Lujza Blaha

{{Short description|Hungarian actress and singer}}

{{Expand Hungarian|topic=bio|Blaha Lujza|date=August 2019}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Lujza Blaha

| image = Blaha Lujza Gondy és Egey.jpg

| caption = Lujza Blaha, c. 1866

| other_names = Lujza Várai
Lujza Kölesi

| birth_date = {{Birth date|1850|09|08}}

| birth_place = Rimaszombat, Gömör and Kishont County, Kingdom of Hungary

| death_date = {{Death date and age|1926|01|18|1850|09|08}}

| death_place = Budapest, Kingdom of Hungary

| resting_place = Fiume Road Graveyard

| occupation = Actor, singer and librettist

| years_active = 1856–1918

| spouse = János Blaha (1866–1870, his death)
Sándor Soldos (1875–unknown)
Ödön Splényi (1881–1909, his death)

| children = 2

| signature = Blaha Lujza aláírása.JPG

}}

File:Blaha Lujza 35 évesen.jpg

Lujza Blaha (Ludovika Reindl; 1850–1926) was a Hungarian actress and singer. She was known as "the nation's nightingale", an epithet given her by writer Mór Jókai.{{cite web |title=Lujza Blaha |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Lujza-Blaha |publisher=Encyclopedia Britannica |access-date=16 August 2019}}{{cite book |last1=Molnár |first1=Miklós M. |title=33 Hungarian Histories: Hungarian Identity Through Portraits |date=2018 |publisher=Catch Budapest |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8ImZDwAAQBAJ&q=lujza+blaha&pg=PT122 |access-date=16 August 2019}} "First published in the Time Out Budapest magazine's monthly column "Magyar of the Month" (2009–2011)"

Personal life

Ludovika Reindl was born 8 September 1850 in Rimaszombat (today Rimavská Sobota, Slovakia). She married Ján Blaha, a Czech conductor in the imperial army, when she was 15 years old. He died five years later, but she kept his surname all her life despite marrying twice more. Despite being considered a "national icon" during her lifetime, she opposed the dignified "national prima donna" that was being thrust upon her and often crossed the taboos of the epoch by being sexually provocative both on stage and in her private life.{{Cite journal|last=Heltai|first=Gyöngyi|date=2016|title=Star prima donnas as lieux de mémoire at home and abroad|url=http://www.wls.sav.sk/wp-content/uploads/06-Heltai-compressed.pdf|journal=World Literature Studies|language=en|volume=8|issue=4|pages=64–76|issn=1337-9275}}{{Cite book|url=http://real.mtak.hu/89719/1/TariL_Magyarnota-Engl.pdf|title=Bloomsbury Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World|last=Tari|first=Lujza|publisher=Bloomsbury Academic|year=2017|isbn=978-1-5013-2610-3|editor-last=Prato|editor-first=Paolo|volume=11|location=New York and London|pages=473–478|chapter=Magyarnóta|editor-last2=Horn|editor-first2=David}}

She died 18 January 1926 in Budapest. She was buried in the Kerepesi Cemetery, and her funeral drew a crowd of 100,000, including a gypsy band of 200 musicians.{{cite web |last1=Kaszás |first1=Fanni |title=Best of Budapest: 6 Famous Women and Their Graves |url=https://hungarytoday.hu/best-of-budapest-6-famous-women-and-their-graves/ |publisher=Hungary Today |access-date=16 August 2019}}

Career

Blaha's parents were travelling actors, and she first performed aged 15 in Subotica. She received acting training from the Budapest School of Dramatic Arts.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=WTkCI62oXjEC&q=Lujza+Blaha+1850&pg=PA145|title=Acting: An International Encyclopedia|last1=Osnes|first1=Beth|last2=Osnes|first2=Mary|publisher=ABC-CLIO|year=2001|isbn=9780874367959|location=Santa Barbara, CA, Denver, CO and Oxford|pages=145|language=en}}

She joined the national theatre five years later and between 1871 and 1900 she played almost 200 parts in plays, mostly Hungarian "folk plays" or "{{ill|Volksstücke|de|Volksstück}}", patriotic plays celebrating peasant life. Apart from her theater work, she would also draw crowds at balls, the banquets and torchlight music events organised by the Mulató-klub (The Club of Amusements), and she was also active as an operetta singer.{{Cite journal|last=Berki|first=Tímea|date=2011|title=From Grigore Moldovan to Moldován Gergely – A Career in Homeland|url=http://www.acta.sapientia.ro/acta-philo/C3-2/Philo32-3.pdf|journal=Acta Universitatis Sapientiae, Philologica|language=en|volume=3|issue=2|pages=156–166|issn=2067-5151}}{{Cite web|url=http://zti.hu/index.php/en/mza/hunmusic/132-bozo-operetta-in-hungary|title=Operetta in Hungary (1859–1960)*|last=Bozó|first=Péter|date=14 October 2016|website=Hungarian Academy of Sciences: Institute for Musicology|access-date=28 September 2019}}

She also appeared in two silent films. The first, A táncz ("Dance", 1901) was an educational documentary short by {{ill|Gyula Pekár|hu|Pekár Gyula}}, while the second, A nagymama (The Grandmother, 1916) sees her play the title role in the Alexander Korda film.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=pxGByL8V24EC&q=Lujza+Blaha+films&pg=PA12|title=Hungarian Cinema: From Coffee House to Multiplex|last=Cunningham|first=John|publisher=Wallflower Press|year=2004|isbn=9781903364796|location=London and New York|pages=12|language=en}}

She played an important role in popularizing Hungarian gypsy songs. Her final performance in 1908 was in Gergely Csiky's play Nagymama ("grandmother").

Legacy

Lujza Blaha Square in central Budapest was named for her in 1920 to celebrate her 70th birthday. It was the site of the Hungarian National Theatre from 1908 to 1965; this was demolished because of construction of Blaha Lujza tér metro station.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=daY3kTaeGfcC&q=Lujza+Blaha&pg=PA185|title=Indispensable Eyesores: An Anthropology of Undesired Buildings|last=Hoorn|first=Mélanie van der|publisher=Berghahn Books|year=2009|isbn=9781845459215|series=Remapping Cultural History|volume=10|location=New York and Oxford|pages=185|language=en}} Her Neoclassical summer home in the resort town of Balatonfüred, on the northern shore of lake Balaton, has been turned into a hotel bearing her name and is a minor tourist attraction of the town.{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4Ttlhk2JFdwC&q=lujza+blaha+hotel&pg=PT278|title=The Rough Guide to Hungary|last=Longley|first=Darreb|publisher=Rough Guides UK|year=2010|isbn=9781405387156|location=London|language=en}}

File:FiumeDSC01857.JPG]]

Her tomb in Kerepesi Cemetery has been described as "one of the finest pieces in the Hungarian national pantheon".

Hungarian indie-pop band Blahalouisiana was founded in 2013.

References

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