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CSI/CUNY News Release |
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For Immediate Release - Monday,
October 27, 2003 |
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Paris comes to Staten
Island
an evening with Music’s Modern Muse
Staten Island - Step back in time
to the allure, charm, and mystique of high-society French salons for
a one night musical journey to turn-of-the-century Paris with A
Soiree with the Princesse Edmond de Polignac.
One of the era’s most influential and
colorful personalities, the Princesse Edmond de Polignac, a powerful
and passionate lover of the arts, used her colossal fortune to
benefit the 20th century world of music, letters, science, and
culture, and her influences on these domains remain incalculable.
On Tuesday, November 11 at 7:00 p.m. at
the College of Staten Island, Sylvia Kahan, narrator and pianist,
presents this world premiere performance based on her recently
released book Music's Modern Muse: A Life of Winnaretta
Singer, Princesse de Polignac, published by University of
Rochester Press.
Princesse Edmond de Polignac, born
Winnaretta Singer, was the 20th child of sewing machine magnate
Isaac Merritt Singer; her mother was Paris-born Isabelle Boyer, who,
according to legend, was the model for Frédéric Bartholdi's Statue
of Liberty. After the death of her father, she inherited a
substantial part of the Singer Sewing Machine fortune, making her a
millionaire at the age of eighteen.
Her 1893 marriage to Prince Edmond de
Polignac, an amateur composer, brought her into contact with the
most elite strata of French society. After Edmond's death in 1901,
she used her fortune to benefit the arts, science, and letters.
Sylvia Kahan, chair of the Performing
and Creative Arts department at the College of Staten Island (CSI),
spent a dozen years researching this legendary Yonkers-born Parisian
in the European archives of the Singer and Polignac families. Kahan
was particularly assisted in her work by Prince Edmond de Polignac,
great-great-nephew and godson of the arts patron.
The performance will be presented in the
Recital Hall of the College of Staten Island’s Center for the Arts
on Tuesday, November 11, 2003 at 7:00 p.m.
Kahan will be assisted by Janet
Pranschke, soprano; Olivier Fluchaire, violin; James Hopkins, viola;
and Jieun Cecilia Kim, cello. The event is presented by Michael
Shugrue, the Friends
of CSI, and the Performing and Creative Arts department.
Tickets for the nearly sold out premiere
cost $20 and may be purchased by calling the college’s advancement
office at (718)982-2342. All proceeds benefit the music program of
CSI and student scholarships.
photography available
MUSICAL
SELECTIONS include:
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Gabriel Fauré: "Mandoline" from Cinq
Mélodies de Venise
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Edmond de Polignac: Lamento
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Maurice Ravel: Pavane pour une infante
défunte
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Igor Stravinsky: Renard (recorded
excerpt)
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Erik Satie: La Mort de Socrate (recorded
excerpt)
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Manuel de Falla: El Retablo de Maese
Pedro (recorded excerpt)
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Igor Stravinsky: Eclogue I from Duo
Concertant
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Francis Poulenc: "Le Garçon de Liège"
from Trois Poèmes de Louise de Vilmorin
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Gabriel Fauré: Quartet No. 1 for Piano
and Strings in C Minor, Op. 15 (•Allegro molto moderato, •Scherzo:
Allegro vivo, •Adagio, •Allegro molto)
BACKGROUND: A Soiree with the
Princesse Edmond de Polignac
WINNARETTA SINGER’s most significant contribution to the 20th
century was in the musical domain: in addition to subsidizing
individual artists (Nadia Boulanger, Clara Haskil, Arthur
Rubinstein, Vladimir Horowitz) and organizations (the Ballets Russes,
l'Opéra de Paris, l'Orchestre Symphonique de Paris), she made a
lifelong project of commissioning new musical works from composers,
many of them unknown and struggling, to be performed in her Paris
salon.
The list of works created as a result is long and extraordinary:
Stravinsky's Renard, Satie's Socrate, Falla's El Retablo de Maese
Pedro, and Poulenc's Two-Piano and Organ Concertos are among the
best-known titles. In addition, her salon was a gathering place for
luminaries of French culture such as Proust, Cocteau, Monet,
Diaghilev, and Colette. Many of Proust's memorable evocations of
salon culture were born during his attendance of concerts in the
Polignac music room.
Singer-Polignac supported the work of several women composers,
including Ethel Smyth and Adela Maddison, using her influence to
have their operas mounted in major European theaters. The Princesse
de Polignac also was a patron of the Ballets Russes and the
composers whose music became associated with the troupe's
productions. Her patronage extended to the worlds of science and
architecture as well, and she counted among her protégés Marie Curie
and Le Corbusier.
SYLVIA KAHAN is chair of the Performing and Creative Arts
department at The City University of New York’s College of Staten
Island. She is a member of the music faculties of the CUNY Graduate
Center and the College of Staten Island.
Kahan has written extensively on late 19th-century and 20th-century
French music and culture. Her book, Music's Modern Muse: A Life of
Winnaretta Singer, Princesse de Polignac (University of Rochester
Press) has been recently released. She has been featured in
prestigious concert series in major cities, including the Tuesday
Matinees Series (Merkin Concert Hall, NYC), the Dame Myra Hess
Memorial Concerts (Chicago) and the Fondation Singer-Polignac
(Paris). Her concerts have been broadcast on WQXR and WNYC (New
York) and National Public Radio. She has performed at the Tanglewood,
Aspen, Waterloo, Delta, and Nancy summer festivals, and has
collaborated with the English Chamber Orchestra, sopranos Roberta
Peters and Shirley Verrett, the Meridian String Quartet, and members
of the New York Philharmonic and Metropolitan Opera Orchestra.
Sylvia Kahan earned degrees in Music
from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music, Michigan State University,
and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, and
continued her piano studies with distinguished artist Richard Goode.
JANET PRANSCHKE was a national finalist with the Metropolitan
Opera, and a winner in the Munich International Voice Competition
and the Liederkranz Foundation Competition. She serves on the voice
faculties at the College of Staten Island, CUNY and Wagner College,
and maintains private voice studios in Manhattan and Staten Island.
OLIVIER FLUCHAIRE performs on a rare Tomaso Carcassi violin
dated 1751 throughout Europe, Asia, and the United States and is
currently a doctoral candidate at the CUNY Graduate Center. He
serves on the music faculties of the College of Staten Island and
the Brooklyn/Queens Conservatory’s Professional Division.
JAMES HOPKINS is a violist, a tenor, and a Certified Fund
Raising Executive. He received his Bachelor of Music degree in Viola
Performance from the Eastman School of Music, where he studied viola
with Francis Tursi and voice with Jon Maloy. He currently serves as
Director of Development for The English-Speaking Union of the United
States.
JIEUN CECILIA KIM was born in Seoul, Korea. She began piano
study at age five, but, encouraged by her mother, switched to the
cello at age nine. Cecilia Kim has recently moved to Staten Island,
and performs regularly in the New York area.
The College of Staten Island (CSI) is a senior college of The City
University of New York (CUNY), the nation’s leading urban
university. CSI offers 35 academic programs, 15 graduate degree
programs, and challenging doctoral programs to 12,000 students.
The 204-acre landscaped campus of CSI, the largest in NYC, is fully
accessible and contains an advanced, networked infrastructure to
support technology-based teaching, learning, and research. For more
information, visit www.csi.cuny.edu
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