Up for auction "The Vagabond King" Rudolf Friml Hand Signed Card W/ Musical Note. This item is certified authentic by Todd
Mueller Autographs and comes with their Certificate of Authenticity.
ES-4489E
Charles
Rudolf Frim (December
2, 1879 – November 12, 1972) was a Czech-born composer of operettas, musicals, songs and piano pieces, as well as a pianist. After musical training and a brief performing career
in his native Prague, Friml moved to the United States, where he became a
composer. His best-known works are Rose-Marie and The Vagabond King, each of which enjoyed success on Broadway and in London and were adapted for film. Friml
was born Rudolf Antonín Frymel on December 2, 1879 in Staré Město 445, Prague, Bohemia (then part of the
Austro-Hungarian empire) and was baptized Catholic at the Kostel svatého Jiljí. Friml showed aptitude for music at an early
age. He entered the Prague Conservatory in
1895, where he studied the piano and composition with Antonín Dvořák. Friml was expelled from the conservatory in
1901 for performing without permission. In Prague and later in America he composed and
published songs, piano pieces and other music, including the prize-winning set
of songs, Písně Závišovy. The last of these, Za tichých
nocí, later became the basis for a famous film in Nazi-occupied
Czechoslovakia in 1941. After the conservatory, Friml took a position as accompanist to the violinist Jan Kubelík. He toured with Kubelik twice in the United States (1901–02 and 1904) and moved there
permanently in 1906, apparently with the support of the Czech singer Emmy Destinn. His first regular post in New York was as
a repetiteur at the Metropolitan Opera, but he
had made his American piano debut at Carnegie Hall on November 17, 1904, giving the premiere
of his Piano Concerto in B-flat major with the New York Symphony, under the baton of Walter Damrosch, in a concert that also included Friml playing
his own Etude de concert op. 4, Smetana's "Am
Seegestade", Liszt Liebesträume no.
3, the Grieg A-minor piano concerto with
the orchestra, and a solo improvisation. He later settled for a brief time in
Los Angeles where he married Mathilde Baruch (1909). They had two children,
Charles Rudolf (Jr.) (1910) and Marie Lucille (1911). His second marriage was
to Blanch Betters, an actress who had appeared in the chorus of Friml's
musical Katinka; his third was
to actress Elsie Lawson (who played the maid in Friml's Glorianna,
and by whom he had a son, William); and his fourth and final marriage was to
Kay Wong Ling. The first three marriages ended in divorce.