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Arts


Gisele Ben-Dor

Women step up to the conductor's podium

November 30, 1999
Web posted at: 4:43 p.m. EST (2143 GMT)

From Gloria Hillard
CNN Entertainment News Correspondent

SANTA BARBARA, California (CNN) -- "I always had this conviction that this is what I was supposed to be doing, and that it was OK for me to do this. And I think for a woman, this is very important."

So says Gisele Ben-Dor, music director and conductor of the Santa Barbara Symphony. A mother of two and protege of Leonard Bernstein, the Uruguay-born musician has held her position for five years.

She's one of a handful of women in a business traditionally dominated by prominent men. You've heard of Bernstein, Zubin Mehta, Andre Previn, Robert Shaw.

Do you know Sarah Caldwell, the first women to conduct for New York's Metropolitan Opera? That was a production of Giuseppe Verdi's "La Traviata" in 1976.

How about Iona Brown, of the Chamber Orchestra of Los Angeles? Prior to her direction of that company, she was director of London's acclaimed Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields and music director of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra.

Along with Ben-Dor, they're part of a not-so-quiet revolution in certain opera houses and concert halls. There, women are turning their backs on tradition -- and the audience -- and taking up the baton.

"When I am on the podium, I think I try to become the music, become the actual music."

— Gisele Ben-Dor, Santa Barbara   
Symphony music director   

"I like to tell them what to do, which is very arrogant when you say it," Ben-Dor says.

For those who have wielded a pencil or other makeshift baton to a recorded piece of music, it may look easy to wave the real thing in front of a group of professional musicians. The music is the music, after all, and the musicians have all played it before. But beware taking the conductor for granted, Ben-Dor says -- "(You) stand in front of a live group and try to do it, and see what comes out of the orchestra."

Her success at getting "what comes out" to sound good is supported by the guest-conducting spots she's held: the London Symphony, the Boston Pops, the Israel Chamber Orchestra are all on her resumé.

She's also in demand as a recording conductor, with a contract with BMG/Conifer for several new discs. The first of those, Alberto Ginastera's complete ballet, "Estancia," has been recorded only twice before -- once by the Mexico City Philharmonic Orchestra with Enrique Batiz and the other by the London Symphony Orchestra, Sir Eugene Goossens conducting. The suite from the ballet was recorded by the Poznan Philharmonic Orchestra, Andrzej Borejko conducting.

When she walks onto the stage, Ben-Dor says, "I feel everything is right with the world. ... When I am on the podium, I think I try to become the music, become the actual music."

It may not be yet be a common profession for a woman. But, "there's no reason it shouldn't be," says the married mother of two, with a laugh.

"Actually, for a married woman with children, I recommend it."


Gisele Ben-Dor's recordings include:

  • Alberto Ginastera: "Panambi" (Opus 1) and "Estancia" (Opus 8), with the London Symphony Orchestra, soloist Luis Gaeta; BMG/Conifer, 1999.
  • Silvestre Revueltas: "La Coronela" ("The Lady Colonel"), "Travel Diary," "Colorines," with the Santa Barbara Symphony and English Chamber Orchestra, soloists Gilles Apap and Douglas Masek; Koch International Classics, 1998.
  • Bela Bartok: "For Children," "Divertimento" and "Romanian Folk Dances," with the Sofia Soloists Chamber Orchestra; Centaur Records, 1995.
  • Alberto Ginastera: "Variaciones Concertantes" and "Glosses on Themes of Pablo Casals for Orchestra," with the Israel Chamber Orchestra and London Symphony Orchestra; Koch International Classics, 1995.
  • Ezra Sims: "Concert Piece," with the Boston Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra, soloists Anne Black, Ian Greitzer, Suellen Hershman and Beth Pearson;Composers Recordings Inc. (CRI), 1993.


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