Hartford Conservatory

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The Hartford Conservatory is a 117-year old performing arts school in Hartford, Connecticut. It offers programs in music, dance, musical theater and recording arts to post-secondary students on a pre-professional level. Its small student body, diverse in age, background and geographical area of origin, pursues immersion studies in music and dance with a jazz emphasis. The school has been preparing nationally-known performers and teachers for five generations, and has contributed immeasurably to the cultural life of Connecticut's capital city.

The Hartford Conservatory is one of the nation’s oldest performing arts schools. Located in Hartford, Connecticut, it was founded in 1890 at the Hartford Theological Seminary as the School for Church Musicians. Five years later it became the independent Hartford School of Music. In 1934, Truda Kaschmann, a student of Mary Wigman, brought modern dance to the school. Now known as the Hartford Conservatory, it provides not only a community program of weekly instruction in music and dance for all ages and levels, but also an accredited two and three-year post-secondary immersion program in music, dance, theater and recording arts.

The Conservatory has been an active part of the musical life of Hartford, and the home of orchestra and vocal groups that formed a major part of the arts scene especially in the first half of the twentieth century. Not only sacred and secular classical music performances, but city premieres of avant-garde works were presented under Conservatory sponsorship in collaboration with the Wadsworth Atheneum’s Chick Austin and other Hartford notables.

In the last thirty years the school has acquired a jazz and popular music emphasis, teaching jazz dance and music, and offering holiday performances of Duke Ellington’s Jazz Nutcracker with the New England Jazz Septet and student choreographers, musicians and dancers, and sponsoring master classes with dance artists like Jacques d’Amboise and Savion Glover.

The school maintains a small student body of fewer than one hundred students of varied ages, backgrounds and geographic regions of the country and the world, and a faculty all currently performing in their respective fields. Among the artists that have been part of the Conservatory as students or teachers over the past 117 years are Betty Allen, opera singer and former director of Harlem School of the Arts, James Argiro, jazz pianist, choral director Ralph Baldwin, pianists Ward Davenny and Grayson Hugh, vocalists Alyson Bristol, Peter Harvey and Teresa Stich-Randall, cellists Charles Krane and John Riley, Cirque de Soleil choreographer Michael Montanaro, and dancers Douglas Boulivar, Margarita Froman and Alwin Nikolais.

[edit] References

Huntington, Caroline W., 75 Years at the Hartford Conservatory, 1965. Sherwood, David, The Hartford Camerata Conservatory: A 100-Year Retrospective, 1990.