Elizabeth Fretwell

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Elizabeth Fretwell OBE (13 August 1920 - 5 June 2006) was an Australian soprano. She was the prima donna at London's Sadler's Wells Opera (English National Opera) through much of the 1950s and 1960s.[1]

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[edit] Early life and career

Born Betty Drina Fretwell in Murrumbeena, a suburb of Melbourne, as a child she had hoped to become a ballerina. However, she grew too big for this profession. She focussed instead on singing, taking vocal studies in Melbourne. In order to gain greater skill she moved to London to study under the tenor Joseph Hislop who had also coached Jussi Björling and Birgit Nilsson.[1]

After returning to Australia she quickly started to make a name for herself, taking soprano roles in operas by Mozart and Puccini, amongst others. It was while on an Australian national tour of Tosca that she had an extramarital affair with the Australian baritone Robert Simmons (they were later to marry), with whom she later had a son, John Simmons now a Melbourne Architect, and a daughter Geraldine 'Geri' Roggiero nee Simmons now a Sydney wildlife artist. This caused a scandal in 1950s Australia so she and Simmons headed for the UK.

[edit] Sadler's Wells

Once in Britain, Fretwell's first professional engagement was for Dublin's Grand Opera company. Her performances there came to the attention of Sadler's Wells and in 1955 they engaged her services. Sadler's was where Fretwell's finest performances were given, and she gained rave reviews. This was no small achievement given that at that time Maria Callas was dominant on the London opera stage. From the early-1960s to 1970 she went back and forth between Australia and the UK performing. In 1965 she gave her only performances at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, in Aida and Il Tabarro.[2]

[edit] Later career and death

In 1970 Betty Fretwell returned permanently to Australia and during 1973 sang in the opening season of the Sydney Opera House. She remained a member of the Australian Opera (now Opera Australia) until her retirement. In her later career she took on smaller roles, to give up and coming singers there chance to further their careers as principal singers. Her retirement was very low key, no one in the Company knew of her impending retirement until after she had left. She did not want any fanfare, or accolades at her last performance, and therefore only the management of the Australian Opera knew of her decision to retire in the late 1980s. She simply gave her last performance, then quietly went to her dressing room, packed up her makeup and personal belongings, and went home to her beloved house at Bayview, and reverted to her married name of Betty Simmons.

She was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1977[3]. She died suddenly at her Bayview home, on the northern beaches of Sydney, 5th June 2006, from a Ruptured Cerebral Artery Aneurysm, aged 85.[1]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c The Independent obituary
  2. ^ The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Opera
  3. ^ It's an Honour - OBE