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STRAD’s
THE GIBSON
STRADIVARIUS: FROM HUBERMAN TO BELL
The Gibson Stradivarius, one of the world's great violins,
is now owned and played by Joshua Bell. In 1985 this instrument
resided incognito for months in the Danbury home of Edward Wicks,
where its "owner" Julian Altman, who was on his way to jail, had
brought it for safekeeping. Within months of his imprisonment,
Altman was near death from stomach cancer. On his deathbed,
according to his wife, he divulged that the violin he had played
for nearly 50 years was the Gibson Stradivarius that had been
stolen in 1936 from the Polish violinist Bronislaw Huberman. The
fascinating story of the Gibson Stradivarius has been told before.
Here, for the first time, is the complete story, including
the important part that Edward Wicks played as a guardian for the
violin on its journey to Joshua Bell. A somewhat shorter version
of this story was published in the Danbury News-Times on April 18,
2004. In my research, I was able to confirm some facts previously
uncertain (for example, that Altman had indeed played with the
National Symphony). As a former research librarian, I am confident
that this is as close to the "real story" as one can get at this
time.
-- Jim Pegolotti
Librarian Emeritus, Western Connecticut State University
The Theft
The violins produced and shaped by the hands of Antonio Stradivari
(1644-1737) have never been bettered, and since only some 600 of
the 1100 Stradivarius instruments (mainly violins, but also violas
and cellos) remain, the possession of one of these instruments is
an absorbing ambition for some violinists. The traditional way to
gain a Stradivarius is by purchase, but there is another method
--- by thievery. This tactic occurred during a concert at Carnegie
Hall on Friday evening, February 28, 1936, when the Gibson
Stradivarius (named for an earlier owner) disappeared from the
Carnegie Hall dressing room of its then owner, the Polish
violinist Bronislaw Huberman (1882-1947). It happened while the
violinist was on stage performing and playing his other
exceptional violin, a Guarnerius.
After intermission, Huberman's secretary noticed the
Stradivarius was missing from its case in the dressing room. It
was "déjà vu all over again" because once before the violin had
been stolen from Huberman in 1919 in Vienna, but was returned in
only a few weeks. Rushing to the wings, the secretary got word to
Huberman about the missing violin before the concert was over.
Huberman, knowing the violin was insured, told her to call the
police immediately, probably hoping for a result like that in
Vienna --- a quick recovery. The police descended upon Carnegie
Hall, but in spite of a lengthy investigation, the Gibson
Stradivarius did not reappear. Lloyds of London, its insurer,
eventually paid Huberman $30,000 (£8000), the then value of the
violin, and thereby becoming the violin's owner should it ever
resurface. For the 51 years that followed the theft, the Gibson
Stradivarius simply vanished.
How Edward Wicks Came to Danbury and
Became a Luthier
On Saturday, the day after the violin's disappearance from
Carnegie Hall in 1936, twelve-year-old Edward Wicks was helping in
his father's welding shop near their home in Flushing, Queens. The
Wicks family was musically attuned with Mrs. Wicks playing the
piano and her husband making valiant attempts on the French horn.
Young Ed also had taken piano lessons, but had more fun learning
to play the mandolin. With such musical interest, very likely the
family was intrigued that morning with the two articles in the
New York Times, both on the same page: one was a review of the
Huberman concert, while the other headlined "Huberman Violin
Stolen At Carnegie."
As years passed and the family business grew on Long Island, Ed
found that he had inherited his father's innate sense of
inventiveness and tinkering. It was a gift that would lead him in
the second half of his life to become a luthier, a repairer of
bowed stringed instruments. That happened after he married Ann
Martinus. In 1950, the entire Wicks family, metal working business
and all, moved to Danbury, where Ed remained part of the family
business.
Ann, a singer trained at Julliard, brought a major musical
influence into the family's home, an enormous building in southern
Danbury on the Redding line that became known as Wicks Manor. But
it was John Burnett, a violinist who came to the Danbury area in
1936, who sent Ed off in a direction that would ultimately bring
the Gibson Stradivarius to his home.
John Burnett in 1946 became the conductor of the Danbury
Symphony, then known as the Danbury Orchestral Society. The short,
prominent-chinned Burnett, an excellent violinist who had studied
at Julliard and the Royal Belgian Conservatory, energized the
Danbury area musically; he was both an influential teacher and
conductor. Of lasting importance was his initiation in 1957 of a
training orchestra, the Danbury Little Symphony, now the Danbury
Community Orchestra. Not unexpectedly, many in the orchestra were
his own string students.
When Ed and Ann determined that their 8-year-old daughter Joan
should learn to play the violin, John Burnett became her teacher
and he came to know Ed better. Sensing musical gifts yet
undeveloped, Burnett convinced him to learn to play the cello.
From his basement, the teacher unearthed a "rough and chewed-up"
cello for his soon-to-be protégé. Ed recalls that Burnett could
almost be a martinet in his demands on his students, particularly
if he believed they had not practiced sufficiently since the last
lesson. Even as an adult, Wicks felt the pressure of Burnett and
practiced incessantly. Within six-months of first pulling a bow
across the cello strings, Ed was playing in the Danbury Symphony.
