She studied in New York
with Jacques Bouhy and then in Paris
with Mathilde Marchesi. She made her opera début at the Paris Opéra in 1894 or
1895 as Juliette in Charles Gounod's Roméo et Juliette. She studied the role of
Juliet and the role of Marguerite from Faust with Gounod himself, who greatly
admired her fine technique, brilliant tone, and vocal flexibility. She remained
at the Paris Opera for three years and then went to Nice. While in France she sang
numeroues roles by Gounod and Meyerbeer, as well as the Queen of the Night in
the The Magic Flute and the title role in Gluck's Eurydice among other roles. In
the summer of 1898 she appeared at Covent Garden, London as Hero in the world premiere of C. V.
Stanford's Much Ado About Nothing. She went on to join the Metropolitan Opera
in New York City
where she sang numerous roles during the seasons of 1898-99 to 1903. Her roles
at the Met included Juliette, Marguerite, Marguerite de Valois from Les
Huguenots, Micaela from Carmen, Cherubino from Le nozze di Figaro, Donna Elvira
from Don Giovanni, Philine from Mignon, Berthe from Le prophète, the Forest
Bird from Siegfried, Nedda from Pagliacci, Gilda from Rigoletto, Infanta from
Le Cid, Inès from L'Africaine, and Mimì from La bohème among others. In 1898 she
married Leo Stern, an English cellist who died in 1904. Following Stern's
death, Adams soon retired from the stage and settled in London. She appeared at Covent
Garden in some performances of Carmen in November 1906 (presumably
as Micaela), these may have been among her last appearances in opera. Judging
from a New York passenger list of 1903, she
had already ceased to be a US
citizen; presumably she had become a British citizen. However, the recently
released UK 1911 census has
her as a US citizen resident
in the UK.
She is reported to have taught singing for many years, further details are
lacking so far. She appeared in a few concerts in the UK in 1905 and
1906. She visited the United States
in late 1907 to appear in vaudeville in Chicago,
New York and elsewhere. In 1915
she married John Lumsden Mackay, 'of independent means'. Details of John
Mackay's life are lacking, but he may have had some career as an actor before
World War I (sources: NY passenger list of 1912; 'Garrick Club' as address in
WWI medal index). He served in WWI, possibly as a sick bay attendant with the
Navy, and was awarded the 1915 Star etc. He died in November 1934. They lived
for many years north of Hyde Park in London at
55 Inverness Terrace. She may have continued
teaching until her death in London
in 1953.
Chronology of some appearances
Micaëla 1/4/191900, Berthe 1/16/191900,
Marguerite de Valois 3/8/191900, Nedda 3/13/191900, Micaëla 3/15/191900,
Marguerite de Valois 1/8/191901, L’Infante 1/22/191901, Inès 3/5/191901,
Micaëla 1/2/191902 (attività svolta a Filadelfia) Juliette 3/02/1899, Donna
Elvira 3/07/1899, Marguerite 12/26/1899 (in Filadelfia).
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