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Alice
Chalifoux
Master
Performer and Teacher
Only
a few very special musicians have an impact on the world of music
that goes beyond the joy they give with their playing or the students
to whom they pass on their hard-won insights and sense of excellence.
The harpist Alice Chalifoux was one of these. In a career that spanned
more than 60 years, she quite literally changed the way the harp
was perceived-by orchestra-goers, students of the instrument, and
composers.
In
her hands, an instrument that had been traditionally treated as
a meek background voice was transformed into a dynamic force. For
66 years, students flocked to her studios at the Cleveland Institute
of Music and nearby Oberlin and Baldwin-Wallace conservatories-and
in the summers, to her legendary harp camp in Camden, Maine-to
acquire the new techniques of playing of which she was a leading
proponent.
Born
in Birmingham, Alabama, Chalifoux was the youngest, and most precocious,
of the four children of Oliver Chalifoux, a violinist who had trained
at the Paris Conservatory, and of Alice Halle Chalifoux, who played
piano, violin, and harp. It was the last of these that captured
the heart of the couple's youngest child. At 11, young Alice persuaded
her mother to give her lessons on the harp. She continued her studies
at a convent school and private high school for girls.
Realizing
that her gifted daughter needed a more advanced teacher, Mrs. Chalifoux
approached the renowned French composer and harpist Carlos Salzedo.
On hearing Alice play, he accepted her as a student at Philadelphia's
Curtis Institute, where the naturally lively and vivacious girl
quickly embraced her teacher's technique of pulling the strings
to effect a vibrant, singing quality.
In
the summer of 1930, Chalifoux was invited to join Salzedo at his
summer harp school in Maine. (When he died in 1961, Salzedo would
bequeath to his most brilliant student both his house and the
school, of which she would serve as director until the end of her
own career.) And the following year, Nikolai Sokoloff, the first
music director of the 13-year-old Cleveland Orchestra, hired Chalifoux
as principal harpist. Though eyebrows were raised at the presence
of a woman in the ensemble, she retained her position unchallenged
under the batons of four successors: Artur Rodzinski, Eric Leinsdorf,
George Szell, and Lorin Maazel, until she finally retired in 1974.
When
her husband, industrial designer John Gordon Rideout, died in 1951,
Chalifoux was forced to add to her busy schedule of teaching and
performing the challenge of raising their five-year-old daughter,
Alyce, alone. The same qualities she brought to everything she did
would see her through those difficult years. Known for her warm
combination of wit, caring, and astuteness, she was seen by her
students not only as a gifted teacher, but also as a prime force
in their lives.
Chalifoux's
professional honors include the Cleveland Arts Prize Special Citation
for Distinguished Service to the Arts (1986), being named an Artist-Teacher
by the American String Teacher Association in 1991, and receiving
an honorary doctor of fine arts degree from Bowdoin College (1991)
and an honorary doctor of musical arts degree from the Cleveland
Institute of Music (1993).
In
1997, she moved to Leesburg, Virginia, to be near her daughter,
Alyce Gordon Lelch, and her son-in-law. In 1998, the Alice Chalifoux
Scholarship Fund was established to benefit future generations of
harp students at CIM. But Alice Chalifoux never exactly retired.
The inveterate teacher, eager to share what she had learned, continued
to invite harpists to study with her in the beautiful setting of
the Blue Ridge Mountains.
Fall
2002
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