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RUDI KOLISCH1254 Holmby Ave.
Brother of Gertrud; violinistand founder of KolischQuartet, champions ofSchoenberg’s music.
THE HOLLYWOOD BOWL2301 N. Highland Ave.
Music of Schoenberg conducted during hislifetime by Nicolas Slonimsky, EugeneGoossens, and Henri Verbrugghen.
YATES STUDIO1735 Micheltorena St.
Home of Peter Yates and Frances Mullen,founders of “Evenings on the Roof” series
in 1939. Studio addition designed by Rudolf Schindler.
AMBASSADOR HOTEL3400 Wilshire Blvd.
Site of Kol Nidre Opus 39 premiere in 1937.
WILSHIRE EBELL THEATER4401 W. 8th St.
Important site for new music performances including Buhlig recitals, 1945 premiere of Prelude to Genesis Suite,
“Evenings on the Roof” concerts beginning 1945, Schoenberg’s 75th birthday celebration.
H O M E O FGEORGE GERSHWIN
1019 Roxbury Dr.Fellow composer, painter,
and tennis partner.
H O M E O FADOLPH WEISS
1803 Bronson Ave.First American to study with
Schoenberg in Berlin (1925-6).
LA CIENEGA TENNISCOURTS
Schoenberg took up tennis in 1927 in Berlin and remained an enthusiast
throughout his lifetime.
H O M E O FOTTO KLEMPERER
1546 Calmer Ct.German-born Music Director of the
L.A. Philharmonic 1933-40; Schoenberg student and champion.
LOS ANGELES CITY COLLEGE855 N. Vermont Ave.
Site of the 1947 premiere of Op. 48 Three Songsby Peter Page and Leonard Stein.
LINCOLN PARKSanta Monica
Schoenberg and children on the courts.
H O M E O FTHEODOR ADORNO
316 S. Kenter Ave.German philosopher; student
of Alban Berg; worked with Mann on musical issues in Dr. Faustus.
H O M E O FVERN O. KNUDSEN
Mandeville CanyonDean of UCLA’s GraduateDivision; acoustics expert;
family friend.
H O M E O FBRUNO WALTER
608 N. Bedford Dr.German-born conductor.
H O M E O FLOUIS GRUENBERG
506 N. Foothill Rd.Composer; conducted American
premiere of Pierrot Lunaire in 1923;family friend.
H O M E O FMAX REINHARDT
2201 Maravilla Dr.German-born theater and film director; produced A Midsummer Night’s Dreamin 1934 at the Hollywood Bowl; made
into classic film the next year.
H O M E O FFRANZ WERFEL
& ALMA MAHLER610 N. Bedford Dr.
Czech- and Austrian-born writer and composer; hosted
many émigré gatherings.
H O M E O FBERTOLT BRECHT
1063 26th St.German dramatist; came to LA in 1941
under sponsorship of the European Film Fund; attended Schoenberg’s
composition classes at UCLA.
H O M E O FHERBERT STOTHART
La Mesa WayMGM composer, including The Wizard ofOz score; family friend and tennis partner
ASSISTANCE LEAGUE PLAYHOUSE1367 N. St. Andrews Pl.
Second site of “Evenings on the Roof” concerts (1942-5). Phantasy for Violin with Piano
Accompaniment, Op. 47 premiered here in 1949 by Adolf Koldofsky and Leonard Stein.
H O M E O FERNST TOCH
811 Franklin St.Austrian-born
composer and teacher.
H O M E O FSALKA VIERTEL
165 Mabery Rd.Polish-born actress; screenwriter for Greta
Garbo; hostess of many émigré gatherings.Memoir The Kindness of Strangerschronicles émigré life of the period.
WHEN THE MUSICAL WORLD’S LEADING MODERNIST
arrived in the City of Angels in 1934, he found himself in a
thriving—and often incongruous—cultural mélange: amid
sunshine and palm trees, marquee faces and media moguls lived
alongside a growing community of Europe’s intellectual elite
fleeing Nazi persecution. This map highlights the many facets of
Arnold Schoenberg’s life in Los Angeles: as composer, conductor,
teacher, émigré, friend, and family man. IIII
HOTEL CONSTANCE940 E. Colorado Blvd., Pasadena
(Not shown on map)Temporary home of the Schoenbergs, for two weeks in September 1934.
