José Iturbi

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José Iturbi
photo by Carl Van Vechten, 1933
photo by Carl Van Vechten, 1933
Background information
Born November 28, 1895(1895-11-28)
Valencia, Spain
Died June 28, 1980 (aged 84)
Los Angeles, California, USA
Genre(s) Classical
Occupation(s) Conductor, pianist
Instrument(s) Piano
Associated acts Rochester Philharmonic

José Iturbi (28 November 189528 June 1980) was a Spanish conductor and pianist. He appeared in several Hollywood films of the 1940s, notably playing himself in the 1943 musical, Thousands Cheer. He was involved in a complex family custody battle in the 1940s that culminated in his former son-in-law kidnapping Iturbi's two granddaughters.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Born in Valencia, Spain, of Basque descent, Iturbi studied in Malta and at the Valencia and Paris conservatories on scholarship. His worldwide concert tours, beginning around 1912, were brilliantly successful. He excelled as an interpreter of French as well as Spanish music. He made his American debut in New York City in 1929. He made his first appearance as a conductor in Mexico City in 1933 when presented by don Ernesto de Quesada from Conciertos Daniel. He was also conductor of the Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra in upstate New York from 1936 to 1944. He also led the Valencia Symphony Orchestra for many years. He often appeared in concert with his sister, Amparo Iturbi, who was also a renowned pianist.

Iturbi was most renowned in lightweight, showy repertoire, and he left no impression in music that required more depth. He appeared as an actor-performer in several filmed musicals of the 1940s, beginning with 1943's Thousands Cheer for MGM. He usually appeared as himself in these films. He later was featured in MGM's Anchors Aweigh, which starred Gene Kelly and Frank Sinatra, as well as several other MGM movies, including one with Deanna Durbin. In the biopic about Chopin, A Song to Remember, close-ups of Iturbi's playing were shown in scenes where Cornel Wilde, as Chopin, was playing the piano.

Unfortunately, while these films made him very popular during his lifetime, his musical exhibitionism and Hollywood appearances caused many connoisseurs to undervalue him as a serious musician. His concertizing and recording in the 1950s and afterwards did nothing to change that appraisal.

[edit] Personal life

Iturbi married María Giner de los Santos in 1916; she died in 1928; they had one child, María. His companion for many years was Marion Seabury, his secretary, who survived Iturbi and founded the José Iturbi Foundation after his death.

María Iturbi married Stephan Hero, an American concert violinist who had been one of her father's protégés in 1936; they had two daughters, Maria Antonia and Maria Theresa, before separating in 1939. At age 28, in 1946, Iturbi's daughter committed suicide.[1]

María Hero had obtained legal custody of the children in her 1941 divorce; her former husband had them for three months of each year. In 1943 Iturbi took his daughter to court for custody of the girls, calling her unfit, according to The New York Times.[2] Hero absconded with them while Iturbi was on a European concert tour in 1947. After a court battle, Iturbi and his former son-in-law ultimately resolved their differences, and the girls remained with their father.

José Iturbi continued his public performances into his eighties. Finally he was ordered by his doctors to take a sabbatical in March 1980. He died five days after being admitted to Cedars-Sinai Hospital for heart problems June 28, 1980.

[edit] Trivia

Cormac McCarthy honored Iturbi with a moment of colloquial humor in Suttree, his semi-autobiographical novel published in 1979. Conversing with his Aunt Martha on the topic of dogs once owned between himself and his ancestors, he proclaimed, "We had one named Jose Iturbi. Because it was the peeinest dog."[3]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Milestones" (29 April 1946). Time vol. XLVII (no. 17). 
  2. ^ Father 'Abducts' Grandchildren of Jose Iturbi. Retrieved on 2007-07-17.
  3. ^ McCarthy, Cormac; p. 128 (1992). Suttree. New York: Vintage International, Vintage Books. ISBN 0679736328. 

[edit] External links