Background
Born in Los Angeles, California, he was the son of a minister.
Born in Los Angeles, California, he was the son of a minister.
Cholmondeley graduated of the University of Southern California where he studied science. He also played violin. He first studied voice with Achille Alberti in Los Angeles, and later with Sibella and Dellera in New York City.
His birth name was Archer Cholmondeley. He made his debut in Los Angeles in 1916 as Edgardo in Lucia di Lammermoor with the Lombardi Opera Company. A year later, Chamlee went on tour with the Aborn Opera Company as "Mario Rodolfi", where he sang with soprano Ruth Miller.
The tenor was personally selected by General Pershing to perform with an ensemble for delegates at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference.
Upon his return to the United States in 1919, however, Chamlee devoted himself to developing his operatic talent. Beginning by singing at movie houses, he was discovered by baritone Antonio Scotti and joined the Scotti Opera Company.
On November 20, 1920, Chamlee debuted at the Metropolitan Opera singing Cavaradossi. Engagements followed with various opera companies later in his career in the United States and Europe, including: the Ravinia Summer Opera in Chicago.
The San Francisco Opera (where he performed Wagner).
His acclaimed appearance in Henri Rabaud"s Marouf at the Paris Opera and the Brussels Théâtre de la Monnaie. The Vienna Volksoper. And the Deutsches Theater in Prague.
He later reprised Marouf in his return to the Metropolitan
Chamlee"s first records were made in 1917 under his "Mario Rodolfi" pseudonym for the Lyraphone Company of America"s vertical-cut "Lyric" discs, but he later recorded exclusively on conventional 78s for Brunswick Records and was a successful recording artist in the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. One of Chamlee"s earliest supporters, Gustave Haenschen, who directed the popular-music records of the Brunswick company, stated in several interviews that Brunswick"s classical-music director, Walter B. Rogers, worked with Chamlee to imitate Caruso"s phrasing and dynamics as heard on his (Caruso"s) Victor Red Seal recordings.
During his prior association with the Victor company, Rogers had overseen many of Caruso"s recording sessions. With a powerful yet beautiful sound, Chamlee"s lyric tenor voice emerged as one of the world"s finest tenors in the era which followed Caruso"s death in 1921.
Mario Chamlee retired from the opera stage at the age of 47.
He subsequently devoted himself to teaching operatic voice to private students. His prize students included the Broadway star Anna Maria Alberghetti and the Las Vegas stage singer Rouvaun, who later billed himself on an album cover as "the world"s greatest singer". Chamlee died in his native Los Angeles in 1966.
Chamlee"s abilities were underestimated, however, and although he was always well received by opera fans and critics alike across America and around the world, and his records sold well, he never achieved the same level of recognition of his talents and abilities that his Italian contemporaries did, and Chamlee has been largely overlooked and forgotten in time.
During two and a half years of mandatory military service, during World War I, Chamlee served as a member of the Argonne Players, a group of army soldiers who sang and entertained troops on the front line.