Fedora "Fadwa" Kurban: The Defiant Daughter and the Last Years of Maloof Records
Fedora “Fadwa” Kurban
Fedora "Fadwa" Kurban, 4 October 1935, Madison Eagle. Courtesy of newspapers.com |
Maloof Records has fascinated 78 rpm record collectors for decades. Ethnomusicologist Richard K.
Spottswood painstakingly documented much of what had been recorded on Alexander Maloof’s label and we know that some of the last recordings on the Maloof Record
De Luxe Orientale phonograph label are credited to Mme. Fadwa Kurban. Like
other musicians who emigrated from or are descendants of those who left Greater
Syria in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, we know very little
about Fadwa Kurban, her connections to Alexander Maloof, or her music - until now.
Fedora
“Fadwa” Kurban was one of seven children born to Navum Kurban and Saada
Kurban on 11 May 1898 in either the coastal city of Acre, Palestine (now Israel) or Aqraba, Syria. She
started singing when she turned five but her father, Navum, a professor at the
Syrian Protestant College (later the American University of Beirut) expressed
skepticism about Fedora’s ability to make a career of singing. The family seems
to have become Presbyterians through the work of American and Canadian
missionaries in Palestine, and young Fedora sang as a soloist in the
Presbyterian and English churches in Beirut. Her younger brother, David, first
moved to Canada and worked as a coffee inspector, but by the time he turned 21,
he became a representative of the French Consul in Windsor, Ontario, Canada.
Fedora followed David and relocated to Windsor, Canada, in 1913. While David still
worked as a coffee inspector, Fedora met and married Joseph Hallett when she
turned 20. They couple had one child, Eleanor, on 21 April 1921.
Fedora
Kurban’s residence in Windsor placed her just across the river from Detroit,
Michigan, a city that would come to have one of the largest concentrations of
people of Arab descent in North America. This meant she’d have an Arab American
fan-base as well as one rooted in the striving middle and upper middle-class
Anglo and Italian communities of the Motor City. Fedora made her radio debut on
Detroit’s WWJ 317 accompanied by Herbert E. Blythe and the Detroit News Orchestra.
Radio exposure led Kurban to musical teacher and talent scout Alfred Blackman,
who less than a year after the WWJ performance, recruited Fedora Kurban to sing
in a concert on 2 April 1925 that feature singers from the US, Wales, Scotland,
Ireland, Russia, Italy, Canada, and various Ottoman millets. Just over twenty
days later, she performed with violinist Fred Vallance and pianist Ethel Scott
Clark in a 23 April recital at the Detroit Board of Commerce. Around this time,
Kurban started to work with Syrian American composer and record label owner
Alexander Maloof. With that success, Alfred Blackman began to use her name in
ads to recruit other classical singers, Fedora, on the other hand, was off to
Europe, the Middle East, and Northeast Africa. Already, the press and critics
started to compare her to the deceased Swedish opera singer, Jenny Lind, and the
Italian coloratura soprano, Amelita Galli-Curci.
During
her time outside North America from 1925 and 1927, Fedora Kurban performed in
Beirut, Syria (later Lebanon) and Alexandria, Egypt, and studied at the American
University of Beirut, the American University in Cairo, and in Italy and
France. Crowds awaited Kurban’s performances with great anticipation. She
performed at the Khedivial Opera House with King Faud I in attendance. According
to some accounts, King Faud presented Kurban with a beautiful silk dress, while
the governor of Alexandria gave jewelry and a lace shawl. It was in Alexandria,
however, that one critic suggested Kurban study with a more talented and expert
teacher. She supposedly canceled the remainder of her tour and went to Paris to
work with Maritza d’Hellsonn of the Opera Belgique or the Brussels Opera
Company.
Upon
her return to the United States, Sidney Deitch worked with Kurban to help her
master Italian classical standards. She also worked with Edith de Lys to
developed a more powerful stage presence. She floated from teacher to teacher
Deitch, Emil Tiffero, and Albert Jeannotte. The Ladies Aid Society of Giles
Boulevard Church sponsored a recital featuring Kurban and the Westminster
Orchestra in 17 April 1929. She also serenaded the Windsor Kiwanis Club and at
the Brooklyn Academy of Music that spring.
