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Helena Forti (November 17, 1884 in Berlin - May 11, 1942 in Vienna) was a dramatic soprano active 1906 – 1924, closely associated with the Dresden royal court opera, known for her beauty, voice and strong stage presence. She sang all Wagner’s opera heroines, in Dresden, Bayreuth and internationally. Other repertoire included the title role in Verdi’s Aida, Santuzza in Cavalleria  and contemporary works like Marietta in Korngold’s Die tote Stadt. She created the role of Mytocle in Eugen d’Albert’s opera Die toten Augen. Her Sieglinde in Die Walküre in Braunschweig was described by the Neue Zeitschrift für Musik as “Equally endowed with youth, beauty and vocal means... (Forti) immerses herself so intensely in her role that one believes the transformation of the virgin-Goddess into a human form.” After retiring from singing she taught voice and acting in Gera, Düsseldorf and Vienna. She died in Vienna, where she lived with her stage director and Intendant husband, Walter Bruno Iltz.

Family
Helena Forti was born in Berlin, on the 25th of April, 1884. Alternative birth dates are 25. April, 1884, or 1886. Forti was “a true stage child” to theater-parents. Her father Anton Fiedler, "so called Forti", was a tenor and “academic painter” who ran a shop renting out paintings and etchings Anton Forti died in 1920

Helena Forti's mother was the Dresden-Residenztheater actress Minna Forti-Hänsel (1864?-1925?). Minna Hänsel was "one of the best soubrettes ever", according to the Die deutsche Schaubühne, and played in the 'second theater' in Dresden in 1869. After the loss of Gottfried Semper's 'first court opera' due to fire, her theater closed as well, and she moved to Berlin. Semper would go on to rebuild the theater to its current form, where Minna Hänsel's daughter Helena Forti would sing for many years. Hänsel sang the title role in Offenbach’s Helena at the Imperial German Court Theater (Kaiserlich-Deutsche Hoftheater) in St. Petersburg, in 1874, becoming a well-known soubrette who sang in Chemnitz, Görlitz, Hannover, Stuttgart (summer theater in Berg), Stettin and in Dresden, later a fine comic character-actress.

The Forti family's apartment in Dresden was in Zeughausstrasse 2, adjacent to the Synagogue (also designed by Gottfried Semper, the court opera architect). The Jewish local community had its offices in this building as well. Apart from participation in a 1916 concert in the synagogue, it is not known if Forti was Jewish - later, she would be accused of being Jewish in 1933.

Life
Already at 5 years of age, Helena Forti appeared in children’s roles at the Residenztheater in Dresden. Her professional stage debut was as an actress, at the Dessau court theater, at age sixteen in Goethe's The Brother and Sister (Die Geschwister). In Dessau she played the "Naive and Sentimental" 'Fach'. She also worked at the theater in Colberg.

In 1903 she studied singing with the Dresden Baritone Karl Scheidemantel, who would become Opera Director in Dresden in 1920, in her final years there; Further studies were with Teresa Emmerich in Berlin. Forti's stage Debut as a soprano operatic singer came in 1906, as Valentine in Giacomo Meyerbeer’s Hugenots at the Hoftheater Dessau, where she was a member of the soloist ensemble, staying till 1907. Numerous national and international performances followed, at the Royal opera in Stuttgart in 1907, 1908–09 at the Brno Theater, and 1910–11 in Angelo Neumann's Deutschen Theater in Prague. There she learnt her first dramatic roles, and sang contemporary pieces such as Deltnar’s Carmelita, and Felix Weingartner’s 'Orestea Trilogie' She sang as a guest in the Court Opera in Berlin (Valentine in Meyerbeers Hugenots) in 1908, in the theaters of Bremen and Braunschweig, in Vienna (as Elisabeth in Tannhäuser) in 1910 and 1913, and at the Munich Wagner-Festival (in 1911). Her last performance in Prag was Leonora in Fidelio, Alexander von Zemlinsky conducted.

Dresden 1911-1925
The reigning Wagner prima-donnas of the court theater of Dresden were Therese Malten and her successor Marie Wittich. Stars of Dresden and Bayreuth, they made way for a new, dramatically oriented singer like Strauss's choice for Diemuth (in Feuersnot) and the title role of Elektra. Yet Krull failed to achieve Wittich's star-status and left Dresden for Mannheim in 1911. Helena Forti had first appeared in Dresden during the Esperanto Congress in 1908, Dresden Royal court opera.jpg and in September 1911 sang Sieglinde in Die Walküre as a guest at the Royal court opera. She was then hired as Krull’s replacement in the soloist ensemble, and started her contract in Dresden on October 14th, 1911. The music director, Ernst von Schuch, writing to Strauss, described Forti as “A Brunnhilde presence, with a big voice”. Yet this very "Brunnhilde look" was a problem for Strauss, who warned against casting Forti as Salome, her being too “giant”. Forti's first role in Dresden was Elisabeth in Tannhäuser on October 25th, 1911, With Elisabeth, Forti earned a "noticeable success which should be decisive for her being further cast in Wagner roles. She brings not only the vocal size, but also the necessary pathos of expression." and she remained in Dresden till 1925, her last performance that of Adriano in Wagners Rienzi.

