Manuela Budrow
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Career
Budrow sang in Mexico and in Los Angeles, California, where she was a regular concert performer and a soloist at several churches.[1] She was especially known for performing the works of Charles Wakefield Cadman.[3][4] She was also a popular performer in Santa Ana, California, where she lived after 1923,[5] and where she directed a church choir.[6]
Describing her voice, the Santa Ana Register said "Hers is an organ that defies absolute classificationas it is at will dramatic, lyrical, florid, brilliant, mellow, warm or cold. It possesses all the charming characteristics of the Spanish voice and the idiosyncrasies peculiar to the methods of Latin race vocalists, being most successful in the temperamental type of music native to the southern climes."[7] Late in life, she was a faculty member of the Los Angeles Conservatory of Music and Arts.[8]
She was a member of the American Guild of Musical Artists, the National Association of Teachers of Singing, the California Music Teachers Association, and the Orange County Council of Catholic Women. She was on the faculty of the Anaheim Conservatory or Music from 1924 to 1926.[9][10]
In 1929, as sound pictures began production, Budrow opened a studio in Hollywood, while still teaching voice classes on weekends in Santa Ana.[11][12] She composed music for two films, The Tia Juana Kid and The Irish Gringo, both released in 1935.[13] She also wrote a musical play, Brigands of the Sea,[14] and wrote the music for another, The Mystery of Dolores of Las Flores Rancho.[15]
