West Side Story, an FBI warning, Beethoven by the Wall: Leonard Bernstein's eventful and inspiring life

From West Side Story to the Berlin Wall, here is a short guide to the main events in the remarkable life of Leonard Bernstein

William P. Gottlieb via Picryl

Published: June 26, 2024 at 5:32 pm

There's so much to say about Leonard Bernstein, surely one of the 20th century's most inspiring figures in the field of music: a passionate and articulate communicator and educator, he inspired a love of music in generations of American children, while also finding time to set down some of the most exciting performances of classical masterpieces.

In particular, he's remembered as a visionary conductor of the symphonies of Gustav Mahler. You should also hear, though, his versions of the symphonies of Sibelius, Nielsen, Schumann, and Mozart. Then there are his own creations, the masterful and emotive West Side Story not least among them.

So much to tell, in short. Here are the headlines from an incredible life.

Leonard Bernstein timeline

1918: Leonard Bernstein born

The eldest of three, Leonard Bernstein is born on 25 August in Lawrence, Massachusetts, to Jewish parents, both immigrants from Russia. He starts piano lessons at ten against the wishes of his father, a supplier of hair and beauty products.

1935-39: Harvard

At Harvard he studies with Walter Piston and forms friendships with Dimitri Mitropoulos and Aaron Copland. Continuing his conducting at the Curtis institute, he appears at Tanglewood Summer School.

1943: Bernstein's big break

He shoots to fame replacing an ill Bruno Walter as conductor of the New York Philharmonic in Carnegie Hall. Within months the orchestra are playing his First Symphony (‘Jeremiah’).

1951: Bernstein marries

He marries Chilean actress Felicia Montealegre, with whom he subsequently has three children. Having completed a Second Symphony (‘The Age of Anxiety’, 1949) he returns to more popular territory with Trouble in Tahiti (1952), Wonderful Town (1953) and music for the film On the Waterfront (1954).

1957: West Side Story

Hot on the heels of Candide comes his masterpiece, the box-office hit West Side Story. As music director of the New York Philharmonic the following year he inaugurates a seminal series of Young People’s Concerts.

Leonard Bernstein timeline, continued: the 1970s and 1980s

1971: a blasphemous Mass

Religious themes dominate his later works, such as the Third Symphony (‘Kaddish’, 1963), Chichester Psalms (1965) and ballet Dybbuk (1974), though his music-theatre romp Mass: a Theatre Piece for Singers, Players and Dancers (1971) is too blasphemous for some.

Fascinatingly, The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) maintained a file on Leonard Bernstein around this time, because of his left-leaning views. Specifically, during summer 1971, the FBI warned US President Richard Nixon and his aides that the Mass's Latin text could possibly contain anti-war messages. These, it argued, could cause embarrass the President Nixon should he attend the work's premiere.

Elsewhere, Bernstein's pupils during the 1970s include the conductor Yakov Kreizberg.

1983: A Quiet Place

Houston Grand Opera stages his semi-autobiographical opera A Quiet Place, a work that incorporates the whole of his 1952 Trouble in Tahiti into a contemporary tale of love and alienation.

1989: the Berlin Wall concert

Six weeks after the fall of the Berlin Wall, on Christmas Day 1989, Leonard Bernstein triumphantly and emotionally conducts Beethoven's exultant Ninth Symphony in East Berlin. The orchestra and choir for the legendary Berlin Wall concert are drawn from both the former East and West Germany, plus France, the Soviet Union, the United States and the United Kingdom (the four nations that had shared Berlin for the previous 44 years). The word 'Freude' ('Joy') that gives the symphony its nickname 'Ode to Joy' is poignantly changed, for this performance, to 'Freiheit' ('Freedom').

1990: Leonard Bernstein dies

Two years after completing Arias and Barcarolles, Leonard Bernstein is diagnosed with lung cancer: his health quickly deteriorates. Smoking to the end, he dies of a heart attack on 14 October in New York. His body is buried in Brooklyn’s Green Wood Cemetery.

To listen to our 'Best of Bernstein' playlist, click here.

This article first appeared in the June 2005 issue of BBC Music Magazine, when Bernstein was the Composer of the Month.

This website is owned and published by Our Media Ltd. www.ourmedia.co.uk
© Our Media 2024