|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
|
Established in 1996 |
|
Friday, November 22, 2024 |
|
Hellmut Stern, 91, dies; Violinist returned to Germany after fleeing |
|
|
The violinist Hellmut Stern. Stern, who fled Germany with his family as a child to escape the Nazis, then returned years later to join the Berlin Philharmonic as a violinist and later became a leading member of the orchestra, died on March 21, 2020 at his home in Berlin. He was 91. Reinhard Friedrich via The New York Times.
by Katharine Q. Seelye
|
NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE).- Hellmut Stern, who fled Germany with his family as a child to escape the Nazis, then returned years later to join the Berlin Philharmonic as a violinist and later became a leading member of the orchestra, died March 21 at his home in Berlin. He was 91.
The Philharmonic announced the death. Stern had Parkinsons disease in his later years, according to Misha Aster, a friend who wrote about the Philharmonic.
Admired as much for his life story as for his musicianship, Stern was a member of one of the worlds most illustrious orchestras for more than three decades. For most of that time, the Philharmonic was led by strong-willed conductor Herbert von Karajan, one of the towering maestros of the 20th century.
Stern rose to become the equivalent of associate concertmaster and also served several terms as a member of the orchestras leadership committee. As such, he was deeply involved in orchestra politics and management, Aster said in a phone interview. This often put him in conflict with Karajan, who had a tempestuous relationship with the orchestra anyway.
For Stern, who was Jewish, the relationship was particularly fraught, because Karajan had been a member of the Nazi Party.
Stern was well liked by the other players and carried a certain moral authority, chiefly for making his home in the city that he had fled during the Holocaust.
By returning to Germany after the persecution of the Jews and the Holocaust and becoming a member of our orchestra, he set a unique example of reconciliation and forgiveness, Alexander Bader, a clarinetist and chair of the Berlin Philharmonics orchestra board, said in a statement.
During the Nazi era, the Berlin orchestra had been purged of Jewish performers. Jewish patrons were barred from attending concerts. And Jewish composers like Mendelssohn and Mahler were removed from the repertoire. The orchestra played Beethovens Ninth Symphony for Hitler on his birthday and staged a concert each time Nazi troops invaded another country.
But Stern dreamed from his earliest days with the Philharmonic, in the 1960s, of arranging a concert tour of Israel. While Israel said it would welcome the musicians, it refused to accept Karajan.
Only after Karajan died in 1989 was Stern finally able to negotiate the tour. The Philharmonic had an unexpected opening in its schedule, and Stern seized the opportunity.
In April 1990, the orchestra, under the direction of Daniel Barenboim, gave seven concerts in different Israeli cities. The high point came in Tel Aviv, where the Berlin ensemble joined with the Israeli Philharmonic in playing Saint-Saëns, Weber, Ravel and Beethoven under the baton of Zubin Mehta.
Chanoch Ron, the music critic of the daily Yediot Ahronot, wrote that he and other Israelis were moved to tears when the 120 Berlin musicians stood and played Israels national anthem. That moment, he wrote, symbolized that the Jewish spirit had survived while the Third Reich had been destroyed.
Aster, the author of The Reichs Orchestra: The Berlin Philharmonic 1933-45 (2012), said the concerts were a triumph for the orchestra, for the relationship between Germany and Israel, and for Stern personally.
He was making his lifes experience whole by uniting these worlds, the German and the Jewish, Aster said. He was linking these stations of his life that had seemed so disparate but were very much part of his biography into a singular moment.
Heinz Hellmut Stern was born May 21, 1928, in Berlin. His father, Dittmar, was a banker, then a voice teacher; his mother, Ilse Rose (Wolff) Stern, a pianist, started teaching her son when he was 5.
In 1933, when Hitler became chancellor of Germany, Jewish teachers were no longer allowed to give private lessons to non-Jews, and the Sterns were severely restricted. Dittmar Stern became a laborer as the family income dwindled.
They spent five years trying to get out of Berlin, applying for positions all over the world. They were rejected by several countries, including the United States, because of restrictive immigration rules.
Hellmuts talent was quickly recognized. When he was 9, his Jewish school deemed him its most gifted student and gave him a violin, which he learned to play.
