In very loose connection with an article I am writing about organist Gordon Turk, I happened to google yesterday Eleanor Sokoloff. Turk had studied piano with Sokoloff’s husband, Vladimir, at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia.
Eleanor too is a pianist and pedagogue at Curtis. She began teaching there in 1936. Among her countless pupils were Lambert Orkis, Susan Starr, Hugh Sung, Leon McCawley, and Keith Jarrett. Eleanor has nothing at all to do with the article. I was just curious to see if she is still around and what she is up to. Oh, she is still around, all right. Today, Eleanor turns 104.
I recollect attending concerts at Curtis’ Field Hall, back in the 1980s, and the Sokoloffs were seemingly always in attendance. Vladimir had also served as a pianist with the Philadelphia Orchestra. He died in 1997.
In 1995, I became Eleanor’s neighbor, when I opened a bookshop on 17th Street, below Latimer. My morning dog walks would take me past the Sokoloff residence, situated between the old Rittenhouse Medical Bookstore (since demolished) and I believe a former residence of Leopold Stokowski, which had been turned into an art gallery. Eleanor would frequently be standing at her front door, and she would always smile and give a friendly wave. When she wasn’t at the door, it meant she had a pupil, and music would flood the streets.
According to what I can find out about her on the internet, she continues to teach to this very day. Of course, in music there is really no involuntary “retirement,” and Curtis has a history of venerable pedagogues. The pianist Mieczyslaw Horszowski taught there until a few weeks before his death in 1993. But Sokoloff has Horszowski beat. He hadn’t even reached 101.
Happy birthday, Eleanor. Long may ye reign.
Here’s a mesmerizing two-part interview with Sokoloff, conducted by Hugh Sung, when she was 100:

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