Date: Fri 15-Sep-1995
Date: Fri 15-Sep-1995
Publication: Bee
Author: CURT
Illustration: C
Location: A-11
Quick Words:
CT-Performers-Series
Full Text:
Classical Music Views-
The Performers of Connecticut And The Cost Of A Free Lunch
By Vadim Prokharov
There is always a positive side to any negative occurrence.
As Mario Cuomo said recently, it is good that we [Democrats] lost: at least
now everyone knows how much free lunches cost.
Indeed, the more Congress cuts cultural funding, the more people understand
what it costs to keep orchestras playing and shows running. The arts industry
in Connecticut, said John E. Otrout, executive director of the Connecticut
Commission on the Arts, exceeded the half-billion dollar mark last year in
annual economic impact and supplied over 12,000 jobs. But a 40 percent cut in
the National Endowment for the Arts' budget for next year, approved by the
Senate Appropriations Committee in July, made many Connecticut arts groups
jittery about their future. Though more and more people donate money to local
cultural organizations, it is still not enough to fill the gap and to make
executive directors feel safe.
However, Millette Alexander, president of the Performers of Connecticut (POC),
who lives in Fairfield, is encouraged. People call, she says, and offer their
support. In addition, the organization received a substantial grant from the
Exxon Corporation, whose Volunteer Involvement Fund Program encourages
volunteer services that directly improve the quality of life in the community.
Different music organizations do this differently. Some try to bring to the
community the best artists from all over the world. Some present only
Connecticut musicians. POC's work, however, is totally dedicated to exposing
young people to quality music, as Ms Alexander put it. "We have to develop
audiences as well as young artists. It has to be both." The organization gives
a unique opportunity for young people to play professionally on the stage.
Some programs, such as the Renee Fisher Piano Competition and the Leon Tec
Showcase Concert, are paid for by their sponsors, but POC does all the work to
produce them. There is, however, an annual event for which POC is responsible
in full. It is the Heida Hermanns International Young Artists Competition,
which this year will be held in December.
The competition was founded 23 years ago by Heida Hermanns, who did a lot for
this community and whose life is a novel in itself.
She was a distinguished concert pianist who won the Bluthner (a legendary
German piano maker) piano competition in Germany at the age of 18. Her career
was cut short by the outbreak of World War II, and she came to America with
her husband, who was a writer for a Jewish daily newspaper in Frankfurt. They
got out of Europe before it was too late.
Heida Hermanns was co-founder of POC and the competition for young artists
which bears her name. Originally, the prize was area performances and a debut
at Carnegie Recital Hall, but later it was decided instead to give the winners
an equivalent in prize money.
This year's prizes total over $7,000, which has to be raised. For this
purpose, on September 16, well-known local pianists will participate in a
benefit for the Performers of Connecticut at the Westport Arts Center. Six
teams of area piano duos will present a program called "Duos and Dances."
Pianists Natalie Maynard of Westport and Helene Wickett of Wilton will play
"Gazebo Dances" by composer John Corigliano, whose opera The Ghosts of
Versailles was produced by the Met in 1993.
"The Dances" are dedicated to Heida Hermanns, whom John Corigliano Jr. knew
from his childhood. His father was violinist and concertmaster of the New York
Philharmonic from 1943 to 1966, and Heida Hermanns was his piano partner in
their violin-piano duo. Fairfield County has always been arts-oriented, and
people here understand what it takes to get to the top. So both the
competition and the benefit continue the tradition of creating the artistic
atmosphere the area is so famous for, as well as by helping young musicians to
find their way in life.
All but one pianist participating in the benefit are from local towns.
Rowayton's David Allen Wehr and Eve Dillingham, of West Redding, will play
Dvorak's Three Slavonic Dances . David Wehr is an internationally-known
pianist and professor at Ouachita University in Arkadelphia, Ark. Eve
Dillingham was a member of Concorde, the resident chamber music ensemble
before it was disbanded last year, and the Hanover Chamber Players. For over
20 years she has taught at the Westport Music School.
Also on the program is the Silvermine Duo, which consists of Sandra Shaw of
Fairfield and Rita Lapcevic of Stamford; Linda Maranis and Elizabeth Lauer,
who live in New Canaan; Genevieve Chinn Brings and Allen Brings of Wilton; and
Millette Alexander and New Yorker Frank Daykin. The latter duo will make their
New York debut at Carnegie Recital Hall in September.
The POC's benefit certainly will not have a problem finding an audience, nor
will its concerts and competitions, since there are clear indications the
organization's ideas reach young people more and more. POC has expanded its
outreach program to include inner-city Bridgeport school children.
"The response has been overwhelming," says Ms Alexander, "not just from the
grateful school administrators, but also from the children."
"I want to thank you for coming and singing," wrote one fifth-grader to POC.
"It was great. I loved it. Now that is what I call singing. I saw when you
sang you had to use a lot of breath and you had to open up your mouth real
wide."
Dear fifth-grader: the artists open their hearts, too.
(For more information about this program, call 227-8998)
