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==Early life and education== ==Early life and education==
Born to ] parents Emmanuel and Rosalie Grau,<ref name="Moravian"/> Maurice Grau was born in 1849 in Brünn, ]{{sfn| Gänzl|2001 |page=810}} (now ], ]).<ref name="Moravian">{{cite journal|url=https://www.tresbohemes.com/2019/01/moravian-maurice-grau-and-the-metropolitan-opera/|author=Kytka|date=3 January 2019|work=Très Bohèmes|publisher=Czechs in America Organization|title=Moravian Maurice Grau and the Metropolitan Opera}}</ref> In 1854 the Grau family immigrated to the United States when Maurice was five years old;{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}} settling in New York City where Emmanuel and Rosalie operated a boarding house.<ref name="Moravian"/> He was educated in the ] and then attended the New York Free Academy (now ]) where he graduated in 1867.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> He then matriculated to ] and while a student there was an apprentice in the law firm of Morrison, Lauterbach & Spitgarn.{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}} Born to ] parents Emmanuel and Rosalie Grau,<ref name="Moravian"/> Maurice Grau was born in 1849 in Brünn, ]{{sfn| Gänzl|2001 |page=810}} (now ], ]).<ref name="Moravian">{{cite journal|url=https://www.tresbohemes.com/2019/01/moravian-maurice-grau-and-the-metropolitan-opera/|author=Kytka|date=3 January 2019|journal=Très Bohèmes|publisher=Czechs in America Organization|title=Moravian Maurice Grau and the Metropolitan Opera}}</ref> In 1854 the Grau family immigrated to the United States when Maurice was five years old;{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}} settling in New York City where Emmanuel and Rosalie operated a boarding house.<ref name="Moravian"/> He was educated in the ] and then attended the New York Free Academy (now ]) where he graduated in 1867.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> He then matriculated to ] and while a student there was an apprentice in the law firm of Morrison, Lauterbach & Spitgarn.{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}}


Grau abandoned his law ambitions in favor of a career in the theatre; largely due to the influence of his uncle, ], who was a theatre impresario that specialized in importing French ] to the United States.{{sfn| Gänzl|2001 |page=810}} Maurice began working for his uncle as a child; selling ] to patrons at his uncle opera house.{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}} His uncle was appointed director of the ] in New York in 1862, but after a difficult tenure there during the ] he left to take over the management the ] in 1866.{{sfn|Carlson|1985|page=27}} At this time Maurice began working for his uncle in more serious theatre business endeavors at the age of seventeen,{{sfn| Gänzl|2001 |page=810}}{{sfn|Bordman|Hischak|2004|page=274}} and in 1872 he ultimately decided to not pursue the legal profession but embrace a career in artist management.<ref name="Grove"/> Grau abandoned his law ambitions in favor of a career in the theatre; largely due to the influence of his uncle, ], who was a theatre impresario that specialized in importing French ] to the United States.{{sfn| Gänzl|2001 |page=810}} Maurice began working for his uncle as a child; selling ] to patrons at his uncle opera house.{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}} His uncle was appointed director of the ] in New York in 1862, but after a difficult tenure there during the ] he left to take over the management the ] in 1866.{{sfn|Carlson|1985|page=27}} At this time Maurice began working for his uncle in more serious theatre business endeavors at the age of seventeen,{{sfn| Gänzl|2001 |page=810}}{{sfn|Bordman|Hischak|2004|page=274}} and in 1872 he ultimately decided to not pursue the legal profession but embrace a career in artist management.<ref name="Grove"/>


