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With a professional conducting career beginning in 1973,
John Mauceri stands out as one of the most distinguished conductors of the late 20th and early 21st centuries.
Mauceri has worked with many prominent opera companies such as the
New York City Opera, the
Scottish Opera, and Teatro Regio, Torino.
Mauceri isn’t limited to opera as he has also found success with premiere orchestras, for example, the
Los Angeles Philharmonic, the
New York Philharmonic, the
Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra, as well as many others across the United States and Europe. Along with conducting,
Mauceri has also been on the forefront in efforts to perform and preserve the American musical.
John Mauceri’s musical training began at the piano, studying under his grandfather, Baldassare Mauceri, who worked as a composer, teacher, and conductor.
Mauceri attended Yale College, where he majored in music theory and composition. After a year at Yale's graduate school,
Mauceri was appointed music director of the
Yale Symphony Orchestra and remained on the faculty for 15 years. In 1978, at the request of
Richard Rodgers,
Mauceri laid the groundwork for the Department of Music Theater at New York University, which became one of the finest in the United States.
In 1971,
Mauceri was invited to Tanglewood as a conducting fellow and studied with
Bruno Maderna,
Colin Davis,
Seiji Ozawa,
Gunther Schuller, and
Leonard Bernstein. Following this,
Mauceri was invited to be an assistant to
Bernstein. During the 18-year collaboration,
Mauceri premiered many of the composer’s works.
Mauceri's professional conducting career began in 1973 at the Wolf Trap Festival, with Gian Carlo Menotti's The Saint of Bleecker Street. From 1979 until 1991 he served as music director of the Kennedy Center orchestras, which included being music director for the Washington National Opera. Between 1987 until 1993, he served as music director of the
Scottish Opera, after which
Mauceri became the music director of the Teatro Regio, Torino (1995-1999).
Mauceri was also music director of the Pittsburgh Opera (2001-2006).
Alongside his career in opera,
Mauceri is also highly regarded in the orchestral world. In 1974,
Mauceri made his concert conducting debut with the
Los Angeles Philharmonic. From there, he went on to conduct many of the world’s orchestras, including eight years with the
Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra. 1985 saw
Mauceri’s appointment as music director for the American Symphony Orchestra in New York, the first to hold this position since
Leopold Stokowski stepped down in 1972.
Mauceri was the founding director of the
Hollywood Bowl Orchestra in 1991, retiring from there in 2006.
Mauceri has made efforts to preserve and continue the American musical throughout his career. During his time at the Kennedy Center,
Mauceri secured grants from the National Endowment for the Arts to restore 1930s and 1940s era Broadway scores. As a trustee for the National Institute for Music Theater, he pushed for cataloging of the surviving music of
Kern,
Berlin,
Gershwin,
Rodgers,
Arlen, and
Porter. In 1989, he was tasked by Leonore Gershwin to record the complete works of
George and
Ira Gershwin for the Library of Congress, which earned
Mauceri an Edison award as well as the High Fidelity Magazine Record of the Year for the 1991 recording of Girl Crazy.
In 2006,
Mauceri accepted the invitation to become chancellor of the University of North Carolina’s School of the Arts in Winston Salem, where he served until 2013.
Among the many prestigious awards through his storied career, Mauceri has received a Tony award in 1983 for Best Revival for On Your Toes and a Grammy award in 1987 for Best Opera Recording for
Candide (1982 New York City Opera Cast).