Andayweg (Hütteldorf), named in 1980 after the Hungarian mezzo-soprano Rosette Anday.
Rosette Anday (22 December 1899 or 1903 – 18 September 1977), born Piroska Anday in Budapest, was an internationally renowned Hungarian mezzo-soprano. She began her musical training at the Franz Liszt Academy at the age of twelve and made a sensational debut at the Vienna State Opera in 1921 as Carmen. With the support of Franz Schalk and Richard Strauss, she quickly rose to become one of the leading singers of the company. Her repertoire included major mezzo roles ranging from Mozart to Verdi, Wagner, and Richard Strauss, among them Dalila, Brangäne, Waltraute, and Klytämnestra.
Anday appeared at the most important opera houses in Europe as well as in North and South America, while remaining closely associated with the Vienna State Opera. After the Anschluss of Austria, she was dismissed in 1940 because of her Jewish origins and lived under constant threat during the Nazi period. After the Second World War, she successfully resumed her career, including performances at the Theater an der Wien. She was one of the youngest Austrian Kammersängerinnen and received numerous honors and widespread recognition. Rosette Anday died in Vienna in 1977 and was laid to rest in an honorary grave at the Vienna Central Cemetery.