==Early arts management career with Carlo A. Chizzola==
==Career and later life==
{{construction}}
Grau began his career as a theatre manager and producer in 1872 when he formed a partnership with Carlo A. Chizzola.{{sfn| Gänzl|2001 |page=810}}{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}} Their partnership resulted in the first significant achievement of Grau's career: bringing the French soprano ] to the United States.{{sfn|Bordman|Hischak|2004|page=274}} Grau and Chizzola became Aimée's manager on February 12, 1872.<ref name="Grau_Sun_Obit" >{{cite news |title=Impresario Grau Is Dead: The Man Who Made the Metropolitan Famous |newspaper=The Sun |place=New York City |date=15 March 1907|page=9a |url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1907-03-15/ed-1/seq-9/ }}</ref> Theatre scholars ] and Thomas S. Hischak credited Aimée's American appearances with popularizing not only the genre of ] in the United States but also setting the foundation for the popularity of the musical within America.{{sfn|Bordman|Hischak|2004|page=274}} Grau began his career as a theatre manager and producer in 1872 when he formed a partnership with Carlo A. Chizzola.{{sfn| Gänzl|2001 |page=810}}{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}} Their partnership resulted in the first significant achievement of Grau's career: bringing the French soprano ] to the United States.{{sfn|Bordman|Hischak|2004|page=274}} Grau and Chizzola became Aimée's manager on February 12, 1872.<ref name="Grau_Sun_Obit" >{{cite news |title=Impresario Grau Is Dead: The Man Who Made the Metropolitan Famous |newspaper=The Sun |place=New York City |date=15 March 1907|page=9a |url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1907-03-15/ed-1/seq-9/ }}</ref> Theatre scholars ] and Thomas S. Hischak credited Aimée's American appearances with popularizing not only the genre of ] in the United States but also setting the foundation for the popularity of the musical within America.{{sfn|Bordman|Hischak|2004|page=274}}


Grau was also responsible for bringing ] to the United States for his much lauded and profitable 1872-1873 American tour.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> This tour was organized under the auspices of the ] company, as was a another tour Grau oversaw that year featuring the violinist ].{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}} In 1873 he co-founded the English Opera Company with ],<ref name="Grove"/> but this venture proved unsuccessful financially.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> He next brought the Italian actor ] to the United States,{{sfn|Bordman|Hischak|2004|page=274}} but his American tour of plays by ] performed in Italian also failed to make money.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> After this, he became the manager of New York's ] in 1874 but continued to struggle financially.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> Grau was also responsible for bringing ] to the United States for his much lauded and profitable 1872-1873 American tour.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> This tour was organized under the auspices of the ] company, as was a another tour Grau oversaw that year featuring the violinist ].{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}} In 1873 he co-founded the English Opera Company with ],<ref name="Grove"/> but this venture proved unsuccessful financially.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> He next brought the Italian actor ] to the United States,{{sfn|Bordman|Hischak|2004|page=274}} but his American tour of plays by ] performed in Italian also failed to make money.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> After this, he became the manager of New York's ] (FST) in 1874 but continued to struggle financially.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> Entertainers whom Grau brought to New York to star in productions at the FST included actresses ], ], and ]; actor ]; and the English Opera Bouffe Company led by its manager and star ].{{sfn|Grau|1909|page=276}}


In 1875, amidst a financial crises, Grau and Chizzola's partnership ceased.{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}}
In 1876 Grau rebounded with a tour featuring the French composer ];<ref name="Grove"/>{{sfn|Bordman|Hischak|2004|page=274}} although the composer's high fees made it financially a losing proposition<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> while publicly considered a triumph for Grau.<ref name="Grove"/> While Offenbach's thirty performances at ] was a monetary failure, this was offset by record breaking box office sales of a production of '']'' staged at Broadway's ] which was produced by Grau and featured Offenbach as conductor and Marie Aimée as its star.{{sfn|Grau|1909|page=276}}


==Bringing Offenbach and other European artists to America==
Grau made a large amount of money when he brought a French theatre troupe led by Paola Marie and Victor Capoul to the United States in a highly successful tour in 1879.<ref name="Grove"/> He also organized a tour featuring soprano ].{{sfn|Beach|Rines|1912|loc=Entry: Grau, Maurice}} Other prominent European artists he brought to the United States included actors ],{{sfn|Beach|Rines|1912|loc=Entry: Grau, Maurice}} ],{{sfn|Beach|Rines|1912|loc=Entry: Grau, Maurice}} and ];{{sfn|Beach|Rines|1912|loc=Entry: Grau, Maurice}} and actresses ], ], and ].{{sfn|Beach|Rines|1912|loc=Entry: Grau, Maurice}}
Grau rebounded with a 1876 tour featuring the French composer ].<ref name="Grove"/>{{sfn|Bordman|Hischak|2004|page=274}} While publicly considered a triumph for Grau,<ref name="Grove"/> the composer's high fees made it financially a losing proposition.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> Offenbach's thirty performances at ] were a monetary failure, but these were offset partly by record breaking box office sales of a production of '']'' staged at Broadway's ] which was produced by Grau and featured Offenbach as conductor and Marie Aimée as its star.{{sfn|Grau|1909|page=276}} His finances were further improved by money forfeited to him by the actor ] who abandoned his contract with Grau to come to New York in favor of staying in Paris.{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=278}}