Forti sang the title roles of Aida,Fidelio and Carmen, Marina in Boris Godunov, Santuzza in Cavalleria, Antonia in Contes d'Hoffmann, Rachel in La Juive, Leonore im Il Trovatore, Amelia in Ballo in Maschera and even Pamina in der Die Zauberflöte, but mainly she was the Wagner-singer of Dresden: Senta in The Flying Dutchman Ortrud in Lohengrin, Isolde in Tristan und Isolde, Sieglinde in Die Walküre, and all other Wagner heroins, Elsa, Eva, Brünnhilde, Fricka, etc. Forti sang more contemporary pieces as well, the title role of Richard Strauss Ariadne auf Naxos, Minneleide in Hans Pfitzner's Die Rose vom Liebesgarten; most notably she created the role of Myrtocle in Eugen d’Albert's Opera Die toten Augen in 1916.

Other role creations were Maria in Arthur Wulffius's opera Gabina (1914), Eroon in Karl v. Kaskel's Schmiedein von Kent,(1916) Ilsebil in Naumanns opera Mantje timpe te, (1918), and Irene in Siegfried Wagner's Sonnenflammen, (1920). The opera was a success with the audience, due to Forti's excellent performance. Forti also sang Dresden's first performances of Erich Wolfgang Korngold's Marietta in Die Tote Stadt and the title role in his Violanta, as well as the role of Weibes (=a woman) in Paul Hindemith's opera, Mörder Hoffnung der Frauen

During her Dresden period she sang in Amsterdam, Berlin, (Kaiser's world creation of Stella Maris), Brussels, Bucharest, Cologne, Dessau (Isolde) Munich, Vienna, Zürich (Boris Godunov), and in Italy.

In 1914 Forti appeared for her only season at the Bayreuther Festspiele as Sieglinde in Richard Wagner'sDie Walküre and Kundry im Parsifal. Bühne und Welt wrote: "It was an event. No stage should have two such powerful Kundry-interpreters at the same time. Forti drew from the depths of all femininity, and was - in her internalization, and lightly consuming ecstasy, of indescribable urgency. One experienced the mystery of compassion."

Forti received the title of Kammersängerin in 1917. At the time of her death, Forti had two such titles, the one granted by the King in Dresden in 1917 ("Kgl. sächsische Kammersängerin"), it is unknown when and where she was granted the other title, "fürstlich-reußische Kammersängerin". .

Marriage to W.B. Iltz
in 1917, she married Dresden's "most famous and excellent" actor (and later stage director and Intendant ='General manager') Walter Bruno Iltz, who was “always seen sitting in the artist’s box when Forti sang, utterly immersed at her stage presence.“ The wedding took place in Tegernsee, Bavaria, where they purchased a house from Forti's tenor colleague Leo Slezak. In Dresden the couple lived in Forti’s parent’s apartment in Zeughausstr.2 The Dresden artist Georg Gelbke designed the couple's wedding announcement, as well as stationary for Helena Forti, based on a motif from Walküre. The Forti-Iltz couple were an important part of the Dresden artistic society, and were friends of Siegfried and Winifred Wagner, Paul Adolph (administrative director of the Dresden Theater), Oskar Walzel, Karl Mai, Max Mohr, and others. The artist Rudolf Scheffler included them in his book of caricatures of the most famous members of the royal court theater in Dresden.

Retirement from the stage
Forti left the Dresden Opera in 1925, her performances in Dresden and elsewhere dwindled. Online and other references to a "career breakthrough" in Germany after her "excellent" Marina in Boris Godunov in 1923 cannot be sourced and are in error; Forti definitely retired from singing by 1925. Years of singing the dramatic repertoire and a possible addiction to morphium may have taken their toll. Siegfried Wagner wrote her a flattering letter, expressing regret at her early retirement from the stage.

after Dresden
Forti's mother Minna died about 1925. Forti and her husband left the apartment in Zeughausstrasse 2 (it was taken over by the Dresden Kappelmeister Kurt Striegler). She followed her husband to Gera where he was Intendant and where she worked with the actors of his company. According to Theo Anna Sprüngli, Forti now "saw her own success in the success of her husband, her highest ambition was to see him achieving his plans." In Gera, Iltz's production of the 1925 play Katalaunische Schlacht by Arnolt Bronnen - a sexualized war drama offended public sensibilities, and Iltz, as well as his wife, Helena Forti, received an anonymous letter with threat of being shot.

