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 Navigate - Genetic Matrix> Info Center> Famous People> By Type> Emotional Generators> Lehar Franz

 Franz Lehar - Human Design Picture3trFranz Lehar - Human Design Chart & Details 

Franz Lehar - Human Design Chart
1 Arrow General Details

Type                   

Generator
Inner Authority       Emotional - Solar Plexus Center
Profile               3/5
Strategy                To Respond
Definition              Split Definition
Incarnation Cross   Right Angle Cross of The Four Ways - 1
Personality Sun Quarter Initiation
1 Arrow Defined Centers  
1 Head Center
2 Ajna Center
3 Throat Center
4 G Center
5 Sacral Center
6 Solar Plexus Center
7 Root Center
1 Arrow Undefined Centers
1 Heart Center
2 Splenic Center
1 Arrow Lines
1st Lines 01 - 03.85%

2nd Lines

04 - 15.38%
3rd Lines 08 - 30.77%
4th Lines

06 - 23.08%

5th Lines 05 - 19.23%
6th Lines 02 - 07.69%
1 Arrow Collective Gates 38.46%
Collective - Sensing Gates 08
Collective - Understanding Gates 02
Collective - Gates - Total 10
1 Arrow  Individual  Gates 46.15%
Individual - Centering Gates 02
Individual - Knowing Gates 10
Individual - Gates - Total 12
1 Arrow Tribal Gates 15.38%
Tribal - Defence Gates 00

Tribal - Ego Gates

04
Tribal - Gates - Total 04
1 Arrow Collective Channels 40.00%
Collective - Sensing Channels 02

Collective - Understanding Channels

00
Collective - Channels - Total 02
1 Arrow Individual  Channels 40.00%
Individual - Centering Channels 00
Individual - Knowing Channels 02
Individual - Channels - Total 02
1 Arrow Integration Channels 00.00%
Integration - Integration Channels 00
1 Arrow Tribal Channels 20.00%
Tribal - Defence Channels 00
Tribal - Ego Channels 01
Tribal - Channels - Total 01
1 Arrow Quarters
Civilization Gates 09 - 34.62%
Duality Gates 01 - 03.85%
Initiation Gates 11 - 42.31%
Mutation Gates 05 - 19.23%

2arrow  Franz Lehar - Generator - Biography

Franz Lehár (30 April 1870 – 24 October 1948) was an Austrian composer of Hungarian descent, mainly known for his operettas.

Lehár was born in Komárno (Hungarian: Komárom then in Austria-Hungary, now Slovakia) as the eldest son of a bandmaster in the Austro-Hungarian army. He studied violin and composition at the Prague Conservatory but was advised by Antonín Dvořák to focus on composing music. After graduation in 1899 he joined his father's band in Vienna, as assistant bandmaster. In 1902 he became conductor at the historic Vienna Theater an der Wien, where his first opera Wiener Frauen was performed in November of that year.

He is most famous for his operettas - the most successful of which is The Merry Widow (die lustige Witwe), but he also wrote sonatas, symphonic poems, marches, and a number of waltzes, (the most popular being Gold und Silber, composed for Princess Metternich's "Gold and Silver' Ball, January 1902) some of which were drawn from his famous operettas. Individual songs from some of the operettas have become standards, notably "Vilja" from The Merry Widow and "You Are My Heart's Delight" ("Dein ist mein ganzes Herz") from The Land of Smiles.

Lehár was also associated with the operatic tenor Richard Tauber, who sang in many of his operettas, beginning with Frasquita (1922), in which Lehár once again found a suitable post-war style. Between 1925 and 1934 he wrote six operettas specifically for Tauber's voice.

By 1935 he decided to form his own publishing house, Glocken-Verlag (“Publishing House of the Bells”), to maximize his personal control over performance rights to his works.

He died in 1948 in Bad Ischl, near Salzburg where he was also buried.

1 Arrow Honours
He was elected an honorary citizen of Sopron in 1940.
Despite his work being in contrast with the erudition of Wagner, associated with the Nazis, Lehár's work was enjoyed by Hitler, who awarded him the Goethe Medal. Lehár himself had a Jewish wife and his friend and sometime-librettist Fritz Löhner was killed in the gas chambers at Auschwitz.
A street in Leidsche Rijn, Utrecht, The Netherlands was named after him.

1 Arrow Operettas
A complete list of his musical works may be found here

Wiener Frauen, 21 November 1902, Theater an der Wien, Vienna
Der Rastelbinder, 20 December 1902, Carl Theater Vienna
Der Göttergatte, 20 January 1904, Carl Theater Vienna
Die Juxheirat, 21 December 1904, Theater an der Wien, Vienna
The Merry Widow, 30 December 1905, Theater an der Wien, Vienna
Das Fürstenkind, 7 October 1909, Johann Strauß Theater, Vienna
Der Graf von Luxemburg, 12 November 1909, Theater an der Wien, Vienna
Zigeunerliebe, 8 January 1910, Carl Theater Vienna
Eva, 24 November 1911, Theater an der Wien, Vienna
Endlich allein, 30 January 1914, Theater an der Wien, Vienna
Wo die Lerche singt, 1 February 1918, Royal Opera Budapest
Die blaue Mazur, 28 May 1920, Theater an der Wien, Vienna
Frasquita, 12 May 1922, Theater an der Wien, Vienna
Paganini, 30 October 1925, Johann Strauß Theater Vienna
Der Zarewitsch, 26 February 1926, Metropol Theater Berlin
Friederike, 4 October 1928, Metropol Theater Berlin
The Land of Smiles, 10 October 1929, Metropol Theater Berlin
Schön ist die Welt, 3 December 1930, Metropol Theater Berlin
Giuditta, 20 January 1934, Vienna State Opera

1 Arrow Recordings
In 1947, Lehár conducted the Zurich Tonhalle Orchestra in a series of 78-rpm recordings for English Decca (released in the U.S. by London Records) of overtures and waltzes from his operettas. The recordings had remarkable sound for their time because they were made using Decca's "full frequency range recording" process, one of the first commercial high fidelity techniques. These recordings were later issued on LP and CD. A compilation of his recordings has been released by Naxos Records.

1 Arrow Films
The Merry Widow has also been made into a movie, most notably in 1925 by Erich von Stroheim with John Gilbert playing Danilo; and in 1934 a completely new version, with new music, appeared starring Maurice Chevalier. In 1952, Lana Turner starred in yet another movie version.

Source : Some of the information on this page came from a Wikipedia article and is licensed under the GNU Documentation License. ©2008 www.geneticmatrix.com.

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