Singer In 1850, at the age of twenty-one, she married Gisbert Kapp, an Austrian counselor. Her husband died three years after their marriage, leaving her with two children, a son, also named
Gisbert Kapp, and a daughter, and with only a small pension with which to support and educate her family. After a period of mourning, Kapp-Young began to make use of her talents and her training, in order to enough money for her children's education. When she began her musical career, in 1859, she combined her names, Kapp and Young, into Kapp-Young. Kapp-Young's aristocratic friends persuaded her to give two public concerts, which were so successful that
Anton Rubinstein and Piatti engaged her for their concerts in Vienna, where she lived with her mother. She was then called to court concerts in Vienna, Prague, and
Saxe-Coburg and Gotha. In Munich, her concerts brought an invitation to sing in opera. On 13 May 1860, Kapp-Young made her operatic debut, singing with her brother, Frederic, in
La Juive, and under his guidance, while he sang Eleasar, her Rachelle was, a success. After that, she appeared in London under the auspices and at the residence of
Viscountess Palmerston, her crowning triumph being in a concert given by
Queen Victoria in the Golden Room of
Buckingham Palace to the
King of Belgium. Her teachers in dramatic action were her brother, Frederic, and his wife, and
Lucile Grahn. After appearing in the Royal Theater, Hanover, she was called to Frankfurt am Main, and then to the
Grand Duchy of Hesse-Cassel. At the request of the
Intendant, she made her debut there as Lucrezia. Her Valentine in
Les Huguenots, Fidès in
Le prophète, and Leonore in
Fidelio made an impression.
Hermann Levi, then leader of the Grand Opera in Rotterdam, engaged her after her rendering of Elizabeth in
Tannhäuser. Her appearance in Rotterdam as Ortrud in
Lohengrin created a furore. After that, she appeared in
Pesth, Prague, and Vienna. The sudden death of Kapp-Young's mother caused a severe illness. A sojourn at
Como restored her health so that she could sing in a festival in
Bergamo. After that, she sang in Italian her great role of Valentine in
La Scala, in Milan, and then filled engagements for Italian opera in Bucharest and in the Imperial Theater, Nice. The carnival of Parma followed, and there she created the role of Selika in ''
L'Africaine'', singing it thirty-two times in one carnival. Yianesi, the leader of the
Liceu in Barcelona, engaged her after that event. The
Imperial Theater of Tiflis, Russia, was her next triumph. However, at the end of the season, she contracted
bronchitis. Permitted by a foolish physician and over-persuaded by the Intendant and the Prince, she sang despite her illness. An enthusiastic torchlight procession in her honor closed the evening, but she was unable to acknowledge the ovation, as that night, she was at the point of
death by suffocation, in consequence of the ill-advised vocal exertion. In September, 1868, the city of
Arezzo bestowed upon her, for her singing in a festival, the gold medal of merit by King
Victor Emmanuel II's decree.
Teacher A few months after the Arezzo festival, imagining herself to be well, Kapp-Young accepted an engagement from
Max Maretzek for the
Academy of Music in New York City. The stormy travel to the U.S. brought on a relapse; still, she appeared with remarkable success in ''
L'Africaine'' at the Academy in 1868–69. At that time, she discovered in her vocal art some fortunate secrets which enabled her to overcome the difficulties brought on her by bronchitis, and the knowledge of which, thereafter, made her famous as a teacher. After one season in the U.S., she retired from the stage and went to Milan, and there, soon and often, was called upon to advise young singers. For several years, Kapp-Young taught in Europe, but at the request of American pupils, who came in numbers to study with her, she removed to the U.S., settling in Boston. It was here, when singing in a
Harvard University concert, and acting under the advice of Dr. , that she changed her name from Kapp-Young to Cappiani. During her teaching, she found time to appear occasionally in concerts. While her voice could not endure the fatigue of a whole opera, it retained its sweetness and power for short selections. ==Later life==