In 1919, she married Giorgio Polacco. In 1921 she became one of the leading singers of the Chicago Opera Association. She divorced Polacco on July 21, 1929,[4] and was married to Dr. Maurice Bernstein,[1] guardian of the young Orson Welles.
She remarried Polacco on May 15, 1931.[5] They divorced in 1937.[6] She later married William E. Ragland.
Edith Mason and Mabel Garrison on November 11, 1915, at the Metropolitan Opera, New York
Edith Mason (seated) sings for the first regular radio program of operas (Chicago, 1921), with Mary Garden in attendance
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Edith Mason.
^ abc"Edith Mason Dies. Leading Soprano. Favorite At Chicago Opera Also Sang With Met". The New York Times. November 27, 1973. Retrieved 2013-11-09. Edith Mason, a lyric soprano who sang at the Metropolitan Opera and reigned as a favorite for many seasons at the Chicago Opera, died of a stroke yesterday in San Diego. She was 80 years old and the wife of William E. Ragland.(subscription required)
^Joseph F. Clarke (1977). Pseudonyms. BCA. p. 112.
^Albert Ernest Wier, ed. (1938). "Mason, Edith". The Macmillan Encyclopedia of Music and Musicians, Volume 2. MacMillan. p. 1136.
^"Edith Mason Gets Decree. Singer Obtains a Second Divorce From Polacco on Cruelty Charge". The New York Times. April 22, 1937. Retrieved 2013-12-16. Edith Mason Polacco, opera singer, received a divorce here today from Giorgio Polacco, opera conductor, whom the singer divorced once before. They were married the second time in May 15, 1931, at Zurich, Switzerland. In the interval between these marriages Miss Mason became the wife of Maurice A. Bernstein of Chicago and divorced him. ...