Mary and Daniel both attended The Julliard School in NYC, or as it is come to be known - Julliard. To start April out, I'm going back to where these two first met - Julliard. The school has some well known alumni - below is a brief history of the school.
Source: The Julliard School
Throughout its history,
The Juilliard School has maintained a commitment to providing the highest
caliber of artistic and educational experience to exceptionally talented young
performing artists from around the world. Juilliard was founded in 1905 as the Institute
of Musical Art by Dr. Frank Damrosch, the godson of Franz Liszt and the head of
music education for New York City’s public schools. Damrosch was convinced that
American musicians should not have to go abroad for advanced study, and created
the Institute as an American music academy that would provide an educational
experience comparable to that of the established European conservatories. With
the initial enrollment figures nearly five times what was expected, the
Institute quickly outgrew its original home at Fifth Avenue and 12th Street
(seen in photo above) and moved to new quarters near Columbia University in
1910.
Nine years later, a
wealthy textile merchant named Augustus Juilliard died and left in his will the
largest single bequest for the advancement of music at that time. The trustees
of the bequest founded the Juilliard Graduate School in 1924 to help worthy
music students complete their education. In 1926, the Graduate School and the
Institute of Musical Art merged to become the Juilliard School of Music under
one president, the distinguished Columbia University professor John Erskine.
Erskine was succeeded in 1937 by renowned concert pianist and composer Ernest
Hutcheson, who served in the position until 1945.
Succeeding
Hutcheson in 1945, composer William Schuman expanded Juilliard’s identity as a
conservatory devoted exclusively to music study with the establishment of the
Dance Division, under the direction of Martha Hill, in 1951. In 1968, during
the tenure of Peter Mennin, a Drama Division was created, with John Houseman as
its first director and Michel Saint-Denis as consultant. The School changed its
name to The Juilliard School to reflect its broader artistic scope, and moved
to its current home at Lincoln Center the following year. The first production
of the Juilliard Opera Center, Igor Stravinsky’s The Rake’s Progress, celebrated the opening of the
Juilliard Theater at Lincoln Center in 1970.
Following Mennin’s death
in 1983, Dr. Joseph W. Polisi became the School’s sixth and current President,
beginning with the 1984-85 academic year. Major projects that have been
realized during his administration include the completion of the Meredith
Willson Residence Hall in 1990; significant additions to the curriculum with
new programs in jazz studies and historical performance; strengthening the
School’s liberal arts program; implementation of numerous educational and
community outreach programs; and a major expansion and renovation of
Juilliard’s facility, completed in fall 2009.
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