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Jean Gilbert
Jean Gilbert
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Jean Gilbert (11 February 1879 – 20 December 1942), born Max Winterfeld, was a German operetta composer and conductor.

Key Information

Life and career

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Gilbert was born in Hamburg into a family of musicians; his ancestors were cantors of the Jewish community, his cousin Paul Dessau became a famous composer and conductor. He attended composition lessons held by Philipp Scharwenka in Berlin and studied at the conservatories in Sondershausen and Weimar. After first public appearances as a pianist, the 18-year-old obtained an appointment as Kapellmeister in Bremerhaven. Soon after he moved to the Carl Schultze Theater in Hamburg and, at the age of 20, succeeded Leo Fall as musical director of the Centralhalle [Wikidata] theatre on Hamburg's Reeperbahn.

He adopted the name of Jean Gilbert for the production of his first operetta Das Jungfernstift in 1901. He continued to work as a Kapellmeister at the Berlin Apollo-Theater [de] on Friedrichstraße, where he conducted operettas by Paul Lincke. In 1908, Gilbert moved to Düsseldorf and again turned to composing. Back in Berlin by 1910, he composed more than 50 operettas before and after World War I. His most successful work was Die keusche Susanne (1910), which was also popular in an English adaptation as The Girl in the Taxi.

As a Jew, Gilbert was forced to leave Germany after the Nazi seizure of power in January 1933. He first emigrated to Madrid and later to Argentina, where he once again worked as a radio orchestra leader. He died in Buenos Aires. His elder son Robert Gilbert (1899–1978) was also a composer, his younger son Henry Winterfeld (1901–1990) became a well-known author of books for young readers.

Selected works

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  • Das Jungfernstift, 1901, Hamburg
  • Polnische Wirtschaft [de], 1909, Cottbus
  • Die keusche Susanne, 1910, Magdeburg
  • Autoliebchen, 1912, Berlin ("Ja, das haben die Mädchen so gerne")
  • Puppchen, 1912, Berlin ("Puppchen, du bist mein Augenstern")
  • Die Kino-Königin, 1913
  • Fräulein Tralala, 1913 Konigsberg
  • Die Frau im Hermelin, 1919, Berlin
  • Katja, die Tänzerin, 1923, Vienna
  • Das Weib in Purpur, 1923, Vienna
  • Annemarie, 1925, Berlin
  • Yvonne, 1926, London (with Vernon Duke)[1]
  • Hotel Stadt Lemberg, 1929, Hamburg

Selected filmography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Jean Gilbert (born Max Winterfeld; 11 February 1879 – 20 December 1942) was a German operetta composer and conductor known for his prolific output of musical comedies and light operas that achieved widespread popularity in Europe and beyond during the early 20th century. Born in Hamburg, he adopted his professional name early in his career (around 1901) and became one of the most successful figures in Berlin's vibrant pre-World War I musical theater scene. His breakthrough came with Polnische Wirtschaft (premiered 1909) and Die keusche Susanne (premiered 1910), the latter becoming an international sensation under titles such as The Girl in the Taxi in Britain and La Chaste Susanne in France. His most successful period in the 1910s produced numerous hits including Autoliebchen, Puppchen, Die Kino-Königin, Fräulein Tralala, and Die moderne Eva, many of which were quickly exported to Vienna, Paris, London, and New York. After World War I, he scored further major successes with Die Frau im Hermelin (1919, London as The Lady of the Rose) and Katja, die Tänzerin (1923), which enjoyed extended West End runs. His works often featured catchy melodies and contemporary themes that captured the spirit of the era, establishing him alongside contemporaries as a leading force in German-language operetta. Due to the rise of the Nazi regime, Gilbert left Germany in 1933, moving through Vienna, Paris, London, and Spain before emigrating to Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1939, where he continued composing until his death. He was the father of lyricist Robert Gilbert, and his legacy includes numerous stage works adapted into films and revivals across decades.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Jean Gilbert, born Max Winterfeld, entered the world on 11 February 1879 in Hamburg, Germany. He grew up in a Jewish family with deep musical roots, including ancestors who served as cantors in the local Jewish community. Winterfeld was the father of composer Robert Gilbert (born 1899) and author Henry Winterfeld (born 1901). This family background in music and Jewish tradition provided an early environment that fostered his own musical development.

Musical Education and Early Positions

Jean Gilbert, born Max Winterfeld, received his early musical training at conservatories in Kiel, Sondershausen, Weimar, and Berlin between 1894 and 1897. In Berlin, he studied at the Klindworth-Scharwenka Conservatory, where Philipp Scharwenka was among his teachers. He began his professional career as a conductor in 1897 at the age of 18, accepting the position of Kapellmeister at the Stadttheater Bremerhaven. He soon moved to Hamburg, where he served as conductor at the Carl-Schultze-Theater starting in 1898. In 1900, he took up a further conducting role at Hamburg's Centralhallen-Theater, succeeding Leo Fall in the post. These early appointments established him as a theater conductor before he adopted the pseudonym Jean Gilbert for his compositional work.