H O M E O FARNOLD SCHOENBERG
116 N. Rockingham Ave. From the spring of 1936 to 1951,
home to Schoenberg, wife Gertrud,and children Nuria, Ronald, and
Lawrence, as well as the composer’s principal workplace.
UCLASchoenberg’s academichome from 1936 untilretirement in 1944. 4th String Quartetpremiered at Royce Hallin 1937. “My Evolution”lecture recorded at Royce Hall in 1949.Music building renamed SchoenbergHall in 1963.
H O M E O FARNOLD SCHOENBERG
5860 Canyon CoveSchoenberg family home from fall 1934 until spring 1936.
Mrs. Schoenberg anddaughter, in front of theirHollywood residence.
H O M E O FHANNS EISLER
689 Amalfi Dr.German-born composer; student of Schoenberg andAnton Webern. Left to right: Rudolf Kolisch, GeorgeSzell, Max Horkheimer, Felix Khuner (member of theKolisch Quartet), Arnold Schoenberg, Hanns Eisler,
unidentified, Eduard Steuermann.
A gathering of notables: José Iturbi, Otto Klemperer, Richard Lert, Henry Svedrofsky, Pietro Cimini, Bernardino Molinari, Arnold Schoenberg, Pierre Monteux, and William Van den Berg,
standing outside Otto Klemperer’s house in Los Angeles, 1935
Arnold Schoenberg conducting a rehearsal at Trinity Auditorium, 1937
A Schoenberg class. Over the years, Schoenberg’s students represented a wide range of backgrounds and musical approaches: Leonard Stein, Dika Newlin, David Raksin, Serge Hovey, Oscar Levant — even American mavericks
Lou Harrison and John Cage.
Charlie Chaplin, the Schoenbergs, and Schoenbergstudent, Hollywood composer David Raksin.
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H O M E O FVICKY BAUM
1461 Amalfi Dr.Austrian-born novelist;author of Grand Hotel;
family friend.
H O M E O FTHOMAS MANN
1550 San Remo Dr.German author; friend of
composer until rift caused bypublication of Dr. Faustus(1947), which depicted
a neurotic composer of 12-tone music.
H O M E O FLION & MARTA
FEUCHTWANGERVilla Aurora
520 Paseo Miramar (Not shown on map)German writers and
intellectuals; hosted many émigré gatherings.
USCSchoenberg’s first academic post. Bovard Auditorium site of a 1935 Los Angeles Philharmonic all-Schoenberg concert conducted by the composer, including premiere of Chamber Symphony, Opus 9b.
PHILHARMONICAUDITORIUM
427 W. 5th St.Shown in a 1938 photo; here Klemperer
conducted many Schoenberg works, including premieres of the Suite for StringOrchestra and the orchestral arrangement
of Brahms’ Quartet in g minor.
BILTMORE HOTEL506 S. Grand Ave.
Site of Henry Cowell’s New Music SocietyConcerts in the mid-20s, among the first
performances of Schoenberg in L.A.Schoenberg and Cowell met in
Berlin in 1932.
TRINITY AUDITORIUM9th St. and Grand Ave.
Arnold Schoenberg conducts the WPA SymphonyOrchestra in 1937. He also conducted the
Oakland WPA Orchestra.
BRENTWOOD MART26th St. and San Vicente Blvd.Schoenberg would occasionally
take the family out to this popular local spot.
H O M E O FERNST KRENEK
Palm Springs, CA(Not shown on map)
Austrian-born composer;godfather of Schoenberg’s
son Ronald.
GAMUT CLUB1044 S. Hope St.
Site of recitals by Richard Buhlig,among the first performances
of Schoenberg in L.A.
