Vol. XXIII No. 8
May 2008

New Scholarships Are Established at Juilliard

For more than a century, The Juilliard School has been a leader in educating the world’s performing artists. It should come as no surprise that people from across the United States and around the globe call to ask how to establish a scholarship at the School. Very often we learn that the scholarship donor has never attended Juilliard (or perhaps even been to New York), but feels inspired to help the musicians, dancers, and actors studying here, sometimes in salute to a beloved teacher or renowned performing artist.

Recently, a generous gift came from Canadian resident Judith Harris to endow the Adele Marcus Piano Scholarship. Adele Marcus, a Juilliard alumna, served on Juilliard’s piano faculty from 1954 to 1990, and counted Stephen Hough, David Dubal, Cipa Dichter, and Horacio Gutiérrez among her students. Though Ms. Harris did not attend Juilliard, she had observed Marcus’s master classes as a student at the Interlochen Center for the Arts, the Aspen Music Festival, and the University of Western Ontario, and found her teaching inspired. With her generous contribution, Ms. Harris has provided a meaningful tribute to a teacher she greatly admired, as well as lasting support for young pianists who come to study at Juilliard.

With similar inspiration, additional scholarship gifts have come to Juilliard from other new friends of the School. The Bruno Raikin Memorial Scholarship in Piano was established by Annette Rabin in honor of her uncle, a pianist of Baltic and South African background, long esteemed as a performer and teacher. Among his many accomplishments, Raikin served as Paul Robeson’s accompanist in England.

Linda Frankenbach and Robin Jurechko have memorialized their uncle and father (respectively) by establishing the George Courtney Todd Violin Scholarship. Mr. Todd played and taught violin throughout his long life, and was an inspiration to many.

Juilliard faculty have inspired several new awards this year. Dirk Robinson, a California-based singer who studied in Italy with Juilliard emeritus faculty member Daniel Ferro, took inspiration from that experience and established a new award for singers, the Dirk Robinson Scholarship. Arizona arts patrons Jerry and Peggy Schuld established the Schuld-Jacobs Organ Scholarship in honor of Paul Jacobs, chair of Juilliard’s organ department and a renowned organist. The LLL Foundation saluted Sharon Isbin, chair of Juilliard’s guitar department and an international performing and recording artist, by creating the LLL Foundation Guitar Fellowship, an award for Ms. Isbin’s students.

The American-Turkish Foundation has established the Ahmet Ertegun Memorial Scholarship. The Estelle Jasper Scholarship, a dance award, was begun by Susan Feldman in memory of her mother, who was a longtime dance patron. Also designated for dancers, the Peter J. Frenkel Foundation Scholarship in Dance honors Frenkel, another faithful dance enthusiast.

Juilliard is pleased to welcome several new endowed awards. Celia Ascher, a longtime student in Juilliard’s Evening Division, has endowed the Celia and Joseph Ascher Fund for Piano with a generous contribution. This new fund will provide resources for piano scholarships and for special projects within the piano department.

The Mari Brown Scholarship was established by Dr. Walter Brown, a member of the Brown University medical school faculty. Dr. Brown honored his mother, Marie (as she was known at school) Shapin Brown, who studied at Juilliard in the 1930s.

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