Erna Tauro
Erna Tauro (née Pergament; 16 August 1916 – 4 June 1993), was a Finnish-Swedish pianist and composer, as well as a theatre musician and teacher.[1] She is remembered for her collaboration with Tove Jansson.[2]
Biography
Erna Pergament was born in 1916,[3] in Viipuri. She was the daughter of Isak Pergament and Rifka (née Rosenthal), and niece of composers Moses Pergament and Simon Parmet. The family moved to Berlin in 1921 and later to Helsinki. Tauro studied piano and music theory in Berlin, and according to some sources, also studied music at the Sibelius Academy in Finland.[4] During World War II, Tauro worked as a nurse and also an accompanist. She married Risto Ilmari Tauro, and they had one daughter born in 1945. From 1955 to 1969 she was principal accompanist at the Little Theater in Helsinki and composed music for a number of plays and musicals.
Her composition "Höstvisa" ("Autumn Song") with lyrics by Tove Jansson won third prize in the 1965 Finnish Broadcasting Song Contest. The same year, she won second place with the song "Den gamla brudkläderskan" ("The Old Bridal Wife") with lyrics by Huldén Evert.
In 1969, Tauro received a position as musical director for Fiddler on the Roof in Stockholm, and in 1977 she settled permanently in that city. She died in Stockholm in 1993.[3]
Tauro is best known for the songs for Moomin, a series of children's books by Tove Jansson which were translated into plays and animation. Music for the last play, King Moomin Valley, was finished by composer Mika Pohjola after the death of Jansson and Tauro and premiered in August 2008.[4]
Selected works
- Kahdeksikko, musical
- Oli kevät, musical
- Guldbröllop, musical
- Moomin behind the scenes, songs for a play
- Höstvisa
- Den gamla brudkläderskan
- Troll i kulisserna
References
- ^ "Finnish Music Quarterly". Finnish Music Quarterly. Performing Music Promotion Centre (ESEK): 12. 2002. Retrieved 19 April 2025.
- ^ Jansson, Tove (10 March 2020). Letters from Tove. University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-1-4529-6382-2.
- ^ a b Gustafsson, Barbro K. (1992). Stenåker och ängsmark: erotiska motiv och homosexuella skildringar i Tove Janssons senare litteratur (in Swedish). Uppsala universitet. p. 31. ISBN 978-91-554-2897-6. Retrieved 19 April 2025.
- ^ a b "Erna Tauro". Swedish Literature Society. Archived from the original on 6 June 2010. Retrieved 8 October 2010.