Wednesday, 17 July 2024

Opera Queens, bathhouses and Vicky Edie - once more

The fact that it would have been the 110th birthday today of the celebrated soprano Miss Eleanor Steber has prompted me for a second time to re-visit an ancient post of mine [originally from my MySpace years, and relocated with all the others to my other blog Give 'em the Old Razzle Dazzle] from 2008. The original was in the immediate aftermath of a literary event I attended called "The Lavender Library", at which Mr Paul Burston had enthused about one of my own favourite books of all time, Queens by Pickles, from which I had just rediscovered...

...a passage from the chapter Cruising at the Opera in which "The Opera Queen" - who is "wild about applause, always yelling 'Brava' whilst all about him bellow their ignorance of gender" - has a bitchy conversation at the opera house with his friend:
Friend: "Just look at those diamonds! Look at them! She must be rolling in it! She looks a bit like Margaret Dumont, don't you think?"
Geoffrey: "Some women are so camp, aren't they?"
Friend: "What! They're hysterical! Talk about camp, dear - just give me Eleanor Steber at the Continental Baths! Have you got that album?"
Geoffrey: "Oh, I've tried everywhere. Everywhere! Deleted now!"
Friend: "Oh God, yes! I found mine in New York, actually. Ten dollars. I can't remember when I was so thrilled! Shall we have a little troll upstairs? You never know what you're missing in this place!"
Geoffrey: "I love walking up this staircase. It's so Joan Crawford, isn't it?"
Well, apart from being a brilliant observation of the interplay between queens - it could be Madam Arcati and I and our friends chatting - this set me thinking. Just who is/was Eleanor Steber? And could it be true that an opera singer (if that is indeed who she was) actually performed at the most notorious of the sex-club bathhouses in New York in the 70s? The home of Bette Midler and Barry Manilow (who started out as an act there)? So off I went on a web search to find out more...

Eleanor Steber, who died in 1990, was indeed an American operatic soprano - one of the first major opera stars to have achieved the highest success with training and a career based in the United States. Before her, most of the biggest stars of opera were European. Noted particularly for her performances of Wagner, Mozart, Puccini and Richard Strauss, she rose to prominence in the 1950s with the Metropolitan Opera, and performed at Bayreuth.

A bit of a high-living party-loving girl, her voice suffered towards the end of her career, but not before she paid a tribute to some of her greatest fans - gay men - by performing at the Continental Baths in 1973. And to top the whole search, I have found a copy of the original recording online!

Listen to or download the whole album as an MP3

Eleanor Steber live at the Continental - track listing:

  • Mozart: Zeffiretti lusinghieri (from Idomeno), Ach, ich fuehl's (from Die Zauberfloete), Come scoglio (from Cosi fan tutte);
  • Charpentier: Depuis le jour (from Louise);
  • Puccini: Quando m'en vo (from La Boheme);
  • Massenet: Scene and Gavotte (from Manon);
  • Sieczynski: Wien, du Stadt meiner Traeume;
  • Kreisler: Stars in My Eyes;
  • Lehar: Medley from The Merry Widow;
  • Puccini: Vissi d'Arte (from Tosca).
Edwin Biltcliffe, Piano; Joseph Rabb, Violin.October 4, 1973.

It is strange listening to this very old and very camp recording of a bygone gay era - before AIDS and the hysteria it whipped up closed bathhouses like this forever.

In particular, I found it very interesting how much Ms Steber's speaking voice must have influenced Bette Midler when she created her character Vicky Edie (from whence came my own epithet "Dolores Delargo the Toast of Chicago!").

But those reflections aside, I most enjoyed finding this beautiful vocal performance intact and online. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did!

And, SIXTEEN YEARS on from the original post, I still hope you do...

Eleanor Steber (17th July 1914 - 3rd October 1990)

16 comments:

  1. Times cha... wait! I suppose I really mean tastes have changed so much...
    Every generation says that..."things changed after the war..." "I don't understand all these songs today..." "what are they wearing? Well, NOT wearing!..."
    But good voices, whatever they sing, will (I hope!) always be heard.


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    1. I struggle with the concept of gay men going to a sauna for sex, then sitting around in towels listening to arias from Puccini, Mozart and Lehar... Jx

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    2. Jazz is not classical music. Jx

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    3. No, but great art can start life in not very respectable places.

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  2. No one ever said you can only listen to Mozart with your clothes on. It's not the law.

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    1. Mozart probably would have approved. Jx

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    2. I don't think he was setting out to write music that *only* the fully clothed would hear.

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    3. Do you have some kind of issue here? I've re-posted a blog I was very proud of from sixteen years ago, about a very camp scenario in the 1970s featuring an unlikely situation of an opera diva appearing in a gay bathhouse and her voice perhaps being an inspiration to Bette Midler. Yet you seem to be making this into some kind of issue about where jazz started and whether there is some kind of implied moral judgement about clothed or unclothed audiences. Yet not a single word about the music, the lady, nor anything in the post itself. Why? Jx

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    4. Sorry I didn't mean to upset you. I enjoyed your article, I was just pointing out people can be interested in classical music and sitting around in Bath towels. There *isnt* a contradiction there.

      I really honestly enjoy your site a lot and don't mean to upset you.

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  3. All so fascinating!!! Who knew? That is amazing. Makes one wonder who else may have done a "one night only performance in the baths we don't even know of. It's the one thing I love about Fire Island. One never knows who may show up at the dance palaces there. Last time there Patti Lupone sang, and for the longest time the crowd though she was a drag queen. I post about that. In other trips spotted was Betty Buckley and Marilyn Maye, and Gloria Gaynor.

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    1. Apparently stars who appeared at the Baths (apart from Ms Steber, Ms Midler and Mr Manilow) include Peter Allen, Cab Calloway, Lesley Gore, Paul Jabara, Andy Kaufman, Larry Kert, Labelle, the Manhattan Transfer, Melba Moore, Freda Payne, Phoebe Snow and Sarah Vaughan! Imagine? All that, and a blowjob too! Jx

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  4. Acoustics are always better in the bathroom!
    She has a very clear voice, and a knowing look in her eye.
    Sx

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    1. She reminds me soooo much of the divine Miss Coral Browne in that first photo! Jx

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    2. Snap! I thought of Coral Browne, too.

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    3. They both had looks that could kill! Hope you followed my link for some of Miss Browne's magnificently potty-mouthed put-downs. Whether Miss Steber ever swore like that is not on record... Jx

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