Remembering Leonard Bernstein on his birthday 🎂
📷 Gordon Parks, 1955
"There had never been a communicator about music with anywhere near his brilliance, humor, energy, reach and importance."
- Zachary Woolfe
Seems like his 2018 Centennial was just yesterday!
Coffee with Lenny on his birthday ☕️
That's Joe McNally's 1986 photo of Bernstein at Springate, his Fairfield, Connecticut home.
Leonard Bernstein by Arnold Newman, 1968
@smithsonian National Portrait Gallery
"In terms of conducting technique, he would offer tips. He used to say, 'Don’t imitate me — but do it like this'."
- Marin Alsop
Leonard Bernstein by Don Hunstein, 1958
"Outwardly, Bernstein has much of the actor about him. The bones of his face are arranged so theatrically that in shifting light he gives the impression, without moving a muscle, of being an entire cast of characters."
- Robert Rice
Leonard Bernstein outside the National Theatre in Washington DC, at the August 19, 1957 out-of-town opening
📷 Robert H. Phillips
@NYPL digital collection
"The score to West Side Story is a war zone of impetuous cross-rhythms."
- Jesse Green
Leonard Bernstein by Irving Penn, for Vogue, 1947
Even before he was named Music Director of the @NYPhil the drama critic Harold Clurman said: "Lenny is hopelessly fated for success."
Leonard Bernstein by Gordon Parks, 1956
His @NYTimes obituary quotes "an acquaintance":
"There is nothing Lenny can't do supremely well, if he doesn't try too hard."
Mario Dondero
Maria Callas, Luchino Visconti & Leonard Bernstein during the rehearsals of Bellini's La Sonnambula at La Scala, 1955
Another Mario Dondero shot of Maria Callas, Luchino Visconti & Leonard Bernstein in Milan in 1955. Lenny nearly holds his own, charisma-wise; a tough job when Callas is in the room!
Leonard Bernstein flanked by two of his mentors: Aaron Copland & Serge Koussevitzky
Photo: Ruth Orkin, Tanglewood, 1940
Celebrating Leonard Bernstein on his birthday.
With Virgil Thompson, Walter Piston, Aaron Copland & William Schuman
Photo: Bruce Davidson, 1970
@metmuseum
From Eugene Smith's 1951 "Recording Artists" photo-essay for Life Magazine, Leonard Bernstein with Marc Blitzstein. Blitzstein once said, "We are almost telepathically close. Sometimes we compose startlingly similar music on the same day, without seeing each other.”
Leonard Bernstein by Abbas, Paris, 1986
"Tallulah Bankhead once watched Bernstein conduct a Tanglewood rehearsal & said to him in her husky baritone: 'Darling, I have gone mad over your back muscles. You must come & have dinner with me'."
- Donal Henahan
Leonard Bernstein's final concert with @BostonSymphony
📷 Kristina Jentzsch
"Those who had seen & heard Bernstein perform innumerable times over the years will never forget the sovereign authority of that interpretation, grave & noble, yet passionate, as well."
- John Rockwell
Leonard Bernstein, Jerome Robbins, Betty Comden, & Adolph Green in rehearsal for On the Town, 1943.
@NYPL Digital Collections
"Its omnivorous musical style embodies the Bernstein ethos at its most daring and youthful."
- Joshua Barone
Alfred Eisenstaedt
Stephen Sondheim, Jerome Robbins & Leonard Bernstein work on West Side Story, 1956
"No one writing a musical has ever used rhythm as effectively as he did, to let us hear the human heart just as it’s leaping forward, just as it’s about to burst."
- Jesse Green
Leonard Bernstein by Henri Cartier-Bresson, 1960
"Yes, all conductors have highly personal characteristics, but has there ever been one as theatrical, as showy, as hammy as he was? Or as exciting, as persuasive, as dedicated?"
- Robert Gottlieb
Leonard Bernstein rehearses Carmen with Marilyn Horne at Lincoln Center
@MetOpera
📷 Burt Glinn, 1972
In New York in the 1960s the Three Bs of Classical Music were Leonard Bernstein, George Balanchine & Rudolph Bing.
Photo: Michael Rougier, Lincoln Centre, 1966
I don't believe Philippe Halsman got a #Jump shot with Leonard Bernstein, but no matter: here's Gjon Mili's great photo of Lenny up in the air.
Leonard Bernstein by David Attie, 1959
"I can't live one day without hearing music, playing it, studying it or thinking about it. And all this is quite apart from my professional role as a musician."

