Thalia Sabanieva (23 December 1889[1] – 20 March 1963), also seen as Thalia Sabanieeva, was a Greek soprano.
Early life
Thalia Sabanieva was born in Athens in 1889. She was proud of her Greek birth,[2] and spoke Greek, but objected to being called a "Greek singer", because she was educated in Russia. "What I am as a singer I owe entirely to Russia", she declared in 1937.[3] She studied music with Vera Cehanovska, mother of Russian baritone George Cehanovsky.
Sabanieva was often on the programs of charity benefit concerts and special events. In 1933, she sang a duet with Mario Chamlee at a gala marking the 25th anniversary of Giulio Gatti-Casazza's directorship at the Metropolitan Opera. In 1935, she sang at a benefit concert for Jewish artisans in Poland, with cellist Mila Wellerson, at New York's Town Hall venue,[12] and at another benefit performance with Lucrezia Bori and Tito Schipa, for the WIlloughby House Settlement in Brooklyn.[13] In 1937 she sang at a benefit concert at Carnegie Hall alongside Elisabeth Rethberg, Josephine Antoine, and other singers, raising funds for Chrystie Street House, a shelter for homeless men.[14]
Sabanieva had two film credits, for a supporting role in a Greek film, That's Life (1935), and in the title role in a film adaptation of Natalka Poltavka (1937),[15] though she was an unlikely choice to play a young heroine by then.[16] She was featured in a LIFE magazine photograph, when her dog appeared on the magazine's cover in 1944.[17] Sabanieva taught voice students later in life.[18]
^Some sources give Sabanieva's birth year as 1895, but she gave the 1889 date in official paperwork, such as her application for United States citizenship; via Ancestry