Born in
Baiae, Salvatini was the daughter of an officer of the Italian Army. She was orphaned at the age of 4 and thereafter was raised in boarding schools operated by the
Sacred Heart in Portici and Paris. Her musical talents were evident at an early age and she was encouraged to pursue a singing career. She studied voice in Paris with
Pauline Viardot-Garcia and
Jean de Reszke. She later studied with
Julius Lieban in Germany. Salvatini made her professional opera debut in 1908 at the age of 21 at the
Berlin State Opera in the title role of
Giuseppe Verdi's
Aida, together with Enrico Caruso, who is said to have carried her onto the stage because she would not come out to collect her applause. She remained active at that theatre through 1914, singing such roles as Leonora in Verdi's
Il trovatore and the title role in
Giacomo Puccini's
Madama Butterfly. In 1912 she appeared as a guest artist at the
Bavarian State Opera and in 1913 she made her debut with the
Paris Opera as Valentine in
Giacomo Meyerbeer's
Les Huguenots. She then returned to the Deutsche Oper Berlin where she was active until her retirement from the stage in 1932. and Charles E. (Horst) Gérard. Recent research has disproved claims that she was the mistress of
Adolphus Frederick VI, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz from 1908 until his suicide in 1918 and that her two sons were illegitimate children of the Grand Duke. In 1933 she married
Jurgis Šaulys, the Lithuanian Ambassador to Germany. At the outbreak of World War II they moved to Lugano in the Swiss canton of Ticino, where she died in 1971 at the age of 84. Her grandson , son of Charles E. Gérard and an architect and real estate developer, became – together with his wife, the art historian Jana Marko – the initiator of the new concert hall in Hamburg known as
Elbphilharmonie. ==References==