Jacqueline Froom Explained

Jacqueline Froom
Birth Place:Croydon, London, England, UK
Nationality:British
Education:Whyteleafe School for Girls
Alma Mater:University of Sussex
Occupation:Poet, librettist, event organizer
Years Active:1960–2011
Spouse:Jonathan Hinden
Notable Works:Diva’s Lament, A Garden of Weeds, A Song for your Supper
Awards:2nd prize in the 2008 Keats-Shelley Prize for Poetry
Children:1

Jacqueline Mary Froom (14 January 1929 – 24 February 2018) (known as Jackie Froom and also published as Jackie Hinden) was a British poet, lyricist, and teacher. She was the co-creator and organizer of the Summer Music summer school in Bexhill-on-Sea, East Sussex.

Biography

Jacqueline Froom was born in Croydon in 1929, the only child of Sidney and Kathleen Froom. Her father was a civil servant at the Admiralty. She attended Whyteleafe School for Girls and had planned to go to university. In the late 1940s, returning servicemen took most of the university places and she did not secure a place.

Froom attended the Central School of Speech and Drama before taking up a secretarial post with the Radio Times. She then continued in publishing, spending some years with Brockhampton Press and ultimately as assistant to the Music Editor at Oxford University Press. While there she met several composers including Alun Hoddinott, Kenneth Leighton and Graham Treacher, and began writing texts and translations for them.

Froom met Jonathan Hinden, a member of the music staff at Glyndebourne, when he was the accompanist for her singing class and they married in 1968. In the same year she started the annual Summer Music Summer School with her friend Murray Gordon, which continued until 2005.

Froom became an enthusiastic Bridge player, obtained an Area Community Service Employment and Training Council qualification and taught Bridge and Creative Writing for the local Adult Education in Brighton. She played for one of the Sussex County teams.

Froom received an Master of Arts from the University of Sussex in creative writing. At 63, she was their oldest student.

In her later years, Froom concentrated on poetry. She won several competitions, notably second place in the 2008 Keats-Shelley Prize for Poetry, and published a volume of her poems.

Summer Music Summer School

In the late 1960s, Froom had attended various music courses with her friend Murray Gordon, and they started running residential weekends. In 1968, they started the Summer Music summer school for singers and string players in Bexhill-on-Sea in 1968.

The summer school grew into a major annual event with, at its peak in the late 1980s, some 300 students. There were also courses for accompanists, guitarists and children. It was notable for the family feeling it retained to the end, and there was great loyalty among the students and the tutors. Several regulars met their life partners there and returned with their children. The Summer School re-located to Herstmonceux, Bushey and Wellington College, ending at Ardingly College.[1] When Murray Gordon retired in the early 1990s, Froom continued with Jonathan Hinden taking over the programming and business sides.

Works

Poems

Froom's collection of 61 poems and lyrics, Parallel Mirrors, was published in 2011 under her married name, Jackie Hinden.[2]

Published by OUP

Whilst working for Oxford University Press, Froom provided texts and translations for a number of musical settings all published by OUP:

With Terence Greaves

In the late 1960s and early 1970s, Froom worked closely with the composer Terence Greaves producing three significant works:

With Betty Roe

Froom worked in partnership with composer Betty Roe to produce a range of works for various forces.[9]

Discography

A number of the works to which Froom provided the texts have been recorded:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Froom , Jacqueline . 'The Great Week': A Celebration of Summer Music Summer School's Silver Jubilee . Summer Music . Sussex, UK . 1993.
  2. Book: Hinden , Jackie . Parallel Mirrors . Mirabelle Publishing . Sussex, UK . 2011 . 978-0-9569774-0-3.
  3. Oxford University Press (1960)
  4. Oxford Choral Songs No. U73 – OUP 1961.
  5. Oxford Choral Songs No. X74 – OUP 1961.
  6. Oxford Anthems A171 – OUP 1961
  7. Web site: Fringe Review . Belladonna: Sue Mileham Soprano, Jane Plessner Clarinet, Nicola Grunberg Piano . 20 March 2019 . 10 September 2019.
  8. Web site: A Garden of Weeds . Complete performance by Lorna Kelly (soprano) and Paul Colman (piano), Paul Bourdillon (clarinet) in Concert 1995, Harare, Zimbabwe . 20 February 2009 . 10 September 2019.
  9. The Life and Songs of English Composer Betty Roe. Joyce Andrews. Journal of Singing. 58. 2. November–December 2001. 117–134.
  10. Book: Emmons , Shirlee . Researching the Song: A Lexicon . . Oxford . 2006 . 0-19-515202-6 . registration .
  11. Web site: Merry be Man . 10 September 2019.
  12. Betty Roe: London Fantasies (Medium Voice, Piano Accompaniment, Betty Roe, Thames Publishing, Books, TH978381
  13. Web site: Diva's Lament . 10 September 2019.
  14. Métier CD MSV 28566 released July 2017
  15. Hyperion CD CDA67641
  16. (LP). Argo ZRG 5499
  17. (LP) Pilgrim King. King KLPS 42
  18. (LP), BBC Records And Tapes REC 115.
  19. (10 x LP + Box), Silver Burdett Records, Silver Burdett Company P10 14081, 74 281 00.