Christian Joseph Demmer (baptised 6 August 1772 – 22 September 1835) was a German-Austrian tenor and actor.
In spring 1795 he made a guest appearance with Friedrich Wilhelm Hunnius' troop in Wetzlar and appeared there on 16 and 26 May as Tamino in Mozart's The Magic Flute. Rheinische Musen, Volume 5, Mannheim 1795, Afterwards he followed Hunnius to Mainz, who united there with the travelling troop of Simon Friedrich Koberwein (1733 - after 1803). Also with this enterprise "Herr Demmer, the youngest of the three brothers" was active as first tenor.Heinrich August Ottokar Reichard (edit.): Theater-Kalender auf das Jahr 1796, Gotha 1796, , here Afterwards he worked until 1798 for Johann Ludwig Büchner's troop, which played mainly in Cologne and Mainz. The music director of both troops was Friedrich August Burgmüller. At this time he was already married with the actress Sophie Demmer née Ernst. Shortly afterwards he moved to the theater in Hamburg. In 1803 a report about the Hamburg theater reads: "Christian Demmer, singer at the local theater, left without saying goodbye to his friends, relatives and his wife." Hamburg and Altona. A Journal on the History of Time, Morals and Taste, vol. 2, volume 2, Hamburg 1803, It is still unclear where he spent the following years.
On March 30, 1809 he arrived from Regensburg in Vienna, where he moved to the Theater an der Wien.. From 28 April 1809 to 23 April 1824 he finally belonged to the ensemble of the Vienna Court Theatres. He celebrated his greatest successes in the role of Ober-Seneschall in the singspiel Jean de Paris by François-Adrien Boieldieu, which was performed for the first time on 28 August 1812 in the Theater am Kärntnertor. His brother Carl Demmer played the same role at the same time in a production of the Theater an der Wien. Ignaz Franz Castelli writes in his memoirs:
According to the Viennese artist directory by Franz Heinrich Böckh, "Demmer Christ, K-k lived (Hof-Opern-Sänger" 1821) "An der Wien No 38." Franz Heinrich Böckh, Wiens lebende Schriftsteller, Künstler und Dilettanten im Kunstfache, Vienna 1821, In autumn 1824 he went to the theatre in Graz. Wiener Musikalische Zeitung mit besonderer Rücksicht auf den österreichischen Kaiserstaat. Vol. 8, No. 98 of 8 December 1824, Last he worked in Prague. Demmer died there at age 63.
His brothers were the singers and actors Carl Demmer and Joseph Demmer. His son Friedrich Demmer was also a singer and actor.
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