Before Mixed Martial Arts, Presidents Aimed for Stravinsky

Before Mixed Martial Arts, Presidents Aimed for Stravinsky

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The new norm is to have steel-cage death matches on the South Lawn, but in 1962 an American president might invite Igor Stravinsky to the White House. On Stravinsky’s birthday, here’s an amusing account of the composer’s visit with the Kennedys:

https://www.whitehousehistory.org/igor-stravinsky-at-the-white-house

“Despite such criticism – which was entirely typical of Stravinsky’s unfiltered personality – he clearly remembered the visit with fondness and gratitude. In January, 1964 he commemorated John F. Kennedy – who had been assassinated on November 22, 1963 – by composing ‘Elegy for J.F.K.,’ a vocal piece with words by W.H. Auden. ‘I felt that the events of November were being too quickly forgotten,’ the composer told The New York Times, ‘and I wished to protest.’”



Leonard Bernstein was also in attendance at the dinner. Bernstein’s “Fanfare for JFK” was heard for the first time on the eve of Kennedy’s inauguration, also on this date, though one year earlier. It’s only 40 seconds long, so if you blink, you’ll miss it.


In 1978, Bernstein gave the opening speech at the first Kennedy Center Honors, at which the honorees included Marian Anderson, Richard Rodgers, George Balanchine, Fred Astaire, and Arthur Rubinstein.


I’ll spare you the entirety of Bernstein’s “Mass,” commissioned by Jacqueline Kennedy for the opening of the Kennedy Center in 1971, but here’s the piece’s hit tune, “A Simple Song.”


The questions, where are our Bernsteins and Stravinskys – or for that matter, our Marian Andersons, Richard Rodgerses, George Balanchines, Fred Astaires, and Arthur Rubinsteins – and why are they not honored at the White House, seem moot.

Stravinsky’s concern about the events of November 1963 being forgotten were echoed by many Americans in December 2025. Some presidents try to set an example by leading in a spirit of hope and aspiration. Others attempt to validate themselves by affixing their names to the Kennedy Center.


Comments

3 responses to “Before Mixed Martial Arts, Presidents Aimed for Stravinsky”

  1. Anonymous

    According to Robert Craft’s account, when he and Stravinsky were in their car leaving the dinner, Stravinsky turned to Craft and said of the Kennedys, “Nice kids.” And not wanting to be shown up by the Americans, the White House visit prompted the Soviet Union to invite Stravinsky to return to Moscow later that year to celebrate his 80th birthday. The September 1962 visit marked the first day time that Stravinsky had been to Russia in 48 years.

    1. Classic Ross Amico

      Mather Pfeiffenberger First the space race, and then Stravinsky??? Good thing it was after Stalin. I always think of what happened to poor Prokofiev, enticed home by visions of sugar plums, only to find himself under the thumb of Zhdanov like Shostakovich and the rest. But by then Stravinsky was an American citizen and the most famous composer in the world, so maybe he felt a little more confident he would be able to get back out.

      1. Anonymous

        Classic Ross Amico Well, the Soviet Union was in the midst of the Khrushchev Thaw then, so I Imagine Stravinsky felt that his position was safe. And as you say, he was such a prominent figure then that if the Soviet Union had tried to prevent him from leaving, it would have created a huge international incident. I’m told by someone who was there that when he went to visit music students in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg), Tikhon Khrennikov, the infamous General Secretary of the Union of Soviet Composers and enforcer of Soviet music policy, was also present. According to my friend, Stravinsky said to Khrennikov, “Try dodecaphonism, Khrennikov. You’ll like it!” BTW, a recording of the concerts Stravinsky conducted in Moscow is available on CD: https://www.amazon.com/Stravinsky-in-Moscow-1997-03-11/dp/B01KBI1P9A?crid=2MRHOSLU1LHII&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.npe6V8tVAEVD8NKN5LSQ6d6DfYtAGna1zJJx_Rrh7o7LMftpBsZRQ4Oj8-ZpIdd9gageSvLsx_7VOspPAPhRxCw-HA_V_bHNBuZAvHxG_3Q.DjErJPzQqmyHqx379EWgPMMM3CxGbCIQC39n85TJ24Y&dib_tag=se&keywords=stravinsky+in+moscow&qid=1781826806&s=music&sprefix=stravinsky+in+moscow%2Cpopular%2C113&sr=1-1

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