Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Lotte Lenya heiratete noch zweimal – und überlebte auch diese Männer. 1979, zwei Jahre vor ihrem Tod, zog sie eine nachdenkliche Bilanz ihres Lebens mit Kurt Weill: »Wirklich gut kannte ihn eigentlich niemand. Ich habe mich oft gefragt, ob ich ihn gekannt habe. Ich war 24 Jahre lang mit ihm verheiratet, und bevor wir heirateten, lebten wir zwei Jahre miteinander, insgesamt also 26 Jahre ...

  2. The Lotte Lenya Competition. The Lotte Lenya Competition recognizes talented singer/actors of all nationalities, ages 19-32, who are dramatically and musically convincing in repertoire ranging from contemporary Broadway scores to opera/operetta, including the works of Kurt Weill.

  3. To celebrate the Lenya Competition's 25th anniversary in 2023, all prize amounts increased including the top prize from $20,000 to $25,000. To date more than $1.4 million has been awarded to almost 800 singers from dozens of countries through the Lenya Competition. Many winners of the Lenya Competition have gone on to illustrious careers.

  4. The Legendary Lotte Lenya. As an actress and chanteuse in Weimar-era Berlin, Lotte Lenya immortalized the music of her husband, composer Kurt Weill, with enthralling renditions of songs such as "Mack the Knife." Decades later, she relived that chapter of her life while appearing as Fräulein Schneider in the Broadway musical Cabaret (1966).

  5. Meets Weill. Lotte Lenya , née Karoline Wilhelmine Blamauer, was born on 18 October 1898 in Vienna to working-class parents. An abusive father and an early ambition to become a dancer led her in 1914 to Zurich, where she studied classical dance and the Dalcroze method and gained experience in the opera and ballet at the Stadttheater. As the ...

  6. 17. Apr. 2021 · Podcast abonnieren. Als Lotte Lenya (1898–1981) und Kurt Weill (1900–1950) sich 1924 begegneten und sich sofort ineinander verliebten, war das der Beginn einer turbulenten Beziehung eines ...

  7. The Weill-Lenya Research Center is located on the third floor of a 12-story building in a historic area of Manhattan known as the Flatiron District, situated west of Gramercy Park and east of Chelsea. It is accessible by subway (1,4,5,6,F,M,N,Q,R,W) and bus (M1-3, M7, M23, M55) lines. The facilities include a reading room, video viewing room ...