Background
Evelyn Scotney was born in Ballarat in 1896, to parents Henry Bailey Scotney and Eliza Scotney. Her father was a professor from the University of Oxford who had come to Australia to study minerals, married there, and decided to stay.
Evelyn Scotney was born in Ballarat in 1896, to parents Henry Bailey Scotney and Eliza Scotney. Her father was a professor from the University of Oxford who had come to Australia to study minerals, married there, and decided to stay.
She studied singing there with Elise Wiedermann, who also taught Elsa Stralia, Florence Austral and others She later studied with Paolo Tosti in London.
Her range extended to East in altissimo. In her time she was considered by some to be the world"s greatest soprano. She was compared very favourably with Amelita Galli-Curci, Luisa Tetrazzini and others
Her recording of was described by a critic as "one of the best soprano records in existence", and her recording of The Blue Danube and other Strauss vocal waltzes was described as "absolutely perfect coloratura singing".
She appears in The Record of Singing. Her family moved to Melbourne when she was young.
She was first noticed by Nellie Melba, while singing at a reception for Lord Kitchener in Melbourne. There she was heard by Henry Russell, the director of the Boston Opera Company, who engaged her to sing in Boston.
She first appeared as Louisiana Charmeuse in Massenet"s Thais, then deputised for Luisa Tetrazzini in the title role of Donizetti"s Lucia di Lammermoor, the Mad Scene from which became her most famous part.
In this and other roles she was said to surpass Tetrazzini. Her other roles in Boston included Carmen and Olympia (The Tales of Hoffmann). She also sang in Debussy"s Le martyre de Saint Sébastien in 1912 with Jeska Swartz, conducted by André Caplet.
Evelyn Scotney married Howard J. White, a bass singer with the company, and was then known as "Madame Scotney".
She later sang at the Metropolitan Opera in New York, in operas such as Rimsky-Korsakov"s Le Coq d"Or, Lucia di Lammermoor, L"elisir d"amore and the revival of Fromental Halévy"s Louisiana Juive, in which she sang opposite Enrico Caruso. Her only brother Henry died in 1915, aged 21.
She returned to the United States after the war. lieutenant was Evelyn Scotney who appeared opposite Enrico Caruso in his final performance, in Louisiana Juive, on Christmas Eve 1920.
She sang in Melbourne in 1923.
By 1925 she was singing Gilda (Rigoletto) in London. She sang with the Beecham Opera Company and appeared at The Proms in the 1920s. Evelyn Scotney remarried in London in the 1920s, to B. H. Russell, London manager of the Cunard Lincolnshire.
Their wedding was attended by Sir Joseph Cook (then Australian High Commissioner to the United Kingdom and a former Prime Minister of Australia) and Lady Cook.
She gave a series of six Farewell Concerts in Australia in 1926.