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BIOGRAPHY

For 83 of his 86 years, Jascha Heifetz (1901-87) played the violin,
and for over 60 of them in front of audiences the length and breadth
of the world. Since his first public concert in St. Petersburg
on April 30, 1911, he exposed his art to the world through more
than
2,000,000 miles of travel (much of it in front of World War II
troops), a prodigious recording program, countless appearances
on radio,
in several films, an hour-long television special and, for a dozen
years, a vigorous teaching schedule.
He started to play on a quarter-sized violin given to him by his
father in his native city of Vilna, Russia (now called Vilnius, Lithuania), and at age seven
made
his public debut in Kovno (now known as Kaunas, Lithuania). He entered Leopold Auer's famous class
in St. Petersburg at age nine and in three years was acclaimed
a
child prodigy of unexampled gifts.
"You know," Heifetz said, "child prodigism - if I may coin a word
- is a disease which is generally fatal. I was among the few to
have the good fortune to survive. But I had the advantage of a great
teacher in Professor Auer and a family that instinctively had a
high regard for music, very good taste and a horror of mediocrity."
In the years following his St. Petersburg debut, he concertized
in Germany, Austria and Scandinavia, and when the Russian Revolution
broke out, the family, after many difficulties, traveled to America.
Heifetz made his debut in Carnegie Hall on October 27, 1917. The
noted critic Samuel Chotzinoff reported: "The 16-year-old violinist
seemed the most unconcerned of all the people in the hall as he
walked out on the stage and proceeded to give an exhibition of such
extraordinary virtuosity and musicianship as had not previously
been heard in that historic auditorium." Overnight, Heifetz became
the musical idol of America, and during that first year he made
30 appearances in New York alone.
He soon adopted the United States, became an American citizen in 1925 and amply sampled the "American way." In the '40s he settled into a comfortable house atop one of the Beverly Hills in California, where he lived until his death.
When Heifetz reached his 60s, after half a century of concertizing, he began to curtail his appearances gradually and gave his last public recital in 1972. He devoted his later life to teaching. Handling his students with steel-rod control tempered with humor, Heifetz instilled in them respect for discipline ("It's something you have to do, so you might as well do it and get it over with") and the
ways and means for making music with the violin. Certainly no one knew them better.
Throughout
his life, Heifetz was known for his flawless technical style. He
was even accused of sounding formal and mechanical, which also reflected
his austere personality. But the fierce virtuoso never faltered,
even into his 70s, and ended up recording more than 80 albums in
his lifetime. He even wrote a pop song under the pseudonym Jim Hoyl
called "When You Make Love To Me (Don't Make Believe)," sung by
Margaret Whiting.

Heifetz received many honors in his lifetime for his hard work and
talent. He was even made an officer of the French Legion, an award
stemming from the many charity recitals he performed in France.
Heifetz also received countless Grammy Awards, including the elusive
Lifetime Achievement Award in 1989, and was posthumously inducted
into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1999.
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