Marion Nevada Talley (December 20, 1906 – January 3, 1983)"Marion Talley." Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians. New York: Schirmer, 2001. Biography In Context. Web. 18 July 2013. was an American operatic lyric coloratura soprano. She was at the time (1926) the youngest prima donna to have made a debut at the Metropolitan Opera; her swift rise to fame was followed by a period of decline, although she remained in the public eye for a number of years.
At the age of fifteen, Talley appeared in a 1922 Kansas City Grand Opera Company production of Mignon by Ambroise Thomas, and was a local sensation. Her career became a cause célèbre for the citizens of Kansas City, who attended benefit concerts and contributed money for her to study in New York, under the famed teacher Frank LaForge, and later in Italy. She unsuccessfully auditioned for the Metropolitan Opera in 1923.
That year featured two other Talley debuts. Two days later, she made her radio debut singing "Home! Sweet Home!" She also appeared in the first publicly exhibited shorts featuring the Vitaphone sound film, which premiered on Broadway theatre on August 6, along with the first Vitaphone feature-length film, Don Juan starring John Barrymore. The short films preceding the feature were a collection of musical performances featuring Talley along with a number of other classical and opera musicians including Henry Hadley conducting the New York Philharmonic, Mischa Elman, Josef Bonime, Efrem Zimbalist, Harold Bauer, Giovanni Martinelli, and Anna Case and Hawaiian guitarist Roy Smeck. Talley performed "Caro nome" from Rigoletto. Negative reviews of the Vitaphone premiere focused mainly on Talley, criticizing her inexperience as a performer and her lack of photogenic qualities. In 1927, she would appear in another Vitaphone short film, performing "Bella figlia dell'amore", the quartet from Rigoletto. along with Jeanne Gordon, Beniamino Gigli, and Giuseppe de Luca.
Talley spent four seasons with the Metropolitan Opera and appeared in seventy-six performances of seven operas, as well as in eight concerts where she performed alongside other Met artists, for a total of eighty-four performances. Besides her debut role of Gilda, her other Met roles were the title role in Lucia di Lammermoor by Gaetano Donizetti, the title role in Le rossignol by Igor Stravinsky, Olympia in Jacques Offenbach's Les contes d'Hoffmann, the Queen of the Night in The Magic Flute by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Philine in Ambroise Thomas' Mignon, and the Queen of Shemakha in Rimsky-Korsakov's The Golden Cockerel.
Talley was married twice. In 1932, she married German pianist Michael Raucheisen, but the marriage was annulled after a few months.Marion Talley Given Divorce: The annulment was granted last night in superior court here on the singer's charge that her husband had violated a pre-nuptial agreement by refusing Ms. Talley'
Marion Nevada Talley died on January 3, 1983, in Beverly Hills, California. Talley is buried at Westwood Memorial Park, Los Angeles, California.
/ref> That marriage ended with a lengthy custody battle over their daughter Susan, during which Talley was forced to admit on the witness stand that her daughter was born out of wedlock. "Susan a 'Love Child,' Marion Talley Admits," New York Daily News, 20 May 1941 Both marriages received much media publicity.
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