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More from @dean_frey

11 Sep
Theodor Adorno takes a selfie.
Today we're celebrating his birthday 🎂
"While Adorno is a critic of the Enlightenment, he is ultimately a critic of its failure. There has been too little enlightenment, not too much."
- Nasrullah Mambrol
I didn't know that Theodor Adorno, such an important critic of avant garde music, was a composer himself. Here are his Two Pieces for String Quartet, op.2, 1924/25.
My favourite portrait of Theodor Adorno, from 1958. I wish I knew who took it.
In a letter to Walter Benjamin, Adorno said this about high & popular culture: "Both are torn halves of an integral freedom, to which however they do not add up."
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11 Sep
Remembering D. H. Lawrence on his birthday 🎂
📷 Edward Weston, 1924
@NPGLondon
"Lawrence, in the English language, was the great genius of our time (I mean the age, or climatic phase, following Conrad's)."
- F. R. Leavis
D.H. Lawrence is Mark Rampion in Aldous Huxley's Point Counterpoint, while the character Philip Quarles is Huxley's self-portrait. The two listen to Beethoven together in the novel.
This photo is possibly by Lady Ottoline Morrell
vintage snapshot print, 1928
@NPGLondon
Photo of Lawrence in Taos NM, from Mabel Dodge's scrapbook
"Lawrence’s formal accomplishment, less obvious at a glance than Joyce’s or Woolf’s, is to narrate beneath the stream of consciousness, & chart subterranean currents of feeling as they shift & swell."
- Benjamin Kunkel
Read 5 tweets
11 Sep
Listening to Jimmy Rowles, The Peacocks, from 1977
With Stan Getz, Elvin Jones & Buster Williams
Love the cover illustration by Seymour Chwast
open.spotify.com/album/1xNk28wK…
Jimmy Rowles's 1976 album Jazz is a Fleeting Moment features a self-caricature
"Understatement was his strength, & his best solos often sound preplanned, spare, with each note perfectly chosen for its color. Rowles had absorbed the music of Ellington & Strayhorn."
- Peter Watrous
Bill Evans plays Jimmy Rowles's great song Peacocks, with Eddie Gómez on bass & Eliot Zigmund on drums. From his album You Must Believe in Spring, recorded in 1977, but not released until after Evans's death in 1980.
Read 7 tweets
11 Sep
Remembering Robert Wise on his birthday 🎂
📷 Erich Lessing, 1964
"His films became increasingly fascinating to me because of the editing style, a very crisp, clear style of editing that kind of points the audience toward where to look in a scene."
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Robert Wise & Jerome Robbins on the left of the West Side Story camera; to the right is cinematographer Daniel Fapp, 1961
Jerome Robbins & Robert Wise shared the Director credit for West Side Story. This 1960 Gjon Mili shot for Life Magazine shows the two on set.
I love this shot!
Read 5 tweets
10 Sep
Remembering Elsa Schiaparelli on her birthday 🎂
📷 André Durst, 1936
"I like to amuse myself. If I didn't, I would die."
Impossible Interview: Stalin versus Elsa Schiaparelli
Vogue, June 1935
Illustration by Miguel Covarrubias
- What are you doing up here, dressmaker?
- I am getting a bird's-eye view of your women's fashions, Man of Steel.
- Can't you leave our women alone?
Stalin versus Elsa Schiaparelli
Vogue, June 1935
Read 10 tweets
10 Sep
Remembering H. D. - Hilda Doolittle - on her birthday 🎂
📷 Man Ray, c. 1925
"She was beautiful, reckless, one of the poetesses whose poetry was feared and wondered over."
- D. H. Lawrence
H. D. by Man Ray, 1924
"To read H. D., early and late work, is like reading early and late Blake."
- Alicia Ostriker
Why is Sigmund Freud in this thread celebrating the birthday of the Bethlehem, Pennsylvania-born poet H. D.? It's because Hilda Doolittle took this photo of Freud in his study at Berggasse 19, Vienna, with his chow Jofi, c. 1937
Read 7 tweets

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