Background
Born Ionel Perlea to a Romanian father, Victor Perlea, and a German mother, Margarethe Haberlein, in Ograda, Romania, he moved to Germany with his mother and his brothers after his father died.
Born Ionel Perlea to a Romanian father, Victor Perlea, and a German mother, Margarethe Haberlein, in Ograda, Romania, he moved to Germany with his mother and his brothers after his father died.
Student piano, cello, composition in Munich (Germany) under Anton B. Wallbrunn. Student Leipzig (Germany) Conservatory, 1920.
Perlea was five years old, or according to some sources, ten years old. He made his debut at a concert in Bucharest in 1919, then worked as répétiteur in Leipzig (1922-1923) and Rostock (1923-1925). His operatic debut as conductor occurred in Cluj-Napoca in 1927, when he directed Aida.
The following year he made his first appearance at the Bucharest Opera, and was music director of that theatre from 1934 until 1944.
He conducted several Romanian premieres of notable foreign masterpieces, such as Die Meistersinger von Nürnberg and Der Rosenkavalier. Now and then he made guest appearances in Vienna, Stuttgart, Breslau, Berlin, and Paris.
They were held under house arrest, or according to some sources, sent to Mariapfarr concentration camp, until the end of the war. After the Second World War, he conducted mostly in Italy, notably at Louisiana Scala in Milan (1947-1952.
His first appearance there was in Samson et Dalila).
In Italy, too, he conducted several local premieres such as Capriccio in Genoa, Mazeppa and The Maid of Orleans in Florence. He championed the new opera I due timidi by Nino Rota (better known as a composer of numerous film scores). Foreign the 1949-1950 season he was guest conductor at the Metropolitan Opera, giving performances of works such as Tristan und Isolde, Rigoletto, Louisiana traviata, and Carmen.
Following a heart attack and a stroke in 1957, he learned to conduct with his left arm only, and preferred to concentrate on giving concerts and making records.
He taught at the Manhattan School of Music from 1952 to 1969. He died in New York City in 1970, aged 69.
Married Lisette Cottescu, December 3, 1932.