In
Brooklyn and Detroit, Fedora maintained a solid fan base. For years, the
Arab-language press in the United States and some English-language papers such
as the Detroit Free Press, Boston Globe, and Brooklyn Eagle
lauded her achievements to date. The primary focus of many of these stories
remained, if and when Fedora Kurban would audition for the Metropolitan Opera,
but Kurban continued to perform in venues large and small. For example, she
performed both at a Utica, New York, pageant “depicting the life and history of
Syrian people” and as a soloist at the Westminster Presbyterian Church in Utica,
New York, along with Rev. K.A. Bishara of the Brooklyn Syrian Presbyterian
Church. In May 1930, Dr. and Mrs. H.S. Rasi hosted a large Manhattan dinner
party in Fedora’s honor. The offer to audition at the Met finally came in
October 1930 with little fanfare and no major news coverage. Yet, Fedora Kurban's career
and notoriety blossomed especially when, along with Alexander Maloof, she
attended and sang at the party for Rabindranath Tagore on 7 December and Albert
Einstein on 14 December 1930.
The
newly organized Italian American group Virtus Musical Club put together a
concert of arias from the leading Italian operas and invited Fedora Kurban to
perform in August 1931. The Detroit
Free Press, considered Kurban homegrown talent, and of course, showered her
with praise. Three months later, she sang for a private party for Mr. Abraham
Hitti, a prominent member of New York’s Little Syria. Among the guests were Naoum
Mokarzel, editor of Al-Hoda, the longest continuously running Arab
American newspaper at the time.
In
spite of Fedora and Alexander Maloof’s first concert collaboration back in
1925, as Mme. Fadwa Korban she recorded seven songs on Maloof Phonograph Records in
March 1932 including "Sooria Biladi," "Al-Jazayer," "Ya Hind," "Arabic Lullaby," "Last Rose of Summer," "Walie Menal Gorami," and "Marhaban," all in two parts. She followed up by recording at least three other double-sided
songs in June 1932. She was one of the last singers to record on Maloof’s label – these
were for a series of funeral parlor songs that had low matrix numbers.
Fedora Kurban would gather again, with many of the same
individuals when an Egyptian envoy of dignitaries including Sesostris Sidarous
Pasha, the Egyptian minister to the United States, visited New York in January
1933. This time, Salloum Mokarzal, priests from the local Melkite and Orthodox churches, Muslims, all came together and Alexander Maloof, Helen Rozek, and
Fedora Kurban provided the entertainment. Two years later, the Italian-American
organizations of Morris County, New Jersey held a classical concert with four
different opera singers including Fedora. Among the several songs she sang was one
that she’d integrated into her regular performance repertoire – the “Mad Scene”
from “Lucia di Lammermoor.” The fact that the United States was in the midst of
recovering from the Great Depression didn’t put a damper on Kurban’s schedule.
Fedora appeared on the program of the Elim Society at the Ashbury Park
Convention Center in New Jersey in December 1935 with actor Richard Bennett and
she opened Toronto’s Canadian Grand Opera Series in 1936. As the 1930s came
to a close, Canada offer fewer opportunities for Fedora to sing at concerts
near home and in a June 1937 interview she claimed Canadians were
unappreciative of high-brow art. In the United States, the 300-member Michigan
legislature honored Fedora on 15 June 1937 and Arab American groups like the
Ladies Aid Society of Boston secured Fedora for their benefit concert to raise
funds for the Tuberculosis Hospital in Mt. Lebanon, Syria (now Lebanon) in
October 1937. The Women’s Civic Club of Brooklyn invited Kurban to a similar
event in December 1939.
Recent acquisition of Fedora Kurban 78 on Maloof's Orient Arabic Song label after he relocated to New Jersey. Courtesy of Richard Breaux collection. https://soundcloud.com/user-387335530/orient-arabic-o-15-a-b-maloof-music-co-fedora-kurban-congratulations-traveled-on-the-war |
From
roughly 1942 to 1945, Fedora Kurban toured South America. Concert took her to
Santiago, Buenos Aires, and San Paulo. In Santiago and at the Teatro Municipal
in Vina del Mar, Chilé, she performed to packed houses. In Argentina, she
filled the Ateneo Theater. World War II prevented her from returning to Europe
and Egypt, but she made a return trip to US in 1944 and Canada in 1945. In
fact, when in the US in 1944, she sang a solo at the morning service of Saint
Ann’s Church and broke new ground in Boston.