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Arnold Schoenberg’s Home Studio
H O M E O FGALKA SCHEYER
1880 Blue Heights Dr.German-born screenwriter; hostess; artpatron, most notably for the “Blue Four”
(Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Alexei vonYavlensky, Lionel Feininger). Home was
designed by Richard Neutra, later modified by Gregory Ain.
F O R M E R S I T E O FMGM STUDIOS
(Currently Sony Pictures Studios)Schoenberg’s connections to the film industry were varied. He taught a number
of prominent film composers. Louis B. Mayer and other industry executives contributed to the European Film Fund, an organization run by Schoenberg’s
friends Charlotte and William Dieterle, devoted to helping European writers andartists endangered by the Nazis. Schoenberg’s quartets, produced by his student
Alfred Newman, were recorded at the United Artists Studio in Hollywood.
O C T O B E R 2 0 0 1 – M A R C H 2 0 0 2
Los Angeles Philharmonic Concert Tickets:
call (213) 365-3500
For further information, visit our website at laphil.com
Or call (323) 850-2000
135
N. G
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Ave
nue
Los
Ang
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, CA
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Get
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UNABASHEDROMANTIC;20th-century
Expressionist; celebrated intellectual; contemporary
of Brecht, Freud, Kandinsky, Klimt, and Stravinsky;
Viennese outcast; Jewish exile in Los Angeles;
composer;teacher; painter; father; musical radical
who forever changed music.
IIIIIIIIIUndoubtedly one of the most controversial
figures the world of music has ever produced,
ARNOLD SCHOENBERGwill be examined and
honored by the Los Angeles Philharmonic on the
fiftieth anniversary of his death, through a prism of
concerts, events, discussions, and seminars held
throughout Los Angeles from October through March.
Join us for the Schoenberg Prism.
IIIIIII“I came from the one country into
another country where neither dust nor better food is rationed and where I am allowed to go on my feet, where my
head can be erect, where kindness and cheerfulness is dominating and where to live is a joy, where to be an expatriated of another country is the grace of God.
I was driven into the paradise!” — Arnold Schoenberg
IIIIIII“We need to be inspired by the intense utopian emotionalism of
Schoenberg’s modernism and by his unsentimental and subtle imagination andvision — communicated through music — of future cultural and human possibilities.”
— Leon Botstein, president of Bard College and music director of the American Symphony Orchestra
IIIIIII
Friday, October 5, 2001, 8:00 p.m.Saturday, October 6, 8:00 p.m.Sunday, October 7, 2:30 p.m.Los Angeles Philharmonic ConcertsEsa-Pekka Salonen, conductorEmanuel Ax, pianoPacific ChoraleBeethoven: Choral FantasySchoenberg: Piano ConcertoBeethoven: Symphony No. 5
Dorothy Chandler PavilionParking available in the Music Center Garage onGrand Avenue between Temple and First StreetsTickets: $12 – $78
A conversation with Esa-Pekka Salonen andEmanuel Ax, moderated by Deborah Borda, follows the concert on October 5.
Free Upbeat Live events one hour before curtain:Memories of Schoenberg Lawrence Schoenberg, Ronald Schoenberg, andNuria Schoenberg Nono — the three children ofArnold Schoenberg — discuss the work of their father.
IIIIIIISaturday, October 6, 2001, 2:00 – 4:00 p.m.Welcome to Arnold Schoenberg’s Los AngelesDiscover the haunts, the habits, and the hang-outsof Arnold Schoenberg — for nearly twenty years,one of L.A.’s most famous modernist composers,and, like Rudolf Schindler, a Viennese exile inHollywood. Visit the MAK Center to hear theSchoenberg String Quartet No. 2, performed by the L.A. Philharmonic New Music Group, andmeet musicologist Susan McClary, who will reveallittle-known facts about this fascinating composer.On display at the MAK Center is 20/35 Vision, an exhibit of works by local and international artists that examines the Los Angeles cityscape.
