Olive Smith

Olive Smith

Olive Smith (19 June 1906 - 12 September 1993) was a lifelong campaigner on behalf of classical music in Ireland. She co-founded the Music Association of Ireland, was the first director of the National Youth Orchestra of Ireland, and was a conductor of the Olivian Singers and the Culwick Choral Society.

Contents

Early life

Born Mabel Olive Richardson, she was the third daughter of a Dublin merchant, Charles E. Richardson and his wife, Alice Maud Metcalfe. The family lived in Rathgar. Olive was educated at Alexandra College and Trinity College, Dublin. In 1932, she married Lyall Gilchrist Smith, a chemist.[1]

Career in music

Smith combined her fulltime job as an administrator in Trinity College with her voluntary work in a variety of roles in Ireland's musical life.

In 1948, Smith co-founded the Music Association of Ireland and became its first treasurer.[2] Over the following three decades, she held in turn each position on the MAI's management committee, including chairman, and was responsible for many of the association's initiatives to promote classical music, especially among young people.[3] In July 1978, after her term as chairman had ended, Smith was awarded an honorary doctorate by Trinity College, Dublin, in recognition of her "devoted service to the Music Association of Ireland".[4]

In May 1957, Smith founded the Olivian Singers, a female choir, which she conducted at their inaugural concert on January 6 1958 in Alexandra College.[5] In March 1963, the Olivian Singers participated in the first performance in Ireland of Benjamin Britten's War Requiem, which took place in St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin.[6] For several years in the early-1960s, Smith was also chorus mistress of the Culwick Choral Society, a Dublin choir founded in 1898.[7] She was succeeded in that role by Seoirse Bodley.[8]

In 1970, Smith and violinist Hugh Maguire founded the Irish Youth Orchestra (now the National Youth Orchestra of Ireland). She was the orchestra's first director until her retirement from that position in 1982.[1]

Smith was appointed to the Cultural Relations Committee in January 1982. Set up in 1949, the committee advised the Minister for Foreign Affairs on the administration of funds allocated for the development of cultural relations with other countries.[9]

Personal life

Smith's husband, Lyall, predeceased her in January 1969. They had a daughter, Gillian.[1] Olive Smith died in Highfield Private Hospital aged 87 and is buried in Enniskerry churchyard.[10]

Sources

  1. ^ a b c Simon Taylor, "Smith, (Mabel) Olive", Dictionary of Irish Biography, retrieved 27 June 2011
  2. ^ The Irish Times, "New group to promote music", 21 May 1948
  3. ^ The Irish Times, "Twenty-five years of the MAI", 30 March 1973
  4. ^ The Irish Times, "McBride honoured by Trinity", 7 July 1978
  5. ^ The Irish Times, "Concert by Olivian Singers", 7 January 1958
  6. ^ The Irish Times, "Irish performance of Britten work", 5 December 1962
  7. ^ The Irish Times, "Culwick Choral Society concert", 13 February 1959
  8. ^ The Irish Times, "The Culwick", 17 November 1966
  9. ^ The Irish Times, "Two join cultural committee", 7 January 1982
  10. ^ The Irish Times, p. 24

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Olive Winchester — Olive May Winchester (22 November 1879 15 February 1947) was an American ordained minister and a pioneer biblical scholar and theologian in the Church of the Nazarene, who was the first woman ordained by any Christian denomination in Scotland,… …   Wikipedia

  • Olive Higgins Prouty — (10 January 1882 – 24 March 1974) was an American novelist and poet, best known for her pioneering consideration of psychotherapy in Now, Voyager (1941) (made into a movie Now, Voyager (1942) [1] directed by Irving Rapper and starring Bette Davis …   Wikipedia

  • Olive Beaupre Miller — (née Olive Kennon Beaupré) (September 11, 1883 – March 25, 1968) was an American author, publisher and editor of children s literature. She received her B.A. from Smith College in 1904. The Book House for Children publishing company was founded… …   Wikipedia

  • Olive Branch, Mississippi —   City   …   Wikipedia

  • Olive and Hurley Old School Baptist Church — Olive Hurley Church Olive and Hurley Old School Baptist Church Denomination Primitive Baptist Membership 136 (1832) 119 (1871) 104 (1879) History Former name(s) Baptist Church of Christ at Tongore First Baptist Church in Marbletown First Baptist… …   Wikipedia

  • Olive Branch High School (New Carlisle, Ohio) — Olive Branch High School Western side of the former school Address 9520 West National Road New Carlisle, Ohio …   Wikipedia

  • Olive Borden — Born July 14, 1906(1906 07 14) Richmond, Virginia, U.S. Died October 1, 1947 …   Wikipedia

  • Olive Cotton — at the beach, taken by Max Dupain circa 1930s Olive Cotton (1911 2003) was a pioneering Australian modernist female photographer of the 1930s and 40s working in Sydney. As a female photographer in Australia of that era, she was overlooked and her …   Wikipedia

  • Olive Logan — Born April 22, 1839 Elmira, New York Died April 27, 1909 Occupation Stage actress, writer …   Wikipedia

  • Olive 8 — Alternative names Hyatt at Olive 8 General information Type Hotel, residential, retail …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”