Maria Anna Mozart
Maria Anna Walburga Ignatia "Marianne" Mozart, nicknamed Nannerl, was a highly regarded musician from Salzburg. In her childhood, she developed into an outstanding keyboard player under the tutelage of her father Leopold. She became a celebrated child prodigy and went on concert tours through much of Europe with her parents and her younger brother Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. At age 17, her career as a touring musician came to an end, though she continued to work at home teaching piano and performing on occasion. At age 33 she married, moved to a village six hours by carriage from Salzburg, and there raised her own and her husband's children. On her widowhood in 1801, she returned to Salzburg and resumed teaching and performance. She is known to have composed works of music, though no manuscripts survive. In her later years she contributed to the biographical study of her late brother.
Life
Maria Anna Mozart is known to scholarship from a variety of sources. There are a great number of letters, though virtually all of the surviving ones were written to her or her family, not by her. Particularly for the early years, when she was most famous, there are news reports and other observations, collected and recorded by scholars such as Otto Erich Deutsch. She kept a diary, some of which is preserved, and wrote a brief but informative reminiscence of her brother's childhood. There is very little material to indicate what she thought or felt about the events and people in her life.Childhood and early fame
Maria Anna Mozart was born in Salzburg to Leopold Mozart and Anna Maria Mozart. In childhood, she bore the nickname "Nannerl", a name that is often used for her today; later on her informal first name became "Marianne". When Nannerl was seven years old, her father started teaching her to play the harpsichord. She progressed very rapidly, catching the attention of her little brother Wolfgang, whom Leopold soon started teaching as well. By age 13 Nannerl had reached the point where her father, in a letter, called her "one of the most skillful pianists in Europe."As it emerged that both children were musical prodigies, Leopold had the idea of taking them on tour to perform. There were several such journeys: first to Munich, then Vienna, then a three-year grand tour of northwestern Europe, including long stays in London and Paris. Lastly, there was a second journey to Vienna, but by this time Nannerl no longer qualified as a prodigy and performed little.
Here are some press notices Nannerl received.
Just imagine a girl 11 years of age who can perform on the harpsichord or the fortepiano the most difficult sonatas and concertos by the greatest masters, most accurately, readily and with an almost incredible ease, in the very best of taste.
A Kapellmeister of Salzburg, Mozart by name, has just arrived here with two children who cut the prettiest figure in the world. His daughter, eleven years of age, plays the harpsichord in the most brilliant manner; she performs the longest and most difficult pieces with an astonishing precision.
His daughter, aged eleven, plays the harpsichord in a distinguished manner; no one could have a more precise and brilliant execution.
Mlle Mozart, now thirteen years of age, and moreover grown much prettier, has the most beautiful and most brilliant execution on the harpsichord.
All four reviews quoted go on to praise Wolfgang, though in different terms – not just for his performances of existing works, but also for improvisation and composition.
During the family journeys, Nannerl's life was twice in great danger from illness. The first occasion was in the Hague in November 1765, during the Grand Tour: the Mozarts averted their daughter's death by changing doctors at the last minute, with the altered treatment leading to her survival. In her sickbed she babbled in five languages, and was administered the Roman Catholic sacrament of extreme unction. Afterwards, Nannerl was "nothing but skin and bones", and had to learn to walk again. A second serious illness occurred in November 1767, when the Mozarts visited Vienna during what turned out to be a smallpox epidemic; see Mozart and smallpox. The smallpox was likely contracted in Vienna, but the actual illness took place while the Mozarts were staying in Olomouc, in a vain effort to escape the disease.
The end of her performing career
Toward the end of the Grand Tour, Leopold pondered and made plans for his children. He sought to prepare Wolfgang for a Kapellmeister position, which would offer a steady and substantial income which would enable him to support the entire family as his parents aged. For Nannerl, however, societal views of the time meant that her opportunities were far more limited. Halliwell writes:
Though Leopold manifestly wanted Nannerl to be capable of earning money from music when she grew up, it was also an assumption of their society that she would marry for financial support.
The only real professional positions open to women were in singing, not Nannerl's forte. Leopold instead sought to prepare her for the profession of piano teaching, with perhaps some performance included as well. This was intended to generate supplementary income, either for the Mozart family or for whatever family she might eventually marry into. Concerning Nannerl's fate, Halliwell writes:
There was now an essential difference between her and Wolfgang which was caused by her sex and not by the fact that his talent was superior. He was thrust forward and had a clear goal to guide him as he worked, while she was forced to adopt a passive attitude, waiting until a maneither Wolfgang or a future husbandcould provide the salary and the place of abode which would enable her to practise in the limited way described. At the age of 15, her most dazzling days were behind her.
