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Marguerite de Pachmann

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Marguerite de Pachmann
A white woman with dark hair dressed to the nape, with a curly fringe; she is wearing a low-cut gown with bare shoulders
Marguerite de Pachmann Labori, from a 1907 publication
Born
Anna Louisa Margaret Okey

14 December 1864
Pipeclay Diggings, New South Wales
Died3 July 1952
Millery
Other namesMarguerite de Pachmann-Labori, Margherita Labori
Occupation(s)Pianist, composer, music educator
Spouse(s)Vladimir de Pachmann
Fernand Labori
RelativesPrince Philip of Bourbon-Two Sicilies (son-in-law)

Marguerite de Pachmann Labori (14 December 1864 – 3 July 1952), born Anna Louisa Margaret Okey, was an Australian-born pianist, composer, and music educator. She married two famous men, Russian pianist Vladimir de Pachmann and French lawyer Fernand Labori.

Early life

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Anna Louisa Margaret Okey (or Oakey, or O'Key) was born in Pipeclay Diggings, New South Wales, the daughter of William Okey and Anna Maria King Blade Okey. She began learning to play the piano in Australia, but focused her training in England, while still a young child.[1][2] She studied with Henry Wylde and Ferdinand Praeger at the Royal Academy of Music in London. In 1882, she heard Vladimir de Pachmann play in concert, and went to Germany to study with him. They married in London in 1884.[3]

Career

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Okey began her professional music career in London, and touring in Britain. After marriage, she returned to performing in 1887, in Berlin.[1] Also in 1887, she accompanied Lillian Nordica at the Crystal Palace.[4] She toured in the United States in 1890,[5] and again in 1892.[3] She also composed; her compositions including a piano concerto in F minor, a sonata for violin and piano, and an opera, Yato (1913), which was produced in several cities.[1] In widowhood after her second husband's death in 1917, she wrote and taught piano, and gave a rare recital in 1930 in London.[1] In 1935, she published an edition of Chopin scores annotated according to Vladimir de Pachmann's method.[6]

Personal life

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Okey married Vladimir de Pachmann in 1884; they had two sons together, Adrian and Leonide, before they divorced.[7] Her second husband was a French lawyer and politician, Fernand Labori, known for his role in the Dreyfus affair. They had three daughters together, Violette, Denise, and Odette. Fernand Labori died in 1917. Odette Labori married Prince Philip of Bourbon-Two Sicilies as his second wife in 1927.

Marguerite de Pachmann Labori survived World War II in occupied France; she died in 1952, aged 87 years, in Millery. Her grave is in Montparnasse Cemetery.[1] Houghton Library at Harvard University has a collection of Fernand and Marguerite Labori papers.[8]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Abbott, Carl (Winter 2010). "Marguerite de Pachmann: a forgotten woman pianist and composer". The Musical Times. 151 (1913): 69–78. ISSN 0027-4666. JSTOR 25759518.
  2. ^ "The Fairytale Career of Maggie Oakey: Little Mudgee Girl Became Rage of Continental Concert Platform" (PDF). Australian Collectors of Mechanical Musical Instruments. 108: 249–251. August 6, 2001.
  3. ^ a b F. Forster Buffen, Musical Celebrities (London, Chapman & Hall, 1893), pages 61-64.
  4. ^ "Crystal Palace Saturday Concerts, 1887-1888". Concert Programmes. Retrieved 2021-10-26.
  5. ^ "Mme. Pachmann's Recital". The Boston Globe. 1890-05-01. p. 6. Retrieved 2021-10-26 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ "New Music". The Musical Times. 76 (1110): 706–709. 1935. doi:10.2307/918559. ISSN 0027-4666. JSTOR 918559.
  7. ^ Fitch, A. J. (November 1907). "Husbands who Gave their Wives to Other Men". The Scrap Book. 4: 738.
  8. ^ "Collection: Fernand Labori and Marguerite Labori papers and related material". Houghton Library, Harvard University. Retrieved 2021-10-26.
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