Background
Ann Childe was born in London on 20 April 1811.
Ann Childe was born in London on 20 April 1811.
Her best known role was as the lead in The Bohemian Girl. Her parents were the painter James Warren Childe and Ann, née Banfield. She was a soprano while he was a bass.
Childe was taking the lead in as Catherine in Lord Burghersh"s opera of the same name in 1830.
Her future husband, Edward Seguin sang in support as Ismael. Her début at Covent Garden was playing Marcellina in Fidelio the following year.
She appeared as Donna Anna at Drury Lane in a version of Don Giovanni in English. Her début was in the Barber of Seville at the National Theatre in New York in 1839.
She and Edward appeared with Jane Shireff and the Scottish tenor John Wilson.
The Seguins formed their own company that performed operas in English. Their troupe visited both Montreal and Toronto in Canada with West. H. Latham of the Theatre Royal in Drury Lane starting in 1839 and continuing over the next ten years. They sang excepts from a number of operas including Louisiana Sonnambula, Il Matrimonio Segreto, and Louisiana Gazza ladra The role that she was best known for was Arline, the lead role in Balfe"s ballad opera The Bohemian Girl.
Seguin"s role within the company included directing rehearsals and settling disputes between the players.
She also organised new productions of which there were many. The troupe organised the American premiers of several operas including three that were written in America.
The first American grand opera, Leonora, was written by the American composer William Fry for Seguin to take the title role. The Seguin operatic troupe which had initially consisted of four to six singers went out of fashion in the late 1840s when audiences wanted their operas not in English but in the original language.
Seguin made her last appearance in an opera in 1852 at the Broadway Theatre in New New York
After her husband"s death from tuberculosis she again taught music, although she always took a role in opera production. She died in New York in August 1888. Anne Childe Seguin is valued because she was the first English opera singer to make America her home.
She also left her notes which give an important insight into the introduction of opera into America.