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Mélanie Hélène Bonis, known as Mel Bonis (21 January 1858 – 18 March 1937), was a prolific French late-Romantic composer. She wrote more than 300 pieces, including works for piano solo and four hands, organ pieces, chamber music, mélodies, choral music, a mass, and works for orchestra. She attended the Paris Conservatoire, where her teachers included Cesar Franck, Ernest Guiraud, and Auguste Bazille.

Mel Bonis at age 27, painting by Charles-Auguste Corbineau (1885).
Mel Bonis at age 27, painting by Charles-Auguste Corbineau (1885).
Mel Bonis at about age 50, photo ca. 1908.
Mel Bonis at about age 50, photo ca. 1908.

Life


Bonis was born to a Parisian lower-middle-class family and was educated according to the strict norms of Catholic morality. Endowed with great talent and musical sensitivity, she taught herself to play the piano. Initially, her parents did not encourage her music, but when she was twelve they were persuaded by a professor at the Conservatoire to allow her to receive formal music lessons.[1] In 1874, at the age of sixteen, she began her studies at the Conservatoire, and attended classes in accompaniment, harmony, and composition, where she shared the benches with Claude Debussy and Gabriel Pierné[2] and received tuition from César Franck.

At the Conservatoire, she met and fell in love with Amédée Landély Hettich (5 February 1856 - 5 April 1937),[3] a student, poet, and singer, setting some of his poems to music. Her parents disapproved of the match and withdrew her from the Conservatoire.[4] In 1883, when she was twenty-five, they arranged for her to marry the businessman Albert Domange (4 April 1836 – 31 March 1918).[5] Domange was twenty-two years her senior, and twice a widower with five children from his previous marriages. After marriage, Bonis immersed herself in domesticity, bearing three children with Domange: Pierre (1884 – 1969), Jeanne (1888 – 1987) and Édouard (1893 – 1932).[5] For Bonis, it was not an ideal marriage, as Domange did not like music.[6]

In the 1890s, Bonis re-encountered Hettich, who was by then a respected vocal teacher and writer on music, married to a Polish harpist.[4] Hettich encouraged Bonis to return to composition and was able to introduce her to some of the major publishers, after which her career began to succeed. Bonis and Hettich embarked on an affair, which led to the birth of an illegitimate child, Madeleine (Jeanne-Pauline-Madeline Verger), on 8 September 1899.[7][8] Madeleine was put into the care of a former chambermaid; she inherited musical talent from her parents.[4]

Bonis then devoted all her energies to composition. Her piano quartet was performed in 1901, and when he heard it, Saint-Saens exclaimed, "I never imagined a woman could write such music!".[9] On 22 April 1905, she received an 'honourable mention' for her (now lost) Suite pour harpe chromatique et deux instruments à vent.[4] In 1907, she became a member of the committee of the Société des compositeurs de musique (sic)[6] and, from 1910 to 1914, its secretary.[4] Some of her works were published by Éditions Alphonse Leduc.[6]

In 1912, after the death of his wife, Hettich acknowledged that he was Madeleine's father. Domange died on 31 March 1918, when Bonis assumed care of Madeleine, whose foster mother had also died. Upon his demobilisation from service in World War I, Bonis’ son Édouard began to form a romantic relationship with Madeleine, forcing Bonis to reveal their familial relationship, on pain of strict secrecy. In 1923, Madeleine married Pierre Quinet.[4]

Bonis was too modest for self-promotion, and even her admirers at the time could not overlook her gender. After the First World War, her music fell into obscurity, and she became bedridden from arthritis. She continued to compose through the late 1920s, until her death in 1937, aged 79. Hettich died a month later.[3] Bonis died in Sarcelles, Val-d'Oise, and is buried in Cimetière de Montmartre, Paris.[9]

An eighty-four-page autobiographical book of personal reflections, "Souvenirs et Réflexions", was published by her daughter, Jeanne Brochot (née Domange), through 'les éditions du Nant d'enfer', Évian, in 1974.[4][10]


Compositions



Chamber music



Music for piano


Modern edition in nine volumes published by Furore:


Children's music



Organ music



Vocal religious music



Orchestra


(modern edition: Furore)


Wind and percussions for youth



References


  1. "Mel Bonis Compositrice". www.mel-bonis.com/melboanglais.htm. Retrieved 2021-06-20.
  2. Géliot, Christine: Mel Bonis. Femme et compositeur (1858–1937), second edition (Paris: L'Harmattan, 2009), ISBN 978-2-296-09409-3.
  3. Amédée-Louis Hettich (1856-1937) data.bnf.fr, accessed 22 June 2021
  4. Anne-Marie Polome Portrait de compositrice : Mélanie-Hélène Bonis dite Mel Bonis (I) 26 May 2021 www.crescendo-magazine.be, accessed 22 June 2021
  5. Louis-Hubert-Jacques-Albert DOMANGE family tree www.ancestry.com.au, accessed 22 June 2021
  6. Géliot, Christine. "Mel Bonis biography". La Boutique de Mel Bonis. Retrieved 2021-01-03.
  7. Lettre à Mel Bonis : éditions Baudoux (1899) www.bruzanemediabase.com, accessed 22 June 2021
  8. Extrait "Mel Bonis (1858-1937)" 10 March 2020 issuu.com, accessed 23 June 2021
  9. Mel Bonis www.findagrave.com, accessed 22 June 2021
  10. Bonis, Mel – Souvenirs et Réflexions 1974 www.bruzanemediabase.com, accessed 22 June 2021



На других языках


[de] Mélanie Bonis

Mélanie Hélène Bonis (* 21. Januar 1858 in Paris; † 18. März 1937 in Sarcelles) war eine französische Komponistin. Ihre Werke wurden zumeist unter dem Pseudonym Mel Bonis publiziert.
- [en] Mélanie Bonis

[ru] Бони, Мел

Мел Бони́ (фр. Mel Bonis), настоящее имя Мелани Элен Бони (фр. Mélanie Hélène Bonis, 1 января 1858, Париж — 18 марта 1937, Сарсель) — французский композитор. Писала под псевдонимом «Мел Бони», чтобы скрыть тот факт, что автор — женщина[1][2].



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