Grau made a large amount of money when he brought a French theatre troupe led by Paola Marie and Victor Capoul to the United States in a highly successful tour in 1879.<ref name="Grove"/> The tour also included a further seventeen months of performances across South America, Mexico, and Cuba.{{sfn|Krehbiel|1909|page=279}} He also organized a tour featuring soprano ].{{sfn|Beach|Rines|1912|loc=Entry: Grau, Maurice}} Other prominent European artists he brought to the United States included actors ],{{sfn|Beach|Rines|1912|loc=Entry: Grau, Maurice}} ],{{sfn|Beach|Rines|1912|loc=Entry: Grau, Maurice}} and ];{{sfn|Beach|Rines|1912|loc=Entry: Grau, Maurice}} and actresses ], ], and ].{{sfn|Beach|Rines|1912|loc=Entry: Grau, Maurice}}
In 1882 Grau joined with theatre managers ] and ] to form the theatre management and production firm ].<ref name="NYT OBIT"/>


==Abbey, Schoeffel and Grau and the Metropolitan Opera==
In 1883 Grau married opera singer ] (also known as Marie Durand).<ref name="Grove">{{Cite encyclopedia|date=2002|author=Dee Baily|entry=Grau, Maurice|encyclopedia=Grove Music Online|publisher=] |doi=10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O004182}}</ref>
Grau's collaborative relationship with fellow theatre managers and producers ] and ] extended back to as early as 1882.<ref name="NYT OBIT"/> A formally structured partnership between the three men however, did not materialize until five years later.{{sfn|Duckett|2023|pages=34-35}} In 1883 Grau married opera singer ] (also known as Marie Durand).<ref name="Grove">{{Cite encyclopedia|date=2002|author=Dee Baily|entry=Grau, Maurice|encyclopedia=Grove Music Online|publisher=] |doi=10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O004182}}</ref> In this same year he played a significant though unofficial role in the newly created ] in New York when Abbey served as the Met's first managing director. Grau did not hold an official title at the Metropolitan Opera at this point, but did the work of the Met's business manager for Abbey during its first season.{{sfn|Eisler|1984|page=39}} Abbey did not renew his contract with the Met after its first year. It was rumored that Grau was a leading applicant for his replacement, but Grau chose not to apply for the position.{{sfn|Eisler|1984|page=58-59}}


In 1887 Grau joined forces with Schoeffel and Abbey to organize a tour featuring the French stage actress ]. The tremendous success of this tour led the men to establish the theatre management and production firm ] immediately following this tour.{{sfn|Duckett|2023|pages=34-35}}
Grau's association with the ] began in 1890 when he partnered with ] to bring a special series of 21 opera performances to the Met stage.<ref name="Grove"/>


Grau's association with the Metropolitan Opera was renewed in 1890 when he partnered with Abbey to bring a special series of 21 opera performances to the Met stage.<ref name="Grove"/> On January 15, 1891 Abbey, Schoeffel and Grau were officially named co-managers of the Met;{{sfn|Eisler|1984|page=175}} initially with the intent that the three would transform the Met from a German repertoire only opera house into a company that focused on works from the Italian and French opera canons.{{sfn|Eisler|1984|page=209}} This shift was deemed necessary as the public had expressed weariness with the operas of ]. The three men successfully implemented this shift; although during the six years that they co-managed the Met they also slowly brought German repertory back into the Met's performance rotation.{{sfn|Eisler|1984|pages=209-210}}
Grau became ill in December 1906. He died at his home in ] on March 14, 1907.<ref name="NYT OBIT">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1907/03/15/archives/maurice-grau-dies-in-his-paris-home-former-director-of-the.html?searchResultPosition=8|title=MAURICE GRAU DIES IN HIS PARIS HOME; Former Director of the Metropolitan Opera House Had Been Ill Since December. A FAMOUS IMPRESARIO Directed the Tours of Many Celebrities and Put Grand Opera on a Paying Basis.|work=]|date=March 15, 1907|page= 9}}</ref>