Operetta Career

Adoption of Pseudonym and Early Works

Max Winterfeld adopted the pseudonym Jean Gilbert in 1901 on the express instruction of theater director Ernst Drucker at the Centralhallen-Theater in Hamburg, with the aim of improving the prospects for success of his first stage composition. He retained the French-sounding name permanently for his composing career thereafter. Winterfeld began his professional life as a conductor, taking his first Kapellmeister position at age 18 in Bremerhaven in 1897, followed by a move to the Carl-Schultze-Theater in Hamburg in 1898. In 1900 he succeeded Leo Fall as Kapellmeister at the Centralhallen-Theater in Hamburg under Drucker. Subsequent positions included work at the Apollo-Theater in Berlin, where he conducted operettas by Paul Lincke, and conducting the orchestra of Zirkus Hagenbeck in Hamburg, with which he toured Europe. These early roles were primarily in provincial theaters and non-traditional venues, reflecting a period of itinerant work before he returned to composing more consistently. His debut stage work was the vaudeville-operetta Das Jungfernstift (also known as Comtesse Marie or L’Alliance des Vièrges), in four acts with a libretto by Ernest Guinot after Paul de Kock. It premiered on 8 February 1901 at the Centralhallen-Theater in Hamburg. Commissioned by Drucker to launch Gilbert as a composer, the piece achieved enough local acceptance to encourage continued use of the pseudonym but, like his other early operettas, remained confined to Hamburg and did not achieve wider circulation.

Breakthrough Successes (1910–1914)

Jean Gilbert experienced his breakthrough as a composer of operettas between 1910 and 1914, a period marked by prolific output and widespread popularity in German theaters, particularly in Berlin. His rapid rise began with Polnische Wirtschaft, which premiered on 26 December 1909 in Cottbus and was subsequently staged in Berlin in 1910. This success was followed by Die keusche Susanne, premiered on 26 February 1910 at the Wilhelm-Theater in Magdeburg and later presented in Berlin in 1911. The operetta became one of his most enduring hits, achieving international recognition under the English title The Girl in the Taxi and the French title La Chaste Susanne. Gilbert maintained a remarkable pace of productivity during these years, with further Berlin successes including Autoliebchen in 1912 and Puppchen in 1912. In 1913, he premiered Die Kino-Königin and Fräulein Tralala, both of which contributed to his dominance alongside contemporaries like Walter Kollo on the German operetta stage. Several of these works saw adaptations for production in London's West End, though such international stagings were disrupted by the outbreak of World War I in 1914. This era represented the peak of Gilbert's early career, characterized by consistent commercial appeal and a string of hits that established his reputation in light musical theater.

Post-War Operettas and International Productions

Following World War I, Jean Gilbert achieved a notable resurgence in his operetta career with several romantic works that found international acclaim, particularly in Vienna and London. His 1919 operetta Die Frau im Hermelin, with a libretto by Rudolf Schanzer and Ernst Welisch, premiered at the Theater des Westens in Berlin on 23 August 1919 and marked his most substantial post-war success. Adapted for the West End as The Lady of the Rose, it ran for more than 500 performances at Daly's Theatre, making it one of the only three musicals (alongside Lilac Time) to reach such a length in the London theatre scene during the immediate post-war years before the influx of American imports. This triumph was followed by Katja, die Tänzerin (libretto by Leopold Jacobson and Rudolf Österreicher), which premiered at the Johann Strauss-Theater in Vienna on 5 January 1923 and became Gilbert's most widely circulated work of the period. Its English adaptation, Katja, opened at Daly's Theatre in London and achieved 501 performances, enjoying major success across Europe and extending to Australia. Subsequent works included Das Weib im Purpur (1923, Wiener Stadttheater, Vienna), Annemarie (1925, Schiller-Theater, Berlin), and Hotel Stadt Lemberg (1929, Deutsches Schauspielhaus, Hamburg), the last of which represented his final new success in the genre. By the late 1920s, however, Gilbert's new productions met with declining fortunes, reflected in shorter London runs for adaptations and a shift away from the sustained hits of the early post-war period. These later efforts often fared less well amid changing tastes and financial challenges.