MAK Center for Art and ArchitectureSchindler House835 N. Kings Road, West Hollywood, CA 90069
Co-sponsored by: the MAK Center for Art andArchitecture and the Los Angeles Conservancy
20/35 Vision is open to the public 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.Free; reservations not required.Public parking is available in the garage at the northeast corner of Kings Road and Santa Monica Blvd.
For more information about Arnold Schoenberg’sLos Angeles, please call (213) 972-0704.
For more information about the MAK Center and20/35 Vision, please call (323) 651-1510 or visit MAKcenter.com.
This event is part of the 2001 Los Angeles ArtsOpen House, a Partnership of the City of LosAngeles County Arts Commission and the City ofLos Angeles Cultural Affairs Department.
IIIIIIILate October 2001A Conversation with Esa-Pekka Salonen and special guestDate and time to be announced.Los Angeles County Museum of ArtLACMA Institute for Art & CulturesLACMA WEST, 5th FloorWilshire at Fairfax; entrance on the Green.Parking on Ogden or Spaulding at Wilshire Blvd.Information and reservations: (323) 857-6088.Free
IIIIIIIThursday, October 25, 2001, 8:00 p.m.Saturday, October 27, 8:00 p.m.Sunday, October 28, 2:30 p.m.Los Angeles Philharmonic Concerts Esa-Pekka Salonen, conductorViktoria Mullova, violin
Haydn: Symphony No. 78Schoenberg: Violin ConcertoMozart: Symphony No. 41 (“Jupiter”)
Dorothy Chandler PavilionParking available in the Music Center Garage onGrand Avenue between Temple and First StreetsTickets: $12 – $78
Free Upbeat Live events one hour before curtain:Schoenberg’s L.A. ConnectionsArnold Schoenberg’s nearly twenty years in Los Angeles yielded great friendships with manyimportant artists. A panel of incredible musicians,including film composer David Raksin and pianistLeonard Stein, a former Schoenberg student, discuss the composer’s legacy.
IIIIIIIMonday, October 29, 2001, 8:00 p.m.Los Angeles Philharmonic Green Umbrella Concert Los Angeles Philharmonic New Music GroupEsa-Pekka Salonen, conductorBarbara Sukowa, Sprechstimme
Schoenberg: Ode to Napoleon BuonaparteSchoenberg: Pierrot LunaireSchoenberg: Chamber Symphony No. 1
Zipper Hall, Colburn School of Performing Arts200 S. Grand Avenue, Los AngelesPark at California Plaza; enter on Olive Street north of Fourth Street.Tickets: $26
Free Upbeat Live event one hour before curtain
Saturday, December 1, 2001, 2:30 p.m. Whose Schoenberg? A Modernist between Continents This one-day symposium considers the fate of the Arnold Schoenberg Institute. What is the importance of Schoenberg’s serialism for today’scomposers, and what role does his archive play inour society? A round-table discussion and a concertexplore conflicting claims to Schoenberg’s legacy inthe U.S. and Europe, as well as the challenges and pitfalls of founding an institution on an icon.
Villa Aurora 520 Paseo Miramar, Pacific Palisades, California Free parking at Los Liones Drive, off Sunset Boulevard (shuttle service) Information and reservations: (310) 454-4231 (reservations required)
Whose Schoenberg? is organized by Villa Aurora,Foundation for European-American Relations, in collaboration with the Los Angeles Philharmonic,the Department of Musicology at the University ofCalifornia, Los Angeles, and the Goethe InstituteInter Nationes Los Angeles.
IIIIIIIFriday, January 11, 2002, 1:00 p.m.Saturday, January 12, 8:00 p.m.Sunday, January 13, 2:30 p.m.Los Angeles Philharmonic ConcertsEsa-Pekka Salonen, conductorHélène Grimaud, piano
Schoenberg: Pelleas and MelisandeBrahms: Piano Concerto No. 1
Dorothy Chandler PavilionParking available in the Music Center Garage onGrand Avenue between Temple and First StreetsTickets: $12 – $78
Free Upbeat Live events one hour before curtain:Symbolism, Romanticism, and SchoenbergMaurice Maeterlinck’s symbolist play Pelleas andMelisande inspired a number of turn-of-the-centurycompositions, including an opera by Debussy andincidental music by Sibelius and Fauré. This week-end’s Upbeat Live, featuring a panel of literary,musical, and visual art experts, explores ArnoldSchoenberg’s lushly romantic and distinctlyViennese approach to this fascinating work.