Grau was the Met's sole manager from 1898-1903.{{sfn|Eisler|1984|page=22}}

==Later life and death==
Poor health caused Grau to announce his retirement from the Metropolitan Opera in 1902; stating that he would end his career at the conclusion of the 1902-1903 season.{{sfn|Eisler|1984|page=245}} He became more seriously ill in December 1906. He died at his home in ] on March 14, 1907.<ref name="NYT OBIT">{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1907/03/15/archives/maurice-grau-dies-in-his-paris-home-former-director-of-the.html?searchResultPosition=8|title=MAURICE GRAU DIES IN HIS PARIS HOME; Former Director of the Metropolitan Opera House Had Been Ill Since December. A FAMOUS IMPRESARIO Directed the Tours of Many Celebrities and Put Grand Opera on a Paying Basis.|work=]|date=March 15, 1907|page= 9}}</ref>

He was named a Chevalier of the ] by the ].<ref name="Grau_Sun_Obit" />


==References== ==References==
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{{reflist}} {{reflist}}
===Bibliography=== ===Bibliography===
*{{cite book|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/The_Americana/_oJRAAAAYAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1|title=The Americana: A Universal Reference Library|editor-first1=Frederick Converse|editor-last1=Beach|editor-first2=George Edwin|editor-last2=Rines|publisher=Scientific American Compiling Department|year=1912|chapter=Grau, Maurice}} *{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_oJRAAAAYAAJ|title=The Americana: A Universal Reference Library|editor-first1=Frederick Converse|editor-last1=Beach|editor-first2=George Edwin|editor-last2=Rines|publisher=Scientific American Compiling Department|year=1912|chapter=Grau, Maurice}}
*{{cite book|title=The Oxford Companion to American Theatre (3 ed.)|first=Gerald|last= Bordman|first2=Thomas S.|last2= Hischak|publisher=]|year=2004|isbn= 9780195169867|chapter=Grau, Maurice}} *{{cite book|title=The Oxford Companion to American Theatre (3 ed.)|first1=Gerald|last1= Bordman|first2=Thomas S.|last2= Hischak|publisher=]|year=2004|isbn= 9780195169867|chapter=Grau, Maurice}}
*{{cite book|title=The Italian Shakespearians: Performances by Ristori, Salvini, and Rossi in England and America|first=Marvin|last= Carlson|year=1985|publisher=]|isbn=9780918016768}} *{{cite book|title=The Italian Shakespearians: Performances by Ristori, Salvini, and Rossi in England and America|first=Marvin|last= Carlson|year=1985|publisher=]|isbn=9780918016768}}
*{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmu00ganz_1/page/810/mode/2up?q=Grau%2C+Maurice|title=The Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre, Second Edition|volume=II|first=Kurt|last= Gänzl|author-link=Kurt Gänzl|chapter=Grau, Maurice |publisher=]|year=2001}} *{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/oapen-20.500.12657-63087/page/31/mode/2up?q=%22Maurice+Grau%22|title=Transnational Trailblazers of Early Cinema: Sarah Bernhardt, Gabrielle Réjane, Mistinguett|first= Victoria|last= Duckett|year= 2023|publisher=]|isbn=9780520382114}}
*{{cite book|title=The Metropolitan Opera : The First Twenty-Five Years, 1883-1908|last= Eisler|first=Paul E.|publisher=North River Press|year=1984|url=https://archive.org/details/metropolitanoper0000eisl/page/n1/mode/2up?q=%22Maurice+Grau%22|isbn=9780884270461}}
*{{cite book|chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofmu00ganz_1/page/810/mode/2up?q=Grau%2C+Maurice|title=The Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre, Second Edition|volume=II|first=Kurt|last= Gänzl|author-link=Kurt Gänzl|chapter=Grau, Maurice |publisher=]|year=2001|isbn=978-0-02-865573-4 }}
*{{cite book|title=Forty Years Observation of Music and the Drama|first= Robert|last=Grau|year= 1909|publisher=Broadway Publishing Company}} *{{cite book|title=Forty Years Observation of Music and the Drama|first= Robert|last=Grau|year= 1909|publisher=Broadway Publishing Company}}
*{{cite book|url=https://www.google.com/books/edition/Chapters_of_Opera/v_85AAAAIAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1|title=Chapters of Opera: Being Historical and Critical Observations and Records Concerning the Lyric Drama in New York from Its Earliest Days Down to the Present Time|first=Henry Edward|last= Krehbiel|author-link=Henry Edward Krehbiel|year=1909|publisher=]}} *{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=v_85AAAAIAAJ|title=Chapters of Opera: Being Historical and Critical Observations and Records Concerning the Lyric Drama in New York from Its Earliest Days Down to the Present Time|first=Henry Edward|last= Krehbiel|author-link=Henry Edward Krehbiel|year=1909|publisher=]}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Grau, Maurice}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Grau, Maurice}}

