Gary Graffman
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Gary Graffman (October 14, 1928 – December 27, 2025) was an American classical pianist, teacher and administrator. After a career as a pianist, he became teacher, and later director and president of the Curtis Institute of Music.
Life and career
Graffman was born in New York City on October 14, 1928,[1][2][3] to Russian-Jewish parents. Having started piano at age 3, Graffman entered the Curtis Institute of Music at age 7 in 1936 as a piano student of Isabelle Vengerova.[2][4] After graduating from Curtis in 1946, he made his professional solo debut with conductor Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra.[3][5] From 1946 to 1948, he studied at Columbia University. In 1949, Graffman won the Leventritt Competition.[5] He then furthered his piano studies with Rudolf Serkin at the Marlboro Music Festival and informally with Vladimir Horowitz.[5] In 1954, he returned to Columbia to perform Edward MacDowell's Piano Concerto No. 2 conducted by Leopold Stokowski at the university's bicentennial concert.[6]
Pianist
Upon graduation Graffman played with numerous orchestras and performed concerts and recitals internationally. Over the next three decades, he toured and recorded extensively, performing solo and with orchestras around the globe. He revived the Tchaikovsky 2nd and 3rd Piano Concertos, recorded by CBS with Eugene Ormandy and the Philadelphia Orchestra, and several of his students play these works. In 1964, he recorded Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini with Leonard Bernstein conducting the New York Philharmonic. He also made a classic recording of Prokofiev's Third Piano Concerto with George Szell and the Cleveland Orchestra in 1966; it was reissued on CD as part of Sony Classical's "Great Performances" series in 2006. In the 1970s, Graffman appeared with the Guarneri Quartet and the Juilliard String Quartet in performances of chamber music.[3]
Probably Graffman's best known recorded performance was for the soundtrack of the 1979 Woody Allen movie Manhattan in which he played Gershwin's Rhapsody In Blue, accompanied by the New York Philharmonic.[1]
Injury, teaching
In 1977, he sprained the ring finger of his right hand. Because of this injury he began re-fingering some passages for that hand in such a way as to avoid using the affected finger. This altered technique appeared to aggravate the problem, ultimately forcing him to stop performing with his right hand altogether by around 1979. Thereafter, Graffman pursued his other interests such as writing, photography, and Oriental art. In 1980, he joined the faculty at the Curtis Institute of Music, where his career had begun. He took over as the school's director in 1986, and added the title of President in 1995, serving in both capacities until 2006, when he retired.[5][7] Curtis has since been criticized for failing to protect minor students from sexual abuse by a faculty member under his leadership.[5][8]
Graffman's finger sprain may have been a trigger for focal dystonia, a neurological disorder that causes loss of function and uncontrollable curling in the fingers.[1][5][4] The pianist Leon Fleisher, a close friend of Graffman, also had the disorder.[1][4][9]
Later career
In 1981, Graffman published a memoir, I Really Should Be Practicing.[5][7]
In 1985 he gave the UK premiere of Korngold's Piano Concerto for the left hand, a work that Paul Wittgenstein had commissioned the work in the 1920s.[1][10] Seven left-hand works have been commissioned for Graffman. In 1993, for example, he performed the world premiere of Ned Rorem's Piano Concerto No. 4, written specifically for the left hand,[1] and in 2001 he premiered Daron Hagen's concerto Seven Last Words. The American composer William Bolcom composed Gaea, a concerto for two pianos left hand for Graffman and Leon Fleisher. It received its first performance in Baltimore in April 1996.[1]
Personal life
Graffman was married to Naomi Helfman, who died in 2019.[1]
Graffman died in New York City on December 27, 2025, at the age of 97.[1][5] An obituary was published in The New York Times.[7]
Honors
Graffman received honorary doctoral degrees (including from the Juilliard School, University of Pennsylvania, and Trinity College), was honored by the cities of Philadelphia and New York, and received the Governor's Arts Award by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.[5] His students included pianists Lydia Artymiw, Lang Lang, Yuja Wang,[4][11] Hilary Hahn,[12] Haochen Zhang, Teo Gheorghiu,[13] Vitalij Kuprij,[14] Stewart Goodyear,[15] Claire Huangci,[16] Daniel Hsu,[17] Inna Heifetz,[18] Valentin Schiedermair,[19] Kuok-Wai Lio, Szuyu Su,[20] Ignat Solzhenitsyn, Di Wu, and Haochen Zhang.[4]
References
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Further reading
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- Graffman, Gary (1982). I Really Should Be Practicing. New York: Avon. Template:ISBN
External links
- Template:PAGENAMEBASE discography at Discogs
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- Gary Graffman collection, International Piano Archives at Maryland, University of Maryland Libraries.
- Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". 27-minute interview where Graffman discusses aspects of his career including his treatment for focal dystonia.
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- 1928 births
- 2025 deaths
- 20th-century American Jews
- 20th-century American male musicians
- 20th-century American classical pianists
- 21st-century American Jews
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- 21st-century American classical pianists
- American male classical pianists
- American music educators
- American people of Russian-Jewish descent
- Classical musicians from New York (state)
- Classical musicians from Pennsylvania
- Classical pianists who played with one arm
- Curtis Institute of Music alumni
- Columbia College, Columbia University alumni
- Curtis Institute of Music faculty
- Educators from New York City
- Educators from Philadelphia
- Jewish American classical musicians
- Jewish classical pianists
- Leventritt Award winners
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- Musicians from New York City
- Musicians from Philadelphia
- Musicians with dystonia
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