- John Ardoin
John Ardoin, (born January 8, 1935,
Alexandria, Louisiana – died March 18, 2001, San José,Costa Rica ), was best known as the music critic of "The Dallas Morning News " for thirty-two years and especially for his friendship with and encyclopedic knowledge of the work of the famousopera soprano ,Maria Callas , about whom he wrote four books. But his influence stretched much further than Dallas, and he knew many of the most important figures in classical music of the postwar era.As a child of twelve, he became interested in listening to the Saturday Met broadcasts and also heard and saw many
singer s of the day on "The Voice of Firestone ", and "The Bell Telephone Hour ". As he notes, “the radio was my first important link to the whole world” [ [http://www.parterre.com/ardoin_interview.htm James Jorden interview on "The Parterre Box" web site, November 2005] ] . He also describes his first experiences of seeing opera::”it wasn't until I was about 16 or 17 I saw my first opera -- the old Charles Wagner Company, which used to barnstorm around towns, withBeverly Sills . Wait, I should say, that was my second opera, because I heard my first opera, "La bohème ", and then I saw the next year this neighboring city was doing "La traviata ". I went, and there was a baby Bev and John Alexander” [ [http://www.parterre.com/ardoin_interview.htm James Jorden interview] ] . However, in the same interview, he recounts a visit to the opera inNew Orleans with his parents in 1950 or 1951 to seeRisë Stevens as Carmen.Ardoin attended North Texas State College (now the
University of North Texas ) in Denton and later transferred to theUniversity of Texas at Austin. There he studied music theory and composition and obtained hisbachelor of arts degree. Later, he received his master of arts from theUniversity of Oklahoma at Norman and did postgraduate work atMichigan State University atLansing, Michigan .During his army service spent in
Stuttgart ,Germany , Ardoin had several important operatic experiences, not the least of which was aRing cycle and a later "Tristan und Isolde " with the sopranoMartha Mödl who “knocked me for a loop. From then on, I was searching for that same sort of incandescence in others…..Mödl was electricity -- from her toes to the top of her head. Never once a second out of character. I mean, the concentration was so fierce" [ [http://www.parterre.com/ardoin_interview.htm James Jorden interview] ] .Upon returning to the US, he went to New York in the late 1950s and, for seven years, wrote about music. He was editor of "
Musical America " magazine, managing editor of the program books for Philharmonic Hall (nowAvery Fisher Hall ) atLincoln Center , a writer for the "Saturday Review of Literature", as well as New York critic forThe Times of London and "Opera magazine ".In June 1966 he became the music critic at "The Dallas Morning News", only the second person to do so, but his most well-known writings were about Maria Callas, who was considered the godmother of the
Dallas Opera after her 1958 appearances there. He became friendly with Callas during the 1960's and his 1977 book, "The Callas Legacy," is an overview of her recordings, now in its 4th edition. "Callas at Juilliard" (1988) focuses on her master classes given in New York in the 1970's and it inspired playwrightTerrence McNally to write theTony Award -winning play "Master Class ". Ardoin also collaborated with Gerald Fitzgerald, and in 1974, they published "Callas, Life and Art," possibly the finest book about Maria Callas.Frequently, Ardoin was a commentator on the
Metropolitan Opera 's weekly radio broadcasts and was a consultant to thePBS ‘’Great Performances’’ series for twenty years. He wrote the script forWalter Cronkite 's narration of the New Year's Day international telecasts of theVienna Philharmonic Orchestra on New Year’s Day.He was given an honorary doctorate from the University of North Texas for his work in criticism in 1987, and, after retiring from the "Morning News" in 1998, Ardoin retired to Costa Rica.
References
Books by John Ardoin
*"The Callas Legacy: The Complete Guide to Her Recordings on Compact Disc", Pompton Plains, NJ: Amadeus Press, Fourth Edition, 1995 ISBN 0-931340-90-X A detailed analysis of every recording made by Maria Callas from 1949 to 1977.
*"Callas at Juilliard: The Master Classes", Pompton Plains, NJ: Amadeus Press, 1984 ISBN 1-57467-042-5
*(with Gerald Fitzgerald), "Callas: the Art and the Life", New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1974 ISBN 0-03-011486-1
*"The Furtwängler Record", Pompton Plains, NJ: Amadeus Press, 1994 ISBN 0931340691 An overview of the conductor's career and his place in the mainstream of the German school of conducting.
*"Valery Gergiev and the Kirov: A Story of Survival", Pompton Plains, NJ: Amadeus Press, 2001 ISBN 1-57467-064-6 An overview of the the history of theMariinsky Theatre andValery Gergiev 's efforts to revive it in the 1990s.*"The Stages of Menotti", New York: Doubleday, 1985 ISBN 0-385-14938-7
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