Ethel Stark Explained

Ethel Stark
Background:non_vocal_instrumentalist
Birth Date:25 August 1910
Birth Place:Montreal, Quebec
Death Place:Montreal, Quebec
Instrument:Violin

Ethel Stark, (25 August 1910 – 16 February 2012)[1] was a Canadian violinist and conductor.

Born in Montreal, Quebec, she studied at the McGill Conservatory of Music with Alfred De Sève and Alfred Whitehead. From 1928 to 1934, she studied at the Curtis Institute of Music with Lea Luboshutz, Louis Bailly, Artur Rodziński, Fritz Reiner and Carl Flesch. She was the first Canadian to be accepted to that school.[2] For many years she taught on the faculty of the Conservatoire de musique du Québec à Montréal.[3]

In 1979 she was made a Member of the Order of Canada. In 2003 she was made a Grand Officer of the National Order of Quebec.[4] In 1980 she was awarded a Doctor of Laws, honoris causa degree from Concordia University.[5]

She died in Montreal and was buried in Montreal's Spanish and Portuguese Congregation Cemetery.[6]

A park in Montreal has been named after her. Parc Ethel-Stark is located at the corner of Prince-Arthur Ouest and Clark streets.[7]

Montreal Women's Symphony

In 1940, at the age of 29, Ethel founded the Montreal Women's Symphony Orchestra, which she conducted until 1960. She was the first conductor of an all women's symphony. The decision to form this orchestra was a spur of the moment decision that Stark made.[8]

The first performance of the Montreal Women's Symphony took place in the summer of 1940 to a crowd of 5,000 people. Critics raved that it was ingenious and that it “had broken away from conservative ideas about music and women in music."The Toronto Symphony “Pop” Concert was guest conducted by Ethel in February 1946. The performance was received warmly, and gaining recognition and popularity, the Montreal Women's Symphony signed a contract in autumn of 1947. Ethel was noted as feeling, “that the contract to play at Carnegie Hall is not so much to her and her musicians the answer to every artist’s hopes and ambitions as an acknowledgment that at last it is accepted that there’s room for women in music."

David Gutnick of the CBC Radio One program The Sunday Edition produced a radio documentary about the Montreal Women's Symphony Orchestra in April 2012. You can hear the orchestra and interview segments with Ethel Stark and musicians Pearl Aronoff (Rosemarin), Lyse Vezina and Violet Grant States who was the first black woman in a Canadian symphony orchestra and the first black woman symphony musician to play Carnegie Hall. You also hear from musicologist Maria Noriega who wrote her master's thesis (University of Calgary) and is writing a doctoral dissertation on women in classical music in Canada.

References

Web site: She knew the score for women in music. Philip Fine. The Globe and Mail. April 3, 2012.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.jewishpubliclibrary.org/blog/?p=1630 Ethel Stark, 1910–2012
  2. Rachwal . Maria N. . 2019-12-31 . "A Jewish Maestra and a Lady too": Reflections on Femininity in the Career of Ethel Stark . Canadian Jewish Studies / Études juives canadiennes . en . 28 . 10.25071/1916-0925.40146 . 1916-0925. free .
  3. https://www.ledevoir.com/societe/493183/ethel-stark-creer-son-orchestre-pour-pouvoir-tenir-la-baguette "Ethel Stark, créer son orchestre pour pouvoir tenir la baguette"
  4. Web site: Citation. National Order of Quebec. French.
  5. Web site: Honorary Degree Citation – Ethel Stark. Concordia University.
  6. Web site: Obituary. Montreal Gazette.
  7. Web site: Parc Ethel-Stark. City of Montreal. April 18, 2023.
  8. Thivierge, Mark. "Ethel Stark, first woman symphony orchestra leader" (September 6, 1947) [Textual Record]. Elizabeth Long, Series: 4 : Biographies of Women. File 338. Doris Lewis Rare Book Room, University of Waterloo.