Iwamoto Mari
Iwamoto Mari | |
---|---|
Born | January 19, 1926 |
Died | May 11, 1979 | (aged 53)
Resting place | Japan |
Other names | 巖本メリー・エステル → 巖本 真理 |
Occupation | violinist |
Relatives | Grandfather: Iwamoto Yoshiharu― Educator for women, Christian. Grandmother:Wakamatsu Shizuko― Educator, translator, and novelist. |
Iwamoto Mari (巖本 真理, 19 January 1926―11 May 1979) was a Japanese violinist and educator. She founded the Iwamoto Mari String Quartet and was a professor at the Tokyo Academy of Music.
Biography
[edit]Born in Japan to a Japanese father, Masahito Iwamoto, and an American mother, Marguerite (nee Magruder). She took violin lessons from Anna Bubnova-Ono (Anna Dmitrievna Bubnova) after the age of six. She was a child prodigy, winning the All Japan Music Competition's violin category in 1937.
From 1946 to 1949, she was a professor at the Tokyo Academy of Music, resigning the post in 1949 in order to spend a year in the USA. She stayed there in a year and half, and took lessons by George Enescu in Chicago, and Louis Persinger in New York at The Juilliard School.[1] On 14 June 1950, she took a recital at the Town Hall.[2]
She resumed to play a soloist after coming back to Japan.[3] In addition, She founded the Iwamoto Mari String Quartet in 1967, with violinist Tomoda Yoshiaki, viola player Suganuma Junji and cellist Kuranuma Toshio; the quartet won a special prize at the Suntory Music Award in 1979, shortly prior to Mari's death from cancer on 11 May 1979.
References
[edit]- Margaret Mehl (September 10, 2011). "Three Violin Maidens (2): Iwamoto Mari". Retrieved 2012-05-03.
- Louis Frédéric (2002). Japan Encyclopedia. Harvard University Press. Accessible via Google Books.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Her autobiography: YAMAGUCHI Reiko, "IWAMOTO Mari: Meaning of life", Shinchosha Publishing Co, Ltd., 1984.
- ^ The New York Herald Tribune
- ^ She was a favorite female violinist in Japan at that time. On the "Banshun"(Late Spring) filmed by Yasujirō Ozu, Ozu used a scene of her violin recital.