At the same time, Ed began to tinker with the "rough and
chewed-up" cello. With advice from Burnett, he took it apart and
put it back together in far finer condition than before, yet all
by "trial, error, and common sense." So it was that Ed Wicks in
his late thirties began to repair stringed instruments, encouraged
by Burnett who told him that to become a luthier would help save
what was rapidly becoming a lost art. Many of the violinists in
the Danbury Symphony were teachers in high school and welcomed Ed
as advisor and repairer.
Fortunately for Wicks, he had the opportunity to examine
Burnett's violin, one of the fine violins from the "Golden Age" of
violin making in post Renaissance Cremona. Here in this town on
the Po River plain of Lombardy, artisans named Amati, Stradivari,
and Guarnieri produced great violins, violas, and cellos.
Burnett's violin was created by Girolamo Amati (1561-1630), whose
son Nicola passed on the family violin-making secrets to his
student Antonio Stradivari, who then added his own varnish
secrets. Many fingers had plucked Burnett's Amati, but none more
famous than those of Benito Mussolini, a former owner of the
violin.
When Ed and Ann built a new home near Wicks Manor, Ed set aside
a room for his new avocation and began to advertise in the yellow
pages under "Musical Instrument Repair." It was this ad in 1983
that caught the eye of Julian Altman. The previous year he had
moved to nearby Bethel and needed some work on the violin that had
been the source of his income for decades.
Altman, who had studied at Julliard, in the late 1930s had
moved from his native New York City to Washington, D.C. From 1940
to 1944 he was a member of the National Symphony, but later made
his money more as a strolling musician, gaining popularity as an
entertainer for political events. After a failed marriage and
never able to generate a lot of savings, Altman continued to live
in the Washington area. There he met Marcelle Hall, a divorcee
from Bethel with two grown children, who was working for a social
service department in Maryland. They lived together from 1970 on.
Then in 1982 they moved to a home Marcelle owned in Bethel, a
residue from her previous marriage.
The First Incognito Visit of The Gibson Stradivarius
When Ed Wicks responded to a knock on the door of his Danbury home
one day in the summer of 1983, he didn't recognize the visitor.
The stranger introduced himself: "I'm Julian Altman---Altman, like
the department store. I saw your ad in the yellow pages as a
violin repairer." Wicks recalls the event in detail. "The man
appeared to be quite nervous. At one time he had two different
cigarettes going at the same time." Altman took his violin out of
the case and indicated it needed a new bridge and a slight opening
on the side seam needed attention. He also needed two bows
rehaired.
Wicks immediately noticed that the violin's surface areas --- a
light chestnut color with a reddish hue---showed signs of a violin
well utilized. As soon as he took Altman's violin into his hands,
its overall form, its feel and weight, sent his thoughts whirling.
He looked closer for a signature, then seeing it, spoke excitedly
to Altman: "My God, this is a Stradivarius." The visitor quickly
responded. "On no, just a copy. I've had it since I was a young
man." Wicks was not convinced by the answer, but could hardly
challenge the stranger, so he indicated he could do the necessary
repairs, but it would take about three days.
Hearing this, the nervous man walked about the room, seeming to
decide what to do. He spotted a framed copy of a patent just
assigned to Wicks that very year. A brisk discussion about the
invention seemed to reduce Altman's nervousness, and he started to
divulge some of his history. He told of being a New Yorker and
that some of his early adventures were as a musician on radio,
where he and his sister, Sylvia, often played on radio station WOR
in the late 1930s as a violin duo.
Altman finally agreed to leave the violin for the necessary
work. Over the next few days Wicks fit the new bridge, repaired
the open seam near the neck, and rehaired the bows.
Several days later, when Altman returned for the violin he
immediately picked it up, put rosin on a bow, and ran through a
few cadenzas to test it out. Altman's playing made it clear to
Wicks that he was in the presence of a fine violinist. Wicks
suffered through the next moments, worrying about the results of
his repairs, for he still believed that this was no ordinary
violin. Altman's reaction was not long in coming. The violinist
stopped in mid-phrase, looked directly at Wicks and said: "My God,
what did you do?" Ed's heart went into mild arrhythmia for a
moment, but Altman quickly added: "It never has sounded this
beautiful" and he strolled around the living room delighted with
what he heard. (During the time that Altman played the violin, Ann
Wicks had remained upstairs. After he had left, she came down.
"Ed," she asked, "what was that? It sounded absolutely gorgeous."
"Well," Ed replied, "I think what you just heard was a
Stradivarius.")
Before Altman left, Wicks told him about the Danbury Symphony,
in which he played, and invited him to join. The violinist
indicated that he would, and Wicks promised to bring him to the
next symphony rehearsal and introduce him to James Humphreville,
the conductor. Altman did enter the Danbury Symphony and sat next
to the concertmaster. At times he helped instruct the section in a
variety of techniques and bowing.