Shortly after the Kristallnacht pogrom in November 1938, in which the Nazis murdered Jews and burned their synagogues and businesses, the Sterns had a chance to escape. Ilse Rose Stern had obtained a fictitious contract that made it appear as if she had been hired as a pianist in China.
They almost couldnt go because they didnt have the money. But Hellmuts violin teacher, Gerda Bishop, raised enough from her friends to send them.
The Sterns settled in Harbin, a thriving multicultural city in northeastern China, where they lived in run-down conditions and Hellmut was often sick.
He recounted these details in his autobiography, Saitensprünge (1990), translated as String Jumps. The phrase was a play on words, referring to the leaps of the violin bow across the strings and, in a larger sense, to the leaps of faith that he had to make as a man in exile.
Hellmut accompanied his fathers voice students on the piano and held his first public concert as a violinist in 1942. He contributed to the family income by playing in bars and hotels and at weddings.
The family moved to Israel in 1949. Hellmut was working as a pianist in the bar of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem when he caught the attention of violinist Isaac Stern, who was not a relation. The master gave him an introduction to audition for the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra, and Hellmut Stern won his first orchestral post, in the second violin section.
His parents could not make a living in Israel, and in 1956 they moved to Chicago. Hellmut soon followed, taking jobs selling shoes and working as a Fuller Brush man. He took a job with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra in 1958 and later with the Rochester (New York) Symphony Orchestra.
But he found life difficult in the United States, and in 1961 he returned to what was then West Berlin, which he regarded as home, and joined the Philharmonic.
We were really Germans, he once said. Even when I was in exile, when I was grown up, I still felt like a German.
He married Gisela Gerecke in 1962. They later divorced. He is survived by his second wife, Tatiana Stern; his daughter, Adina Stern; his son, Manuel; and two granddaughters.
After he retired from the Philharmonic in 1994, Stern toured hundreds of schools in Germany and elsewhere, seeking to educate students about fascism and dictatorship. He described himself as a professional witness.
Mr. Stern was a unique musical figure in Germany, violin soloist Daniel Hope, who is based in Berlin, said by email.
He had a lively presence and was an important witness to the evils of Nazism, Hope said. He kept the dialogue of remembrance and healing alive in both German culture and society and was one of the last of his kind.
© 2020 The New York Times Company
|
|
Today's News
April 2, 2020
Preeminent Antique Carpet Gallery Reaches Out to Clientele with Message of Inspiration
Museums scramble to document the pandemic, even as it unfolds
National Gallery of Art returns Picasso work to settle claim
Edinburgh arts festival cancelled due to virus: organisers
As furloughs grow, Kennedy Center defends Use of $25 million in aid
Hauser & Wirth to open online exhibition 'George Condo. Drawings for Distanced Figures'
Take a virtual tour of New York's museum district
Asuka Anastacia Ogawa joins Blum & Poe
Works by Maria Helena Vieira da Silva featured in Di Donna Galleries' inaugural online viewing room
Adam Schlesinger, songwriter for rock, film and the stage, dies at 52
Balcony stars bring joy to self-isolating French
2020 Porter Fleming Literary Competition award winners
Sotheby's launches online day sales of Contemporary and Impressionist & Modern Art this May
National Gallery of Victoria launches at home activities and education resources
Lamps burn bright at Jeffrey S. Evans 19th & 20th Century Lighting Auction
Hellmut Stern, 91, dies; Violinist returned to Germany after fleeing
Derek Jarman's Prospect Cottage saved for the nation
Leading arts education charity supports the vulnerable during isolation with new digital platform
Chinese 'light painter' takes artistic inspiration from virus
Wallace Roney, jazz trumpet virtuoso, is dead at 59
The coronavirus hasn't slowed classical music
Yale Center For British Art's Scott Wilcox begins phased retirement after 3 decades
Bedroom composers all: Musicians are making art in a pandemic
Closing a business in UAE: Conditions to Meet to Undergo Company Liquidation
Full-Spectrum Cannabis Extracts vs CBD Isolate
The Difference Between Green Vein and Red Vein Kratom
What is Kratom, and Why Did They Ban it in The UK?
Enjoy the Splendor of Stunning Canvas Wall Art and Make Your Interior an Absolute Beauty
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|