Wolfgang continued to tour with Leopold, while Marianne had to stay at home in Salzburg with her mother.
The years at home before her marriage
After the final visit to Vienna, Marianne lived at home in Salzburg with whatever family were there at the time, up until her marriage in 1784. The Mozarts led a lively and close family life, with numerous visiting friends and much music-making, both among themselves and with visitors. After 1773, there was more room for this, as the family had moved from the cramped quarters where Nannerl and Wolfgang had been born to the more spacious Tanzmeisterhaus "Dancing master's house", which included a capacious salon originally built for dancing. The family frequently attended the theatre when a company was in town. Often on Sundays there was Bölzlschiessen, followed by a stroll in the Mirabell Park.A few events punctuated this long period. The three Italian journeys by Leopold and Wolfgang split the family, with Marianne and her mother staying at home. In 1772, she took on her first piano pupil. In 1777, the family was split again: Wolfgang departed on a long, ultimately failed job-hunting tour, accompanied by his mother. At this point, Marianne took on a number of duties previously performed by her mother, leading her father to write, "I have to tell you that Nannerl is astonishingly diligent, hard-working, and attentive to everything that concerns housekeeping." Indeed, Marianne's mother never returned from the trip, as she died in 1778 while she and Wolfgang were in Paris. In 1779, Wolfgang rejoined the household, back from his failed journey. In 1781, Marianne took the last trip of her life outside the Salzburg area, visiting Munich to attend the premiere of her brother's opera Idomeneo, performed at Carnival time, with a side trip to Augsburg to perform with her brother. For the trip she made a "very extravagant purchase", a dress costing 70 florins. Wolfgang went directly from Munich to pursue a career in Vienna, and never returned to Salzburg other than a single visit with his new wife Constanze in 1783. Thus, between 1780 and her marriage in 1784, Marianne was Leopold's only family companion at home.
As piano teacher and mature pianist
Marianne had been taught exclusively by Leopold Mozart, who had independent fame for his pedagogy and was the author of a famous violin text. Her career as a part-time piano teacher began in Salzburg in 1772. By the testimony of Albert von Mölk, a family friend, Marianne was herself highly effective as a teacher:
In the last years of her unmarried state, which she spent in the home of her father, she gave lessons in piano playing to several young women of Salzburg; and even to the present, one can single out the students of Nannètte Mozart from all the others by the care, precision, and correct fingering in their playing.
At any one time there was not a great number of students, since each student was taught several times a week, even every day. Her students were mostly female, and were the daughters of the aristocracy and of well-off members of the Salzburg middle class. According to entries in her diary she was an early teacher of Joseph Wölfl, who continued his studies with Leopold and became a famous virtuoso. Leopold also had two resident pupils, part of whose instruction was Marianne's duty.
During the period between her youthful performing career and her departure from Salzburg, when Leopold was at home, he attended to aspects of Marianne's musical education that had been left as gaps when the goal had been to produce a keyboard virtuoso: realization of figured bass, accompaniment of singers, and transposition. She made rapid progress in these areas, which served her as an asset when she later was invited to become the only female member of an amateur orchestra, organized by the young Count Czernin. She sat at the keyboard in the center of the orchestra, holding the ensemble together. The orchestra performed piano concertos, but these were not performed by Marianne, who disapproved of the instrument that was provided. She did, however, coach other young women in their concerto performances.
There were other, occasional opportunities for Marianne to perform in Salzburg. Solomon describes the historical record as follows:
Many of Marianne Mozart's performances in Salzburg have left no trace; among the documented performances are a joint appearance with on 15 October 1769; participation in concert in the "Tanzmeistersaal" on 15 August 1777, performances for the visitors Anton Janitsch and Josef Reicha on 25 and 26 January 1778; continuo accompaniment in a concert by Count Czernin's amateur orchestra on 12 April 1778 ; and accompanying at a concert at court in early September 1780.... Her final joint appearance with took place in Augsburg in early March 1781.
There many have been other performances; according to Solomon, "in a letter of 24 March 1781 suggested that his sister "demand two ducats" each time she performed at court."