Bretan was born in Năsăud. He studied at the Conservatory of Cluj, the Vienna Music Academy where he studied with Gustav Geiringer and Julius Meixner. In 1912 he enrolled at the National Hungarian Royal Academy of Music in Budapest. In 1916, he received a degree in law at the University of Cluj. Bretan held various positions as baritone singer, stage director, and director-general. He made his debut as a singer in 1913 in Bratislava, continuing on to roles in Oradea and at the Hungarian Theatre of Cluj, where he served as first baritone from 1922-1940. Over his career he performed works by Verdi, Gounod, Bizet, Puccini, Wagner, Tchaikovsky, Delibes, and Rossini. Between engagements as a singer, Bretan had a brief career as a silent film actor. Bretan composed six operatic works. His best-known work is the operaLuceafărul based on a poem by the Romantic poetMihai Eminescu. In addition, he composed over 200 lieder, a requiem, and several pieces of sacred music—as well as a handful of choral, chamber, and orchestral pieces. As a director, Bretan staged works by fellow Romanian composers—Brediceanu, Drăgoi, Monţia, Negrea—as well as by members of the European canon further afield: Mozart, Gluck, Wagner, Verdi, Puccini, others. He was named director-general of the Romanian Theater and Opera of Cluj in 1944. Bretan also worked as a translator of libretti, translating his own Luceafărul into Hungarian and Golem into Romanian and German, as well as translating a few of his lieder from the language of their source material into Romanian, Hungarian, or German. In 1928 he translated Gluck's Orfeo ed Euridice into Romanian. In 1915 Bretan married pianist Nora Osvát. In 1944, Osvát's family, who were Jewish, were transported to the Auschwitz concentration camp and murdered. Refusing to become a member of the Romanian Communist Party in 1948, he was not favoured by the Romanian communist regime, who treated the composer as a "non-person". He died in Cluj, aged 81.
Operatic works
Luceafărul, libretto by Bretan after the 1883 poem of the same name by Mihai Eminescu
GolemGolem Lásadása, Oper 1924, after Golem von
Eroii de la Rovine
Horia to libretto by Ghiță Popp
Arald after Mihai Eminescu's "Strigoii", premiered 1982 in Iași
A Különös Széder-est, premiered 1974
Legacy
In 2010, two busts of the composer busts were inaugurated in Cluj-Napoca. One in front of the Romanian National Opera, Cluj-Napoca, and another in front of the Cluj-Napoca Hungarian Opera. In November 2011, at the Tudor Jarda Music High School in Bistrița, Bretan's bronze bust, made by the artist Ana Rus from Bucharest, was unveiled at the initiative of Judit Bretan Le Bovit, the composer's daughter. In October 2013, another bust, also the work of the sculptor Ana Rus, was unveiled at the central alley of "Simion Barnuțiu" Park in Cluj, being donated to the city by the composer's daughter. Another bust is placed at the Iuliu Maniu Square in Alba Iulia, and is standing next to Lucian Blaga's bust.
Recordings
Golem and Arald on Electrecord 02659 and Nimbus NI 5424
Luceafărul on Electrecord 03657/58
Luceafărul on Nimbus NI 5463
Horia on Nimbus NI5513/14
Requiem and selections from Spiritual Songs on Nimbus NI 5584