Deva Dassy


Deva Dassy was a French mezzo-soprano, active in opera and operetta in France from the 1930s to the 1960s who made many radio and studio recordings.

Life and career

Born Marie-Anne Lambert, she was the daughter of the radical French politician Charles Lambert and the pianist Germaine Polack and had a half-sister Gertrude van Goens, from the previous marriage of her mother with the cellist and composer Daniël van Goens.
She made her debut with her stage name at the Opéra-Comique on 19 February 1932 in Madame Butterfly. She went on to sing major roles in operas such as Werther, Mignon, Résurrection, Gianni Schicchi and Les voitures versées La Femme nue. Among her creations at the Salle Favart were Inès in Frasquita, Violette in Le Roi bossu by Elsa Barraine, a servant in Tarass Boulba.
In 1934 her performances in Nice brought forward the comment that her Charlotte confirmed her early promise to be a star of the French lyric stage, with her warm and sensitive voice. As Mignon, the critic lauded her physical appearance embodying the wild 'bohémienne', with her voice across varied tones. She also appeared there that season as la Navarraise and as Prince Charmant in Cendrillon.
In musical comedy she created roles in Erosine in 1935, the title role in Yana in 1936, and in the 'revue opérette' La Féérie blanche in 1937, with Anton Dolin among the cast. After the war she became a frequent participant in the programme of the Service lyrique de l'ORTF making radio broadcasts of light operas, and up to 1963 took part in Rhodope 1962, No, no, Nanette 1954, Dix-neuf ans 1963 and Lady Poum 1963, among others.
She appeared in the film Faut ce qu'il faut directed by René Pujol, Ces sacrées vacances by Robert Vernay, and Toute la ville accuse by Claude Boissol.
In the 1930s she recorded operetta excerpts from, among others, Deux sous de fleurs, La Dubarry, Fleur d'Hawaï, O mon bel inconnu, Rose de France, Valses de Vienne and Yana. In the 1950s she took part in recordings of longer extracts or complete versions of La Petite Mademoiselle by Messager, Le Coeur et la main by Lecocq, Les Mousquetaires au couvent by Varney, Geneviève de Brabant, Orphée aux enfers, La Vie parisienne and Barbe-Bleue and the title role in La belle Hélène by Offenbach. In 1962 she was Militza in François les bas-bleus in a radio recording under Marcel Cariven.

Family

In 1925 she wed the politician Louis Lallemant at Fontainebleau. In 1936 she married François Brunschwig, and had a son Jean-François; they were divorced the same year.
In 1940 she was one of the passengers on the ocean liner the Massilia with her partner Georges Mandel which transported members of the defeated French government and their families into exile.