Latest revision as of 18:38, 8 January 2025

Maurice Grau

Maurice Hermann Grau (1849 – 14 March 1907) was an Austrian-born American impressario, opera director, and theatre manager and producer. The Americana: A Universal Reference Library stated that "from 1872 until 1903 was the most prominent operatic manager in America". He was a named partner in the US theatre management and production firm Abbey, Schoeffel and Grau which managed numerous theaters in Boston and New York City, including the Metropolitan Opera House. As part of this firm Grau co-managed the Metropolitan Opera (the Met) from 1891 until Abbey's death in 1896 when he took over sole management of the Met. He remained the manager of the Met until 1903 when he retired. He was also concurrently the manager of the Royal Opera House in London from 1897-1900.

The Oxford Companion to American Theatre stated that, "Although best known for his successful tenure as head of the Metropolitan Opera, he was also important in the growth of popular musical theatre in America." He should not be confused with his cousin, also named Maurice Grau (1857-1934), who was a theatre agent.

Early life and education

Born to Moravian parents Emmanuel and Rosalie Grau, Maurice Grau was born in 1849 in Brünn, Austrian Empire (now Brno, Czech Republic). In 1854 the Grau family immigrated to the United States when Maurice was five years old; settling in New York City where Emmanuel and Rosalie operated a boarding house. He was educated in the New York City public school system and then attended the New York Free Academy (now City College of New York) where he graduated in 1867. He then matriculated to Columbia Law School and while a student there was an apprentice in the law firm of Morrison, Lauterbach & Spitgarn.

Grau abandoned his law ambitions in favor of a career in the theatre; largely due to the influence of his uncle, Jacob Grau, who was a theatre impresario that specialized in importing French opéra bouffe to the United States. Maurice began working for his uncle as a child; selling libretti to patrons at his uncle opera house. His uncle was appointed director of the Academy of Music in New York in 1862, but after a difficult tenure there during the American Civil War he left to take over the management the Theatre Francais in 1866. At this time Maurice began working for his uncle in more serious theatre business endeavors at the age of seventeen, and in 1872 he ultimately decided to not pursue the legal profession but embrace a career in artist management.

Early arts management career with Carlo A. Chizzola

Grau began his career as a theatre manager and producer in 1872 when he formed a partnership with Carlo A. Chizzola. Their partnership resulted in the first significant achievement of Grau's career: bringing the French soprano Marie Aimée to the United States. Grau and Chizzola became Aimée's manager on February 12, 1872. Theatre scholars Gerald Bordman and Thomas S. Hischak credited Aimée's American appearances with popularizing not only the genre of opéra bouffe in the United States but also setting the foundation for the popularity of the musical within America.

Grau was also responsible for bringing Anton Rubinstein to the United States for his much lauded and profitable 1872-1873 American tour. This tour was organized under the auspices of the Steinway & Sons company, as was a another tour Grau oversaw that year featuring the violinist Henryk Wieniawski. In 1873 he co-founded the English Opera Company with Clara Kellogg, but this venture proved unsuccessful financially. He next brought the Italian actor Tommaso Salvini to the United States, but his American tour of plays by William Shakespeare performed in Italian also failed to make money. After this, he became the manager of New York's Fourteenth Street Theatre (FST) in 1874 but continued to struggle financially. Entertainers whom Grau brought to New York to star in productions at the FST included actresses Clara Rousby, Adelaide Ristori, and Adelaide Neilson; actor John Lawrence Toole; and the English Opera Bouffe Company led by its manager and star Emily Soldene.

In 1875, amidst a financial crises, Grau and Chizzola's partnership ceased.

Bringing Offenbach and other European artists to America

Grau rebounded with a 1876 tour featuring the French composer Jacques Offenbach. While publicly considered a triumph for Grau, the composer's high fees made it financially a losing proposition. Offenbach's thirty performances at Madison Square Garden were a monetary failure, but these were offset partly by record breaking box office sales of a production of La Vie parisienne staged at Broadway's Booth Theatre which was produced by Grau and featured Offenbach as conductor and Marie Aimée as its star. His finances were further improved by money forfeited to him by the actor Ernesto Rossi who abandoned his contract with Grau to come to New York in favor of staying in Paris.

