Ruby Cutter Savage
Ruby Clementine Cutter Savage Willis (October 7, 1876 – July 9, 1949) was an American soprano singer active in the early 20th century.
Early life and education
[edit ]Cutter was born in Boston, the daughter of Fitch Henry Cutter and Mary Alvida Clark Cutter. She was a student of Arthur J. Hubbard in Boston,[1] and studied voice with W. Elliott Haslam in Paris.[2] [3] [4] In New York City, she studied German or French diction with Margaret Goetz.[5]
Career
[edit ]Savage was a soprano soloist who sang with the Boston Opera Company.[3] and in a 1903 production of Orfeo ed Euridice in Angers.[6] She toured with the New York Philharmonic in 1904,[7] appearing in forty cities,[8] in concerts with tenor Dan Beddoe and conductor Walter Damrosch.[9] In 1905 she sang with the Savage Opera Company.[10] "She always makes a splendid impression. Her voice in quality and range is phenomenal," according to a profile in Musical Courier magazine in 1904, which also discussed her appearance ("a fine figure and a most pleasing facial expression") and her "artistic temperament".[4]
Savage sang in Montreal in 1906, including as a last-minute replacement soloist for Handel's Messiah .[11] She and tenor Theodore van Yorx gave a concert together at Boston's Jordan Hall in 1907.[12] She returned to the opera stage in 1909, appearing in La traviata and Faust at the German Opera House in Prague,[13] and appearing as Mimi in La bohème in Boston late that year.[14]
In 1913, Savage used the name "Rena Saville" when she was with the Zuro Opera Company.[15] In 1914 she played Josephine in a "mammoth" production of H.M.S. Pinafore at the Hippodrome, complete with "real water, real sailors".[16] In the 1920s, she was a church soloist in Florida.[17]
Personal life
[edit ]Cutter married twice. She married fellow singer and voice coach Paul Savage in Italy in 1902; they divorced in 1915,[18] the year she married Pierre LaJard Willis in New Jersey. The Willises also divorced. She lived with her mother in Los Angeles in the 1930s and 1940s.[19] She died in 1949, in Los Angeles, at the age of 72.[20]
References
[edit ]- ^ "Boston". The Musical Courier. 46 (1202): 41. April 8, 1903 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ Campbell, Mrs. Marriner. "What I Saw and Heard in the Vocal Studios of Paris" The Western Journal of Education (March 1904): 285.
- ^ a b "W. Elliott Haslam" Musical Canada 9(7)(November 1914): 165.
- ^ a b "Ruby Cutter Savage". The Musical Courier. 48 (1255): 27. April 13, 1904 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "Closes Busy Season". The Musical Courier. 50 (25): 10. June 21, 1905.
- ^ "Boston". The Musical Courier. 46 (1197): 32. March 4, 1903 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "Ruby Cutter Savage Appears in Concert". Minneapolis Daily Times. 1904年02月14日. p. 15. Retrieved 2025年09月05日 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Ruby Cutter-Savage". The Musical Courier. 48 (1263): 13. June 8, 1904 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "Ruby Cutter-Savage" New York Phil Digital Archives
- ^ Cohn, Harry B. "Musicusis Montrealisis" The Musical Courier 50(20)(May 17, 1905): 16.
- ^ Cohn, Harry B. (April 18, 1906). "Musical Montreal". Musical Courier. 52 (1360): 48 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "Mrs. Ruby Cutter Savage and Van Yorx in Recital". Musical America. 7 (3): 7. November 30, 1907 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "American Favorites in Opera in Berlin". Musical America. 10 (8): 21. July 3, 1909 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "'La Boheme', Nov. 27". The Musical Courier. 59 (22): 30–31. December 1, 1909 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "'Rena Saville' is Mme. Ruby Savage". Musical America. 18 (2): 43. May 17, 1913 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "Real Water, Real Sailors in Hippodrome's Mammoth 'Pinafore'". Musical America. 19 (24): 2. April 18, 1914 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "Musical Program at First M. E. Church". The Palm Beach Post. 1925年01月11日. p. 6. Retrieved 2025年09月05日 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Untitled brief item". Musical America. 21 (20): 5. March 20, 1915 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ "Los Angeles Visitors Weekend at Cutter Home". Redwood City Tribune. 1941年12月03日. p. 3. Retrieved 2025年09月05日 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Ruby Cutter Willis (death notice)". The Los Angeles Times. 1949年07月12日. p. 18. Retrieved 2025年09月05日 – via Newspapers.com.