Leonard Bernstein

@Conductor (new York Philharmonic), Birthday and Facts

Leonard Bernstein was one of the most influential classical musicians of the 20th century

Aug 25, 1918

MassachusettsBisexualJewish SingersAmericanHarvard UniversityMusiciansVirgo Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: August 25, 1918
  • Died on: October 14, 1990
  • Nationality: American
  • Famous: Conductor (new York Philharmonic), Bisexual, Jewish Singers, Harvard University, Musicians
  • City/State: Massachusetts
  • Spouses: Felicia Cohn Montealegre
  • Siblings: Burton Bernstein, Shirley Anne Bernstein

Leonard Bernstein born at

Lawrence

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Birth Place

Though there were rumors about his bisexuality, Leonard Bernstein married a Chilean-born American actress Felicia Cohn Montealegre on 10 September 1951. He had three children- Jamie, Alexander and Nina.

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Personal Life

Though there were rumors about his bisexuality, Leonard Bernstein married a Chilean-born American actress Felicia Cohn Montealegre on 10 September 1951. He had three children- Jamie, Alexander and Nina.

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Personal Life

Leonard Bernstein was born in Lawrence, Massachusetts on 25 August 1918 to Samuel and Jennie Bernstein. His birth name was Louis though it was renamed to Leonard at the age of 16.

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Childhood & Early Life

Most of his childhood was spent doing odd jobs like mopping floors and stocking wigs for a dealer. Still from an early age, he went to orchestral concerts and piano performances which immensely captivated him. When his family acquired his cousin’s unwanted piano, he started learning the piano more seriously. Slowly, he began playing entire operas or Beethoven symphonies along with his younger sister, Shirley.

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Childhood & Early Life

He graduated from Boston Latin School in 1935, after which he attended Harvard University. There he graduated by majoring in music. His final year thesis was titled ‘The Absorption of the Race Elements into American Music.’

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Childhood & Early Life

At the university, David Wight Prall, who was a philosopher of art, heavily influenced him with his multidisciplinary outlook on arts, which Bernstein remembered for the rest of his life. He was also influenced by Marc Blitzstein, with whom he later became friends.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1939, after completing his graduation, he went to study at the Curtis Institute of Music, which was situated in Philadelphia. Here, he started studying and practicing with prominent conductors like Fritz Reiner and pianists like Isabelle Vengerova. Over the time he spent here, he is said to have greatly enjoyed the environment in this Institute.

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Childhood & Early Life

After completing his training Leonard Bernstein left Curtis and settled in New York. The New York Philharmonic offered him a position of assistant conductor in 1943. Once when the symphony’s guest conductor fell ill, Bernstein had to step up and take his place, which he did with great success, amazing the crowd and the players. This made him a successful conductor overnight.

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Career

From 1945, he started conducting the New York orchestra and appearing as well, as a guest conductor across the United States. During the next few years, his career started to blossom, and he went on several international tours in order to perform. His overseas debut started with the Czech Philharmonic in Prague.

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Career

In 1949, he conducted the world premiere of the famous Turangalila-Symphonie, which was composed by Oliver Messiaen, with the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

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Career

In 1954, Bernstein started the television show ‘Omnibus’. It allowed him to speak to his audience and music lovers more easily. He gave lectures on Omnibus for several years, which were made into a DVD set in 2010.

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Career

Later, though he stepped down from the New York Philharmonic, he still continued to appear with them for many years till his death. He also toured with them for many years to places like Europe and Asia.

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Career

His musical theater work ‘MASS’ which was commissioned by Jacqueline Kennedy as part of the opening of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. is one of his best known works. The work, though intended to be staged theatrically, has also been performed in a standard concert setting.

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Major Works

His writings were published in several books and journals like ‘The Joy of Music’ (1959) and ‘The Infinite Variety of Music’ (1966). The lectures he gave at Harvard University were also published and televised as ‘The Unanswered Question.’

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Major Works