Washington Dossier June 1980

Page 17

na h~rly-burly of their hectic schedules. ~at ~ts wife, Bernice, an accomplished

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Ptanist, has a Ph.D. in music from ColUmbia. She often lectures at the preconcert talks for the NSO and teaches ~usic at George Washington UniversIty .. The couple discusses repertory chotces for upcoming performances and Martin boasts that Bernice knows 'ein ~ore of the whys but he's better versed s i In ~he whats. The three grown-up FeinD"· stem children are John, 24, working for n the Washington Post; Mary, 21, taking an· ~Year off from Wesleyan to study in tull ome; and Robert, 18, at Duke. Th Entertaining for the Feinsteins is just nr about impossible since operas, plays 1 tt. anct concerts dot the calendar almost 1, a ~ry ~i~ht of the year. Linda Reynolds artm s secretary ever since he came sur to the center) says they mostly throw prl cast ~artie , or small, impromptu bt' &athenngs for old friends like "Slava" .' tt or "Isaac" (no last names needed!). ·~s i h "No, it won't be more difficult to andle both the orchestra and the bril opera," he predicts . " In fact, it will be 1stei much easier than when I was having to 1 e, i negotiate contracts, make contacts , Aftl Plan complicated festivals and import r 0: ~hole opera and ballet companies for hoi t. e Kennedy Center . M y responsibilirtter ttes were unbelievably tax ing, with a lot Of travelling thrown in!" ·ant b Feinstein will still do some travelling , sbuf f Ut he's relieved it won't be at such a )ubi renetic pace. "There were always early .s w morning and late night planes rushing :ve e :e from city to city, and sometimes !rsitl 0 Untry to country, " he notes, "with :d 1t ~ot~ing but dovetailing appointments ttil t Urtng the daytime hours.' ' Now his nstrt P~ce is more leisurely , like last month's er aot•P.to Tokyo with the orchestra and the Jibre thalln American tour he'll take with Jiste em in mid-summer . adr Feins tein notes th a t the heav ier rneg ~Chedule is planned for the orchestra, atter ( Ut they will offer more opera next year tthey would offer still more if it weren t in tt or the fact tha t the o pera pro erbially 1 imp Bses money on every performance). on ~ e's excited about the T errace Thea ter, 1 ~o.' because it 's the kind of setting for t urn thhtch smaller opera were written, a nd e as i ey can be performed a t a sm aller cost. Hurl Feinstein predicts he will m a ke the lent fi ational Sy mph o n y Orc he t ra t he th ttj~~~st in the country. "And ," he sta tes led t ~ tlantly, "I can promise you that b.0 Stropo vich is no t leavi ng. H e' every o-sto c tt as anxiou as I a m to m ake the oroastS ~estra truly great , a nd he wa nts to len a bay· " " Yo u know, o u r o rche t ra" he o m t oasts, " ha a great a p peal to a con-

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