Grau made a large amount of money when he brought a French theatre troupe led by Paola Marie and Victor Capoul to the United States in a highly successful tour in 1879. The tour also included a further seventeen months of performances across South America, Mexico, and Cuba. He also organized a tour featuring soprano Adelina Patti. Other prominent European artists he brought to the United States included actors Benoît-Constant Coquelin, Jean Mounet-Sully, and Henry Irving; and actresses Sarah Bernhardt, Gabrielle Réjane, and Jane Hading.

Abbey, Schoeffel and Grau and the Metropolitan Opera

Grau's collaborative relationship with fellow theatre managers and producers Henry Eugene Abbey and John B. Schoeffel extended back to as early as 1882. A formally structured partnership between the three men however, did not materialize until five years later. In 1883 Grau married opera singer Maria Louise Durand (also known as Marie Durand). In this same year he played a significant though unofficial role in the newly created Metropolitan Opera in New York when Abbey served as the Met's first managing director. Grau did not hold an official title at the Metropolitan Opera at this point, but did the work of the Met's business manager for Abbey during its first season. Abbey did not renew his contract with the Met after its first year. It was rumored that Grau was a leading applicant for his replacement, but Grau chose not to apply for the position.

In 1887 Grau joined forces with Schoeffel and Abbey to organize a tour featuring the French stage actress Sarah Bernhardt. The tremendous success of this tour led the men to establish the theatre management and production firm Abbey, Schoeffel and Grau immediately following this tour.

Grau's association with the Metropolitan Opera was renewed in 1890 when he partnered with Abbey to bring a special series of 21 opera performances to the Met stage. On January 15, 1891 Abbey, Schoeffel and Grau were officially named co-managers of the Met; initially with the intent that the three would transform the Met from a German repertoire only opera house into a company that focused on works from the Italian and French opera canons. This shift was deemed necessary as the public had expressed weariness with the operas of Richard Wagner. The three men successfully implemented this shift; although during the six years that they co-managed the Met they also slowly brought German repertory back into the Met's performance rotation.

Grau was the Met's sole manager from 1898-1903.

Later life and death

Poor health caused Grau to announce his retirement from the Metropolitan Opera in 1902; stating that he would end his career at the conclusion of the 1902-1903 season. He became more seriously ill in December 1906. He died at his home in Paris on March 14, 1907.

He was named a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour by the Government of France.

References

Citations

  1. ^ Beach & Rines 1912, Entry: Grau, Maurice.
  2. ^ Dee Baily (2002). "Grau, Maurice". Grove Music Online. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.O004182.
  3. ^ Bordman & Hischak 2004, p. 274.
  4. "MAURICE GRAU DEAD; THEATRICAL AGENT; Son of Ex-Metropolitan Opera Manager and Cousin of Late Maurice Grau". The New York Times. March 11, 1934. p. 31.
  5. ^ Kytka (3 January 2019). "Moravian Maurice Grau and the Metropolitan Opera". Très Bohèmes. Czechs in America Organization.
  6. ^ Gänzl 2001, p. 810.
  7. ^ Krehbiel 1909, p. 278.
  8. ^ "MAURICE GRAU DIES IN HIS PARIS HOME; Former Director of the Metropolitan Opera House Had Been Ill Since December. A FAMOUS IMPRESARIO Directed the Tours of Many Celebrities and Put Grand Opera on a Paying Basis". The New York Times. March 15, 1907. p. 9.
  9. Carlson 1985, p. 27.
  10. ^ "Impresario Grau Is Dead: The Man Who Made the Metropolitan Famous". The Sun. New York City. 15 March 1907. p. 9a.
  11. ^ Grau 1909, p. 276.
  12. Krehbiel 1909, p. 279.
  13. ^ Duckett 2023, pp. 34–35.
  14. Eisler 1984, p. 39.
  15. Eisler 1984, p. 58-59.
  16. Eisler 1984, p. 175.
  17. Eisler 1984, p. 209.
  18. Eisler 1984, pp. 209–210.
  19. Eisler 1984, p. 22.
  20. Eisler 1984, p. 245.

Bibliography

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