If one wanted to make a biographical feature film about a classical musician, the life of the Bulgarian-American-French pianist
Alexis Weissenberg would furnish ideal subject material. Born in Sofia in 1929,
Weissenberg was taught to play the piano by his mother. Several members of her family were Vienna Conservatory-trained musicians, and
Weissenberg grew up in an environment where the sight-reading of chamber music was as common as watching television is for most children today. His second piano teacher was a disciplinarian dentist, his third Bulgaria's top composer and pedagogue,
Pancho Vladigerov, at whose house
Weissenberg heard
Dinu Lipatti perform.
At age 10,
Weissenberg gave his first recital, performing, among other works, an etude of his own composition. Shortly thereafter,
Weissenberg and his mother attempted to flee Bulgaria for Turkey as fascist terror deepened. They were caught and thrown in a concentration camp. "Only three elements remained constant,"
Weissenberg recalled. "Silence, singing, and crying." What saved the pair was an accordion
Weissenberg had been given as a gift by an aunt. A German guard who liked music let
Weissenberg play and after three months put the
Weissenbergs on a train to Istanbul, throwing the accordion into their compartment through an open window as they left.
They made their way to Turkey and then to Israel, where
Weissenberg studied at the Jerusalem Academy of Music and performed with the
Israel Philharmonic under the baton of
Leonard Bernstein. He left his accordion with a group of children after playing an outdoor concert and departed for the U.S. in 1946.
Weissenberg enrolled at the Juilliard School of Music, studying with Olga Samaroff and at times with
Artur Schnabel, and making contact with
Vladimir Horowitz, who urged
Weissenberg to enter the Leventritt Award competition.
Weissenberg won the award in 1947, and his career was launched. His U.S. debut came with the
New York Philharmonic, conducted by
George Szell, and for the next ten years he toured the U.S. and Europe.
In 1956
Weissenberg moved to Paris, eventually becoming a French citizen. For a decade beginning around that time, he took a hiatus from performing, subjecting himself to a reconstruction of his keyboard technique. His performances of
Chopin,
Rachmaninov, and
Prokofiev were especially notable, and the
Bach Chromatic Fantasy and Fugue was a staple of his recital programming. His recordings of the 1960s and 1970s remained well represented in reissues on the EMI label as of the early 2000s, and he remained active into old age.