Film Career

German Film Contributions (1920s–1930s)

In the late 1920s and early 1930s, Jean Gilbert turned to composing for German cinema as a means to recover from severe financial setbacks suffered after the failure of his grandiose plans for an international musical theatre circuit in the mid-1920s. This shift aligned with the advent of sound film in Germany, offering new opportunities for composers of light music to provide scores and songs for dramatic and musical productions during the early talkie era. His direct contributions to original film music in this period were limited but notable in the context of his career transition. Gilbert composed the score for the 1931 drama Eine Stunde Glück, directed by William Dieterle and starring Dieterle, Evelyn Holt, and Harald Paulsen. This work exemplified his engagement with the German film industry prior to his exile in 1933, though most of his screen presence in the era stemmed from adaptations of his earlier operettas rather than new compositions.

Adaptations of Operettas to Film

Several of Jean Gilbert's operettas, especially his most successful work Die keusche Susanne, enjoyed international popularity that led to multiple film adaptations across Europe and Latin America. The operetta's enduring appeal resulted in cinematic versions in Germany, France, Britain, and Argentina, spanning silent and sound eras as well as later television productions. The earliest major adaptation was the 1926 German silent comedy Die keusche Susanne, directed by Richard Eichberg and produced by Richard Eichberg-Film GmbH. Starring Lilian Harvey, Willy Fritsch, and Ruth Weyher, the film marked the first on-screen pairing of Harvey and Fritsch. In 1937, the work was adapted into the British musical comedy The Girl in the Taxi, directed by André Berthomieu and starring Frances Day, Henri Garat, and Lawrence Grossmith. This English-language version was based on the operetta via its established stage translation, incorporating songs and the story's characteristic mix of mistaken identities and satirical hypocrisy. A simultaneous French-language version titled La Chaste Suzanne was produced by the same director, with overlapping cast members including Henri Garat. Posthumously, the operetta inspired the 1944 Argentine film La casta Susana, directed by Benito Perojo and released in Argentina. This adaptation reflected Gilbert's lasting influence in his country of exile, where his works continued to resonate in cinema even after his death in 1942. Further adaptations included television productions, such as the 1972 German TV movie Die keusche Susanne, directed by Thomas Engel, continuing the operetta's presence in broadcast media long after Gilbert's lifetime. These versions underscore the international reach of his compositions beyond the stage and into diverse film industries.

Original Film Scores in Argentina (1941–1942)

In his final years in exile in Buenos Aires, Jean Gilbert composed original scores for several Argentine feature films between 1941 and 1942. These late-career works marked his adaptation to the local film industry after fleeing Nazi Germany. His credits include Novios para las muchachas (1941), directed by Antonio Momplet, for which he received the Premio a la Mejor Partitura Musical Original from the Academia de Artes y Ciencias Cinematográficas de la Argentina. He also composed the music for El pijama de Adán (1942), Su primer baile (1942), En el viejo Buenos Aires (1942), and El viaje (1942). Parallel to his film contributions, Gilbert led the orchestra at Radio El Mundo, conducting operetta performances three times per week and helping promote the genre in Argentina. His prolific activity in cinema and radio lasted only a short time, ending with his death on December 20, 1942. These Argentine film scores represent Gilbert's concluding original compositions for the screen.

Exile and Final Years

Flight from Nazi Germany (1933 onward)

Following the rise of the Nazi regime, Jean Gilbert left Germany in 1933 as a Jewish composer facing persecution. He first relocated to Vienna, where his operetta Die Dame mit dem Regenbogen (libretto by Julius Brammer and Gustav Beer) premiered at the Theater an der Wien on 25 August 1933 and achieved 72 performances. After this production, with his career effectively ended in the German-speaking world, Gilbert continued his journey through Europe, residing successively in Paris, London, Barcelona, and Madrid. These moves reflected the pattern of many Jewish artists seeking temporary refuge amid escalating Nazi policies. In 1939, Gilbert emigrated to Buenos Aires, Argentina, arriving on May 4, 1939, marking the end of his European exile.

Life and Work in Buenos Aires

In Buenos Aires, Gilbert resumed musical activities by serving as conductor of the Radio El Mundo orchestra. He also promoted the fourth film adaptation of his operetta Die keusche Susanne. During this period, Gilbert contributed original film scores to several Argentine productions, including Novios para las muchachas (1941), El pijama de Adán (1942), Su primer baile (1942), and En el viejo Buenos Aires (1942). He died in Buenos Aires on 20 December 1942, at the age of 63, still in exile.

Personal Life

Family and Relationships

Jean Gilbert was married to Rosa Wagner. He was the father of two sons: Robert Gilbert (1899–1978), who became a composer and lyricist, and Henry Winterfeld (1901–1990), who became a prominent author of children's and youth literature. His family was of Jewish heritage.

Death and Legacy

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