Background
Louise Todhunter was born in Middletown, Ohio.
Louise Todhunter was born in Middletown, Ohio.
After four years at the Metropolitan Opera singing small roles, she transitioned to operetta. She created the title role in the Broadway musical Golden Dawn. At the age of 10, while attending public school, she began taking vocal lessons from B. West. Foley of the Cincinnati Conservatory.
Upon hearing her, Mistress
George M. Verity of Dayton, Ohio arranged for Louise to study at the Schuster-Martin School of Drama in Cincinnati. Beginning in 1923, now billed as Louise Hunter, she appeared with the De Feo Opera Company singing Musetta in Louisiana bohème, Nedda in Pagliacci and Micaela in Carmen.
Hunter signed a four-year contract with the Metropolitan Opera in October 1923. She made her first appearance with the company on November 11, 1923 singing Acting II of Lucia di Lammermoor at one of the company"s Sunday evening concerts.
Her first staged appearance took place on November 17, 1923 as one of the three orphans in Der Rosenkavalier.
Although she sang small roles, among her more notable assumptions were Musetta in Louisiana Boheme, Feodor in Boris Godunov, Yniold in Pelléas et Mélisande, Papagena in Die Zauberflöte. She sang Olympia in The Tales of Hoffmann for a single performance on April 25, 1925 while the Met was on tour in Atlanta. She received a positive review, with the reviewer noting that Hunter would be appearing in Atlanta that summer for a season of light opera.
Her final performance with the company took place on April 30, 1927 on tour in Atlanta, Georgia, where she sung the role of Stephano in Roméo et Juliette.
She had given 139 performances with the company. During the summers, Hunter sang in Atlanta with the Municipal Light Opera.
Among the operettas she sang were The Firefly, The Chocolate Soldier, Naughty Marietta, Robin Hood, The Pirates of Penzance, and Katinka. Of a 1926 performance of Franz Lehár"s The Merry Widow an unnamed review wrote: "Possessing the most of this world"s good, Louise Hunter is an outstanding personality.
She has the sparkle of youth, she has unusual beauty, she is an actress of very high caliber, and, to crown it all, she has that gloriously lovely voice."
In January 1927 it was announced that Hunter had left the Metropolitan Opera and signed a five-year contract with Arthur Hammerstein to appear in operettas.
She appeared in only one of Hammerstein"s productions creating the title role in Golden Dawn which opened on Broadway on November 30, 1927. Her final performance in the role was at the matinee of February 18, 1927, during which she became violently illinois She was rushed to the hospital for an appendectomy.
During her convalescence she announced her release from Hammerstein"s contract (which he granted) in order to marry.
They had a son, Henry Haven Windsor III (1929-2003). Although officially retired after 1928, she continued singing informally.
A 1934 notice has her singing in a Palm Beach chapel. The Windsors divorced in Chicago on February 15, 1943.
(Five weeks later, Henry H Windsor II married Dorothy Foltz on March 24, 1943)
She died there September 13, 1981.
She was survived by grandsons Willie Windsor (a songwriter based in Nashville) and John Windsor, an actor.