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Pauline
Thesmacher
Master Voice Teacher
1908–2003
To
those who know Pauline Thesmacher only by reputation, it may come
as a surprise to learn that the woman who has been described as
one of the foremost voice teachers of our time intended
originally to be an instrumental performer on the concert stage.
In 1928, when she enrolled at the Cleveland Institute of Music,
her dream was to one day become famous as a pianist. After two years
of study, she realized that her true talent lay elsewhere, so she
changed her major to voice-a course alteration that would prove
most fortuitous for the hundreds of students who in later years
would come to know her as teacher, tutor, role model, and mentor.
The
mantle of legend hangs lightly on the shoulders of Thesmacher,
a diminutive nonagenarian whose career as an educator spans eight
decades. In that time she shaped the talents of an extraordinary
number of young people, many of whom later achieved national and
international stature, both as performers and as educators. Generations
of her students have served as choral directors, college and university
professors, and public school music teachers around the country.
Thesmacher's
pedagogical career began after she graduated from the Institute
of Music in 1934. That year she became an assistant in the private
teaching studio of one of her former voice instructors, Marcel Salzinger.
Later in the decade she continued her studies at the Berlin Conservatory
of Music, and in the early 1940s she received further training from
the composer and Juilliard School faculty member Sergius Kagen.
Kagen's commonsense approach to voice instruction stressed the legato
style of smooth and even phrasing, a method that Thesmacher would
eventually adopt as her own.
Thesmacher
taught at the Cleveland Music School Settlement from 1962 to 1985,
serving as head of the voice department for 14 of those 23 years.
At the same time she conducted classes at the former Koch School,
which eventually became part of Lakewood's Beck Center for the Performing
Arts. Perhaps her most singular teaching experience occurred in
the 1950s, when she was a volunteer coach in the opera theater of
Cleveland's Karamu House. It was there that she was introduced to
a young would-be tenor named Seth McCoy.
Recently
arrived in Cleveland from his native North Carolina and entombed
in a job at the local post office, McCoy had been encouraged by
a friend to audition at Karamu. Thesmacher immediately recognized
his talent and took him under her wing, providing private lessons
three times a week for the next seven years. As a result, by 1963
McCoy was a soloist with the Robert Shaw Chorale, and he went on
to become the leading oratorio tenor in the U.S. for more than a
decade, performing with the New York Philharmonic, the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra, and numerous other major ensembles around the world.
In 1979, he made his debut at the Metropolitan Opera-one of the
highlights of his career and one of the high points of his former
teacher's life.
When
McCoy died in 1997, the celebrated tenor was professor of voice
at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York. Sharing his
talent and experience with those who hoped to follow in his footsteps,
he was emulating the remarkable educator who so many years before
had nurtured his own gift. Like all of Pauline Thesmacher's former
pupils-who have spread out across this community and the country
to pursue careers as noted performing artists or teachers of voice
at prestigious institutes and universities-he was, in a sense, an
extension of the woman herself. Which is why Thesmacher's wisdom
and guidance will continue to influence students of voice for generations
to come.
Fall 2002
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