Fritz Mahler
Fritz Mahler (July 16, 1901, Vienna, Austria – June 18, 1973, Winston-Salem, North Carolina) was an Austrian conductor.
Mahler's father was a cousin of the composer Gustav Mahler. In Europe he became a leading conductor with such ensembles as the Berlin Radio Symphony, the Dresden Philharmonic and the Danish State Symphony. He fled Europe in 1936 for the United States. He was married, from 1939 until his death, to dancer Pauline Koner (b. 1912) and taught at summer sessions of the Juilliard School in New York for many years (advanced conducting, director of the opera department). In 1940-41, he was the city's director of music for the National Youth Administration as well. Mahler was music director of the Erie Philharmonic from 1947 to 1953 and the Hartford Symphony Orchestra from 1953 to 1962. Koner's memoir "Solitary Song" (Duke University Press, 1989) provides much information about his career available nowhere else.
References
- Thea Constantine (May 2004). "Fritz Mahler Papers" (PDF). New York Public Library for Performing Arts Music Division. Archived from the original (.PDF) on 2007-07-12. Retrieved 2007-09-14.
Preceded by Moshe Paranov |
Music Directors, Hartford Symphony 1953-1962 |
Succeeded by Arthur Winograd |
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