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Oscar Straus (composer)

Oscar Nathan Straus (6 March 1870 – 11 January 1954) was a Viennese composer of operettas, film scores, and songs. He also wrote about 500 cabaret songs, chamber music, and orchestral and choral works. His original name was actually Strauss,[1] but for professional purposes he deliberately omitted the final 's'. He wished not to be associated with the musical Strauss family of Vienna. However, he did follow the advice of Johann Strauss II in 1898 about abandoning the prospective lure of writing waltzes for the more lucrative business of writing for the theatre.

The son of a Jewish[2] family, he studied music in Berlin under Max Bruch, and became an orchestral conductor, working at the Überbrettl cabaret. He went back to Vienna and began writing operettas, becoming a serious rival to Franz Lehár. When Lehár's popular The Merry Widow premiered in 1905, Straus was said to have remarked "Das kann ich auch!" (I can also do that!). In 1939, after the Anschluss, he fled to Paris, where he received the honour of a Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur. In 1940 he fled via Portugal to the United States,[3] where he settled in Hollywood. After the war he returned to Europe, and settled at Bad Ischl, where he died. His grave is in the Bad Ischl Friedhof.


Straus' best-known works are Ein Walzertraum (A Waltz Dream), and The Chocolate Soldier (Der tapfere Soldat). The waltz arrangement from the former is probably his most enduring orchestral work. Among his most famous works is the theme from the 1950 film La Ronde.

Die lustigen Nibelungen (The Merry Nibelungs) – 1904

Zur indischen Witwe – 1905

Hugdietrichs Brautfahrt (Hugdietrich's Honeymoon) – 1906

(A Waltz Dream) – 1907

Ein Walzertraum

Der tapfere Soldat (The Gallant Soldier, ) – 1908

The Chocolate Soldier

Didi – 1908

Das Tal der Liebe – 1909

Mein junger Herr (My Son John) – 1910

Die kleine Freundin (My Little Friend) – 1911

Der tapfere Cassian (The Brave Cassian) – 1912

The Dancing Viennese – 1912

Love and Laughter – 1913

Rund um die Liebe – 1914

Liebeszauber – 1916

Eine Ballnacht – 1918

(The Last Waltz) – 1920

Der letzte Walzer

Die Perlen der Cleopatra – 1923

Die Teresina – 1925

Die Königin – 1926

Marietta – [1927 in French, 1928 in German]

Die Musik kommt – 1928

Eine Frau, die weiß, was sie will – 1932

Drei Walzer (Three Waltzes) – 1935

Ihr erster Walzer (revised version, Die Musik kommt) – 1950

Bozena – 1952

Grun, Bernard: Prince of Vienna: the Life, Times and Melodies of Oscar Straus (London, 1955).

. The Encyclopedia of Musical Theatre (3 volumes). New York: Schirmer Books, 2001.

Gänzl, Kurt

. Operetta: A Theatrical History. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Company, 1983.

Traubner, Richard

List of Straus's stage works, with information and links

operone.de

List of stage works

at IMDb

Oscar Straus

at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)

Free scores by Oscar Straus