in 1929 Forti followed Iltz to Düsseldforf, where he was named general director, and where she also continued to coach actors, and teach singing to (female) opera singers. The couple moved to Vienna, when Iltz became director of the Volksoper there. Forti died in Vienna, on the 11th of May, 1942, 58 years old, "after a long, severe nervous disorder triggered by her husband's clashes with the Nazi press and the Nazi party in Düsseldorf, which for many years had been "incomprehensible and agonizing" to her and her husband's existence She was buried in Tegernsee

Critical appreciation
There are no films or Video documents of Forti's artistry. She earned her place in the history of modern opera following the footsteps of singing actresses like Annie Krull. Bühnen und Welt of 1909 describes the young Forti in the Prag Maifestspiele as a “youthful singer with great sensuous charm and excellent vocal, acting and intellectual qualities." The author Oskar Walzel describes her Slavonic features, yet "on stage one could not imagine a more convincing personification of a Wagner heroine. Tall and slim, with reddish hair, she commanded gesture masterfully. Upon entering the stage as a Walkyrie, one says to one’s self, this, and in no other way, should a Brünnhilde look like… Yet Walzel and others also comments that Forti's vocal material and craftsmanship did not match her visual qualities, Forti was "no replacement for Marie Wittich". ibid, As early as 1911, Die Musik, while praising her Senta in Der fliegende Holländer, notes a certain difficulty in the top range of her voice. Her Isolde "looked better than it was sung", By the end, Der Merker, merely labels her last performance (Adriano in Rienzi) as "disappointing".

Theo A Sprüngli, the critic and activist wrote: "'An almost mystical magic, the magic of glowing life, emanated from her when she was on stage. She was always on fire inside, she always had to burn herself out; the fire of her enthusiasm, kindled by the primal-power of her heart, was never extinguished. Forti's innermost being was a rushing melody, her art a return of the heart to its divine origin: divine love.'"

Recordings

 * Brahms, song: Vergebliches Ständchen, 1920, Odeon
 * Gounod, Faust, aria: Jewel song, Zonophone
 * Rotoli, song: La Serenata, Zonophone
 * Wagner, Rinezi, aria: „in seiner Blüte“, 1920 odeon []
 * Wagner, Parsifal, “Grausamer! Fühlst Du im Herzen []
 * Leoncavallo, song: Mattinata, 1920, Odeon []

Repertoire
Sources: - Composer - Role - Opera title - note (if any)
 * Hochmuth: Chronicles of the Dresden opera (in German)
 * German Bühnenjahrbuch, (yearbook of theater activity) from 1943 (with an article about Forti listing her roles).
 * Other sources noted specifically


 * d’Albert, Marion Liebesketten
 * d’Albert, Marta, Tiefland
 * d’Albert, Myrtocle‚Die toten Augen, Role creation, Dresden
 * Aubert, Muette, Muette de Portici
 * Beethoven, Leonore, Fidelio
 * Bizet, Michaela, Carmen
 * Deltnar, Carmelita, Carmelita, Role creation, Prague,
 * Goetz, Katharina Wiederspenstigen Zähmung
 * Halevy, Rachel, La Juive
 * Hindemith, Frau, Mörder Hoffnung der Frauen
 * Kaiser, Marga, Stella Maris
 * Kaskel, Eroon, Schmiedin von Kent, Role creation, Dresden
 * Korngold, Marietta‚ die tote Stadt
 * Mascagni, Santuzza, Cavalleria
 * Meyerbeer, Valentine, Die Hugenotten
 * Meyerbeer, Selika, Die Afrikanerin
 * Mozart, Pamina, Die Zauberflöte
 * Mussorgsky, Marina, Boris Godunow
 * Naumann, Ilsebill‚ Mantje Timpe Te, Role creation, Dresden
 * Offenbach, Antonia, Tales of Hoffmann
 * Pfitzner, Minneleide, Die Rose vom Liebesgarten
 * Strauss, Ariadne, Ariadne auf Naxos
 * Verdi ,Aida‚ Aida
 * Verdi, Amelia, Un Ballo in Maschera
 * Verdi, Leonora, Il Trovatore
 * Wagner, Siegfrid, Irene, Sonnenflammen, Role creation, Dresden
 * Wagner, Elisabeth, Tannhäuser
 * Wagner, Elsa, Lohengrin
 * Wagner, Senta, Der Fliegende Holländer
 * Wagner, Brünnhilde, Die Walküre
 * Wagner, Brünnhilde, Götterdämmerung
 * Wagner, Kundry, Parsifal
 * Wagner, Adriano Rienzi
 * Wagner, Sieglinde, Die Walküre
 * Wagner, Isolde, Tristan und Isolde
 * Wagner, Venus, Tannhäuser
 * Wagner, Eva, Meistersinger
 * Wagner, Fricke, Das Rheingold
 * Wagner, Ortrud, Lohengrin
 * Waltershausen, Rosine, Oberst Chabert
 * Weingertner, Kassandra, Orestes Trilogie Role creation, Prague