Maria von Trapp(1905-1987)
- Writer
- Actress
Singer Maria Trapp was born on January 26, 1905, aboard a train, as her
mother hurried from their village in the Tyrol to the hospital in
Vienna, Austria. Her mother, Augusta (nee Rainer), died shortly after
Maria was born, and her father, Karl Kutschera, died when she was 6
years old. As a guardian to Maria, the court appointed a man whom she
has described as a passionate socialist and a violent anti-Catholic.
Although she had been baptized, she grew up outside the Church until
she was 18. She was, at that time, in her final year at the State
Teachers College for Progressive Education in Vienna. To atone for her
earlier life, Maria Kutschera decided to enter a convent. She was
accepted as a candidate for the novitiate at the Nonnberg Benedictine
Convent at Salzburg, where she considered herself a black sheep because
of her tomboyish ways, her willful and independent nature, and her lack
of religious training. She was teaching fifth graders at the convent
when she was sent by the Mother Abbess as a governess to the children
of Baron Georg von Trapp. The Baron, a much-decorated World War I
submarine commander, had retired with his 7 children to a villa in
Aigen, near Salzburg, after the death of his wife. Maria quickly won
the affection of the lonely family with her lively, outgoing
disposition and the songs, games, and customs of her Tyrolean girlhood.
At the end of nine months, she expected to return to the convent and
take the veil. When the Baron proposed marriage, she was torn between
her religious devotion and her attachment to the family. With the
blessing of the Mother Abbess at Nonnberg, however, she married the
Baron on November 26, 1927. After the marriage, the family often sang
together, especially during their traditional observance of religious
festivals. As a result of the economic disorders that plagued Europe in
the early 1930s, the Baron lost his fortune, and to earn a living, the
family turned their large home into a guest house for students and
clergymen. A special dispensation from the Archbishop of Salzburg
permitted them to have a chapel where Mass could be celebrated in their
own home. At Easter 1935, the Reverend Franz Wasner (now Monsignor
Wasner) came to the Trapp home as a guest and officiating priest. An
accomplished musician, he listened critically to the family's informal
singing and then immediately took charge of their musical education,
becoming their conductor as well as their personal chaplain. He
remained with them during their entire career as entertainers. In
August 1936, when they happened to be heard by Lotte Lehmann, who insisted
that they enter a choral competition at the Salzburg Festival. After
winning the contest, they received invitations to give concerts and
broadcasts. They began their first European tour at the end of 1937, as
the Trapp Family Choir. In March 1938, Austria was taken over by the
Nazis. With only a few possessions, they fled across the mountains to
St. Georgen, Italy. There they made arrangements with an American
concert manager, who advanced them enough money for their passage to
New York. The first American concert of the Trapp Family Choir took
place at Lafayette College, Easton, Pennsylvania, in October 1938. Over
the next few years, they did several traveling shows. In 1942, they
spent their summer vacation in Stowe, Vermont. They found the Green
Mountain countryside a peaceful retreat that resembled their native
Austria, and before the summer ended, they had purchased a 660-acre
farm on a hillside offering an expansive view. During a European tour
in the summer of 1950, they appeared at the Salzburg Festival. There
they were greeted and feted royally and paid a visit to their former
home, which had been turned over to missionaries of the Society of
Precious Blood after having been used as a Nazi headquarters during
World War II. In 1955, the group disbanded permanently after a farewell
tour climaxed by three Christmas concerts at Town Hall. Since then,
Maria wrote about her life, which became fictionalized in plays (1959)
and the popular movie The Sound of Music (1965). She spent the last days of her life as a
resort owner with her children and grandchildren in
Vermont.