IIIIIIISunday, January 27, 2002, 8:30 p.m.Words and Music by Schoenberg: A Cabaret Evening This one-of-a kind event weaves Schoenberg’s letters and writings into his almost decadentcabaret music. The performance, created byChristopher Hailey and staged by John deLancie, will feature an enticing cast of L.A. cabaretartists, including Michael Feinstein, and actors.
Knitting Factory Hollywood7021 Hollywood Boulevard, one block east of La Brea, Los Angeles
Information and reservations: (213) 972-0704
IIIIIIISaturday, March 9, 2002, 2:00 – 5:00 p.m.Order and Disorder: Music and Art of Fin-de-siècle ViennaAn afternoon to immerse yourself in the life and timesof Schoenberg, Freud, Kokoschka, and Klimt —adventurous artists and thinkers who helped shapethe twentieth century. Through evocative musicalperformances by the Los Angeles PhilharmonicNew Music Group, dramatic readings of turn-of-the-century plays and poetry, and expert lecturers andpanelists, we explore the order and disorder thatwas Vienna in 1900. Viennese pastries and coffeeswill be available in Zeidler’s Cafe.
Skirball Cultural Center2701 N. Sepulveda Blvd., Los Angeles
Information: (213) 972-0704Co-sponsored by the Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Skirball Cultural Center
IIIIIIIFriday, March 15, 2002, 8:00 p.m.Los Angeles Philharmonic Celebrity RecitalPeter Serkin, piano
Schoenberg: Three Pieces, Op. 11Schoenberg: Five Pieces, Op. 23Schoenberg: Suite, Op. 25Beethoven: Bagatelles, Op. 126Beethoven: Sonata in E major, Op. 109
Dorothy Chandler PavilionParking available in the Music Center Garage onGrand Avenue between Temple and First StreetsTickets: $14 – $51
IIIIIIIMonday, March 18, 2002, 8:00 p.m.Los Angeles Philharmonic Green Umbrella Concert Schoenberg’s LegacyCalArts New Century PlayersDavid Rosenboom, conductorHenry Brant, composer/guest conductorJacqueline Bobak, soprano
Olga Neuwirth: HooloomoolooJohn Cage: Sixteen DancesEarl Kim: Where Grief SlumbersHenry Brant: Glossary
Zipper Hall, Colburn School of Performing Arts200 S. Grand Avenue, Los AngelesPark at California Plaza; enter on Olive Street north of Fourth Street.Tickets: $26
Free Upbeat Live event one hour before curtain
Friday, March 22, 2002, 8:00 p.m.Saturday, March 23, 8:00 p.m.Sunday, March 24,2:30 p.m.Los Angeles Philharmonic ConcertsEsa-Pekka Salonen, conductor
Schoenberg: Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night)Mahler: Das klagende Lied (Song of Lamentation)
Dorothy Chandler PavilionParking available in the Music Center Garage onGrand Avenue between Temple and First StreetsTickets: $12 – $78
Free Upbeat Live events one hour before curtain:Schoenberg and DanceSchoenberg’s Verklärte Nacht (Transfigured Night)serves as the musical score for dances created bychoreographers such as Agnes de Mille (Pillar of Fire)and Jirri Kylian. This weekend’s Upbeat Live featuresmusicologist Karen Painter and a panel of dancersand dance historians who know Schoenbergthrough the dances created to his music.
IIIIIII
Call for Los Angeles Philharmonic Concert Tickets:(213) 365-3500
Tickets also available at the Philharmonic Box Office, 135 N. Grand Avenue, Tues. – Sat., 12:00–6:00, Sun., 12:00–4:00, Dorothy Chandler Pavilion
For further information, visit our website at laphil.comor call (323) 850-2000.
