Anita Socola Specht (June 1871 - November 11, 1958) [1] was an American composer, [2] pianist, [3] and singer who was president of the Louisiana State Federation of Music Clubs [4] and helped found the New Orleans Symphony Orchestra. [5]
Specht was born in Louisiana to Eliza Curien [6] and Angelo Socola. She had five brothers who were actors. [7] By 1889, Socola began lessons under the guidance of Marguerite Elie Samuel at the Southern Academic Institute at 216 Coliseum Street. This would have put her in touch with some of New Orleans' musical elite, including the Wehrmann family. [8] Through Samuel, Socola had many opportunities to perform at venues and benefit concerts throughout New Orleans. [9] She was only 13 when she made her debut at the Grunewald Opera House, where she met her future husband, conductor William Henry Bernard Specht. [10] They married in 1906 [11] had one son. [1]
Specht was fluent in French and Spanish. She studied music in New Orleans, Chicago, and New York City. Her teachers included Alexander Lambert, Herbert Rolling, Marguerite Samuel, and William Charles Ernest Seeboeck. [5] She won the title “best amateur pianist in the United States” at the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, [12] although some of the judges told her, “You are not an amateur, you are an artist!” [6]
Specht helped found the New Orleans Symphony Orchestra (today the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra) in 1887, and was elected president of the Louisiana State Federation of Music Clubs in 1921. [13] Her correspondence with her husband is archived in the William Russell Jazz Collection of the Historic New Orleans Collection. [10] Her compositions include a Nocturne arranged for orchestra [6] as well as several piano pieces. [5] Before her death in 1958, Specht established the still-active Giunio Socola Memorial Award for excellence in public debate at the Jesuit High School of New Orleans. [14]
Nocturne. New Orleans: Grunewald Co., Ltd, 1895 [Dedicated to Louis Grunewald] [15]
Marie Catherine Laveau was a Louisiana Creole practitioner of Voodoo, herbalist and midwife who was renowned in New Orleans. Her daughter, Marie Laveau II, also practiced rootwork, conjure, Native American and African spiritualism as well as Louisiana Voodoo and traditional Roman Catholicism. An alternate spelling of her name, Laveaux, is considered by historians to be from the original French spelling.
Shirley Ann Grau was an American writer. Born in New Orleans, she lived part of her childhood in Montgomery, Alabama. Her novels are set primarily in the Deep South and explore issues of race and gender. In 1965 she won the Pulitzer Prize for Literature for her novel The Keepers of the House, set in a fictional Alabama town.
Lincoln Park was a noted amusement park in New Orleans, Louisiana from 1902 to 1930. It was located in the city's Gert Town section, on the downtown side of Carrollton Avenue between Olive and Forshay Streets. It was devoted to amusements for the city's African American population.
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"Durieux is master of her instrument. It is like an epigram delivered in a deadpan manner:the meaning sinks in casually; when all of a sudden the full impact dawns on one, it haunts one for days. Her work has that haunting quality because its roots are deep, its vision profound".
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