Brazilian Travel document for Fedora Hallett issued during her travels in the 1940s. You can see she is listed as a singer, mention of her birthplace, and her parents names. Courtesy of Ancestry.com |
In
the 1940s, fans witnessed Fedora Kurban at one of her career’s heights, yet
reviews eventually sent her career plummeting. On Tuesday, 11 July 1944, Kurban
made her first appearance with the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s “Pops”. Eugene
Plotnikoff conducted the symphony for its “Oriental Night” fundraiser concert
for the Syrian Relief Association of Boston. It was reportedly the first time
in fifty-nine seasons the Pops hosted an “Oriental Night.” Fedora appeared in
custom, self-designed costume and sang a number of Arabic songs accompanied by
musicians on the oud, kanoon, and derbeke, including,’ “Be Happy My Heart” and “The
Story of the Shepard” by Acabgi. She also performed the famous “Bell Song” from
"Lakme" and the “Mad Scene” from “Lucia di Lammermoor.”
Fedora
Kurban decided she’d move to the United States permanently to join her daughter,
in July 1944, although mention of Eleanor hardly, if ever, came up in the press.
Eleanor lived in Brooklyn, New York, among thousands who shared her heritage and
cultural practices. By the year, Fedora applied to come to become U.S. permanent
resident, on a path to citizenship, cases that hinged on the question of whether
the U.S. government considered Syrians (1915), Armenians (1909), Saudis (1944), or
Afghanis as racially white had already been settled. It would take years for
Kurban to have her citizenship granted, incidentally this occurred one year before the U.S.
removed its “whites only” requisite from the naturalization requirement.
The
brutal, but mostly complementary newspaper reviews, relayed an interestingly
complex account of events. One Boston Globe reviewer wrote, “Miss Kurban
has a strangely weighted coloratura voice which, though sometimes ill-placed,
produced astonishing and admirable vocal colors because of its individual
character. The folk songs, employing narrower intervals than are familiar to
Occidental ears, produced some extraordinary effects.” Fedora Kurban impressed
enough people that less than two years later, on 25 January 1946, she starred
in the New Jersey Opera Associations production of Leo Delibes’ “Lakme” – a
French opera set in British colonial India where Lakme (French for Laksmi), the
daughter of a Brahmin priest, falls in love with a British soldier against her
father’s wishes, but commits suicide after her lover has a change of heart. The
Brooklyn Music Academy hosted the event directed by William Spada.
Ad for Lakme Oprea in which Kurban played the lead, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 20 January 1946. Courtesy of newspapers.com |
If
the reviews of the Boston Pops concert contained measured praise, a writer for
the Brooklyn Eagle savagely derided, “Fadwa Kurban sang the title role
with considerable unevenness in quality and strength of tome and in fidelity to
pitch so far as a hearing of Act I was concerned.” He continued, “She appeared
self-conscious in her acting, giving little illusion of the role she was
portraying. Hers was an earnest performance, at time creditable vocally.”
Fedora
Kurban Hallett became a naturalized U.S. citizen 16 January 1951 in U.S. District
Court in Brooklyn. The year before Congress enacted the McCarran-Walter Act or
the 1952 Immigration and Nationality Act noted above. Press coverage of Kurban’s
career was sparse in the early 1950s.
1945 Immigration document for Fedora "Fadwa" Kurban Hallett and Eleanor Hallett. Fedora hoped to move to the US with her daughter, which she eventually did. Courtesy of Ancestry.com |
When
the press finally caught up to Fedora Kurban in 1955, she had abandoned her
career in the opera and only sang religious songs at churches. She remarked to
the Miami News, “Singing for God is the best thing that has ever
happened to me.” Despite past performances in New York, Paris, Cairo, Lebanon,
Buenos Aires, and Santiago, she instantly declared, “I am content in the life
I lead. I gave up the other because I wanted to serve God and because my
father, a Presbyterian and former teacher at the American college in Beirut,
Lebanon, who died at the age of 100, wanted me to. Then, too, I have had much
sorrow and the spiritual life is the only one which brings me satisfaction.”
She sang “The Lord’s Prayer” that year at the Little River Baptist Church in Miami.
Fedora
moved from Detroit to Long Island, New York, and continued to travel around the
world. In 1959, she visited Naples, Italy, for a few weeks. We don’t
know what became of Joseph Hallett, but he seems to have remained in Canada and
the two likely separated early in their marriage. Fedora’s daughter, Eleanor,
sometimes travelled with her, but by 1951, Eleanor moved to Colorado Spring,
Colorado to work at the Ent Air Force Base. Fedora eventually joined her
daughter in Colorado, although it’s difficult to determine when exactly.
Fedora
Kurban Hallett died in November 1986 at the age of eighty-five. She rests in an
unmarked grave at the Evergreen Cemetery in Colorado Springs. Eleanor married,
had children, and retired in 1992. She relocated to Arizona where she died 26
November 2013.
Special thanks to Thomas L.
Richard M. Breaux
© Midwest Mahjar
© Midwest Mahjar
Comments
Post a Comment