal 2009 Sounds of Chicago s Lakefront A Celebration Of The Grant Park Music Festival Chicago s Book Press p 62 ISBN 978 0 9797892 6 7 Lily Pons Here The Last Roundup Delhi Carl Warren Weidenburner April 11 1946 Archived from the original on June 30 2012 Retrieved October 19 2010 Drake amp Beall Ludecke 1999 p 186 Drake amp Beall Ludecke 1999 p 151 Drake amp Beall Ludecke 1999 p 82 Pons Lily Translator s Note in Jean Cocteau The Blood of a Poet New York Bodley Press 1949 p ix Gala performance Metropolitan Opera House 14 December 1960 The Ford Show Starring Tennessee Ernie Ford www ernieford com Archived from the original on December 21 2010 Retrieved November 25 2010 Cannes Tourist Office Lilypons Maryland MD AllRefer com Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved December 8 2009 Gershwin Rhapsody In Blue Preludes for Piano Short Story Violin Piece Second Rhapsody For Lily Pons Sleepless Night Promenade by Los Angeles Philharmonic amp Michael Tilson Thomas June 23 1985 via itunes apple com For Lily Pons for piano Gershwin amp 124 Recording Details and Tracks AllMusic George Gershwin Michael Tilson Thomas Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra Gershwin Rhapsody in Blue Second Rhapsody For Orchestra with Piano Klavier Preludes Unpublished Piano Works amazon com 1985 Melody No 79 For Lily Pons Arr M Tilson Thomas for Piano by Michael Tilson Thomas Los Angeles Philharmonic on Amazon Music amazon com Ericson Raymond August 18 1985 Gershwin Stars in a Display of American Musical Variety The New York Times Jablonski Edward Stewart Lawrence D August 22 1996 The Gershwin Years George and Ira Hachette Books p 362 ISBN 9780306807398 For Lily Pons Gershwin Melody 79 performed by the Los Angeles Philharmonic amp Michael Tilson Thomas on Gershwin Rhapsody in Blue Preludes for Piano Short Story Violin Piece Second Rhapsody For Lily Pons Sleepless Night Promenade by Sony Classical Legacy Recommended Recordings of Music by George Gershwin Music Feature music minnesota publicradio org Twomey Bill February 20 2015 Met Opera s Lily Pons leaves pet at Bronx Zoo Bronx Times Reporter p 48 https www youtube com watch v BMqctR3Xn c Lily Pons www carnivalheaven com Retrieved January 15 2021 Sources Drake James A Beall Ludecke Kristin 1999 Lily Pons A Centennial Portrait Amadeus Press ISBN 1 57467 047 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lily Pons Lily Pons biography at Opera Vivra Lily Pons at IMDb Lily Pons at AllMovie Lily Pons at AllMusic Lily Pons recordings at Archive org Lily Pons at Virtual History Bell Song on YouTube Lakme from I Dream Too Much 1935 Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Opera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lily Pons amp oldid 1193061569, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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