Programs, artists, and dates subject to change.
IIIIIIISpecial Thanks to:
Los Angeles ConservancyAustrian Consulate General in Los AngelesAustrian Cultural Forum New York
IIIIIIIPhoto Credits: Schoenberg studio, Schoenberg teaching,and Lincoln Park photos: © Richard Fish. Villa Auroraphoto: Karin Apollonia Mueller. Galka Scheyer homephoto: Julius Sculman. Yates Studio photo: Joshua White.Hollywood Bowl photo courtesy of Music Center of LosAngeles County Archives—Otto Rothschild Collection.Salka Viertel, Philharmonic Auditorium, Trinity Auditorium,USC ad, and Schoenberg sheet music photos courtesy ofMusic Center of Los Angeles County. Wilshire Ebell Theaterphoto courtesy of USC Library Special Collections, RegionalHistory Project. UCLA, MGM Studios, Ambassador Hotel,Biltmore Hotel, USC, Los Angeles City College, and HotelConstance photos courtesy of Los Angeles Public Library.Charlie Chaplin photo: Max Munn Autrey. All other photoscourtesy of Arnold Schönberg Center Privatstiftung, Archiv.
Design: William Kent Advertising and Design. © 2001 The Los Angeles Philharmonic. All Rights Reserved.
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Related Schoenberg Events in Los Angeles
Monday Evening Concerts, LACMAMonday, November 5, 2001, 8:00 p.m.Xtet performs Schoenberg’s Pierrot Lunaire
Monday, January 14, 2002, 8:00 p.m.Parisii Quartet performs works of the SecondViennese School (Schoenberg: Quartet No. 3;Webern: Five Movements; and Berg: Lyric Suite)Leo S. Bing TheaterLos Angeles County Museum of Art5905 Wilshire Blvd., Los AngelesInformation: (323) 857-6010
IIIIIIISouthwest Chamber MusicSaturday, November 10, 2001, 8:00 p.m.Norton Simon Museum Theater
Thursday, November 13, 2001, 8:00 p.m.Zipper Hall, Colburn School of Performing ArtsSchoenberg: Phantasy for Violin and Piano, Op. 47Schoenberg: String Quartet No. 4, Op. 37
Saturday, December 1, 2001, 8:00 p.m.Norton Simon Museum Theater
Tuesday, December 4, 2001, 8:00 p.m.Zipper Hall, Colburn School of Performing ArtsSchoenberg: String Trio, Op. 45Schoenberg: Ode to Napoleon, Op. 41Information: (800) 726-7147www.swmusic.org
IIIIIIIPiano SpheresLeonard Stein performs Schoenberg’s piano music
Tuesday, November 20, 2001, 8:00 p.m.Neighborhood Church of Pasadena301 N. Orange Grove Blvd., PasadenaInformation: (323) 851-2965
IIIIIIIRuskin Art ClubSchoenberg Symposium and Discussion
Sunday, November 25, 2001, 3:00 p.m.800 S. Plymouth Blvd., Los AngelesInformation: (323) 755-3530
IIIIIIILos Angeles OperaSchoenberg’s Moses und Aron
Sunday, December 9, 2001, 7:30 p.m.Dorothy Chandler PavilionDeutsches Symphonie-Orchester BerlinKent Nagano, conductorTickets: (213) 365-3500 Information: (213) 972-8001www.laopera.org
IIIIIIILACMA Institute for Art & CulturesDiscovering Schoenberg: Exploring Music through the Language of Visual Art
Monday, March 4, 2002, 7:30 p.m.With Jeffrey Kahane (Music Director of the LosAngeles Chamber Orchestra), Paul Holdengräber,Director of LACMA’s Institute for Art & Cultures, and LACMA curator of Modern and ContemporaryArt Carol S. Eliel.
LACMA WEST, 5th FloorInformation and reservations: (323) 857-6088
The Los Angeles Philharmonic’s SCHOENBERG PRISM
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