Georges Street


Georges Street was a German-born French composer. He was born in Hamburg, the son of Agnes Street-Klindworth and an unknown father. She had briefly been married to a Paris-born Englishman, Ernest Denis-Street, and her son, christened Ernst August Georg, was given the surname Street. Agnes had an affair with the composer Franz Liszt in the mid 1850s, and some suspected that Liszt was the boy's father. In 1868 Agnes moved to Paris together with her widowed father, and her sons Georges and his younger brother, Charles.
Street showed musical talent, which his mother encouraged. He took violin lessons with Hubert Léonard and became a follower and supporter of Georges Bizet. Together with André Messager, Maurice Lefèvre and Raoul Pugno, Street regularly played through the score of Bizet's Carmen, which they regarded as "the opera of the century". The musical scholar Alan Walker comments that it was partly due to the advocacy of Street and Messager that the Paris Opéra took Carmen into its regular repertory.
Street and Messager collaborated to compose the score of the 1891 ballet Scaramouche, to a scenario by Lefèvre and Henri Vuagneux. Street's opérette Mignonette, was a parody of Ambroise Thomas's opera Mignon, written thirty years earlier. Street's other theatre works include Au profit des pauvres, Le Dernier des Muelshausen, Kaen, and La Grande Légende.
Later in his career Street became music critic for the newspapers L'Eclair and Le Matin, and was the founding editorial secretary of the latter.
Street died in Paris at the age of fifty-four.