Frits Reiner papers, 1916-1983.
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Creator:
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Reiner, Fritz, 1888-1963. |
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Phys. Desc:
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0.5 linear ft. (ca.100 items in 1 box). |
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Location:
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Rare Book & Manuscript Library |
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Biographical Note
Reiner was born in Budapest in 1888. He graduated from the Budapest Academy of Music in 1908 where he studied with Bela Bartok.
Various conducting and directing appointments followed in Budapest and in Dresden, including that of chief conductor of the
Royal Opera House in Dresden for 1914-1922. An acquaintance of Richard Strauss, Reiner was influenced by conductor Arthur
Nikisch and Hungarian composer Leo Weiner. In 1922 Reiner left Europe to become the appointed director of the Cincinnati Symphony
Orchestra, a post he held until 1930. In 1928 he became an American citizen. He married his second wife, Cincinnati actress
Carlotta Irwin, in 1930. From 1931-1941 Reiner served as head of the orchestra and opera departments at the Curtis Institute
of Music, where Leonard Bernstein was his student. He supervised activities of the Philadelphia Academy of Music and was a
frequent guest conductor at the Philadelphia Grand Opera. During that time he also participated in opera festivities at Covent
Gargen in honor of King Edward VIII's coronation and Wagner performances at the San Francisco Opera from 1936-1938. In 1938
Reiner was appointed conductor and music director of the Pittsburgh Symphony, resigning in 1948 over financial disputes. He
became conductor at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City where he debuted with an historic performance of Strauss' Salome
on February 4 1949. Among the 113 performances conducted during that brief tenure were acclaimed performances of Tristan und
Isolde and Der Rosenkavalier and the organization's premiere of Stravinsky's The Rake's Progress. From 1953-1962 Reiner conducted
the Chicago Symphony. He died in New York City on November 15 1963.
Scope and Contents
Letters, notes, programs, photographs, and printed materials. The collection is comprised primarily of handwritten correspondence
between Reiner and notable music figures including Samuel Barber, Leonard Bernstein, Aaron Copland, Lukas Foss, Darius Milhaud,
Arthur Nikisch. Arnold Schoenberg, Richard Strauss, Igor Stravinsky, and Leo Weiner. Also of note, letters from writer and
conductor Gian Francesco Milpiero and his wife Auna detailing wartime conditions in Italy (1946).
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