According to Wicks, Altman was a charming man and a good
conversationalist. Linked by their musical interests, Ann and Ed
occasionally went out to lunch or dinner with Altman and Marcelle
Hall, who though not his wife appeared on the surface to be just
that. As fate would have it, the socialization would last less
than two years. Early in 1985, while at dinner in a local Chinese
restaurant, Altman complained often of stomach pains. Those
physical pains became secondary to the agony that Hall brought
upon him when she had him arrested for sexually molesting one of
her granddaughters. The arrest and date for sentencing were kept
out of the local papers, leaving the musical community unaware of
what was to come.
The Second, and Longer, Visit to Ed Wicks of the Still
Incognito Gibson Stradivarius
On March 20, 1985, Altman appeared at the Wicks' home, not with
the single violin case of two years before, but with a double
violin case containing two violins: the one that Ed had worked on
and another. He also had a sealed cardboard box about a foot
square. Ed provided the following receipt: "Holding for Julian
Altman: one double violin case, two violins and four bows. One
cardboard carton containing men's jewelry, cuff links, coins,
gems, rings, watch and various items of jewelry." Altman's
instructions to Ed were to hold onto the violins and box until
further notice, and not to let anyone know he had them. He then
divulged to Ed the story of his arrest and that in six days he
would be sentenced. Wicks agreed not to say anything to anyone
until the story broke.
Then in a surprise move, Julian and Marcelle flew to Las Vegas
and were married on March 24, 1985. Upon their return, on March 26
Altman pleaded guilty to the charge of risk of injury to a minor
in Danbury Superior Court, thus avoiding trial. He was sentenced
to a year of incarceration, and taken to the Bridgeport jail on
North Avenue.
To make her first visit to the man who was now her husband,
Marcelle asked Wicks to drive her to the jail because she didn't
know how to get there herself. Ed remembers the trip and the
dejected face of Altman in the brief time he had to speak to him.
In the car, on the return trip to the Danbury area, Marcelle
repeated over and over: "Oh, that Julian. If I ever knew where
that violin is." Ed said nothing.
On April 9, 1985, Altman wrote to Ed and informed him that he
had been moved to the Litchfield jail where he found his new
quarters "more tolerable than before---thus giving me a better
incentive to 'last-it-out' and to 'come through it all'-per your
advice…In any case, I always think of you as a very close, sincere
and treasured friend."
Not long afterward, Altman's chance to "last-it-out" vanished
with the diagnosis of stomach cancer in terminal stage. Word got
to Ed about Altman, now moved to a guarded area of a Torrington
hospital, where he was allowed only incoming calls. Wicks called
him several times during Altman's final weeks of life. In one
call, the ailing prisoner asked Ed to get him a lawyer. He
complained a great deal about how Marcelle continually questioned
him to find out where the violin was, in a manner Altman referred
to as "vicious."
As Marcelle would reveal almost two years later, just days
before he died Altman told her that the violin was indeed a
Stradivarius. She would find corroboration of its being the one
stolen from Huberman in material between the violin case and its
canvas cover. He then told her that Ed Wicks had the violin.
Marcelle soon called Wicks and indicated she would come to get
the violin. Ed wasn't so sure that he should give her the double
violin case, with its two violins and bows, so he called the
prison and spoke to the dying man. Altman told him that, yes, he
should give the violins to Marcelle. Within a few days, Marcelle
claimed the double violin case. She would later declare that at
some point after retrieving the violin she looked under the canvas
cover of the violin case and discovered the material about the
Huberman theft: newspaper clippings from 1936 about the theft, and
a portion of an article from the 1977 September edition of
Strad magazine, with the story of the stolen violin
highlighted in pink.
Julian Altman died on August 12, 1985 and was cremated. Marcelle,
declared executrix of the estate, delayed a funeral service at St.
James Episcopal Church in Danbury until November 2nd, which was
followed by the burial in a Bethel cemetery. She sent a personal
invitation to Ed and Ann to attend, which they did. At the service
a violin lay on the altar. When Ed went to view the violin, he saw
that it was definitely not the one he had worked on. As would
later be revealed, Marcelle, soon after her husband's death, had
contacted a lawyer, a cousin in Norwalk, and brought the violin to
experts to confirm it as being a Stradivarius.
Altman's Widow Announces The "Truth" About the Violin
For nearly two years after Altman's death Ed Wicks would hear no
more about the violin, but much was happening. Once experts
verified it as the Gibson Stradivarius, Marcelle Hall and lawyers
then spent over a year negotiating with Lloyds of London, the
violin's owner, for a finder's fee. Lloyds ultimately agreed that
upon the sale of the cleaned and restored Gibson they would
provide Marcelle Hall with one-quarter of the violin's value. They
chose the prestigious firm J. and A. Beare Ltd. of London to
restore the Stradivarius.
On May 8, 1987, with the Lloyds agreement reached, champagne
flowed at Hall's Bethel home in a party that "had been in progress
more or less since the previous evening." An NBC television crew
had been summoned to help break the story of the return to the
musical world of the Gibson Stradivarius. Charles Beare,
representing Beare Ltd., arrived in a limousine, along with two of
Lloyds' lawyers, and got his first look at the long-lost violin
that they were to take back to England. Later that year he
described the event in an article for Strad magazine: "As I
lifted the violin from its case, I didn't appreciate that Mrs.
Hall and her friends and family were still in doubt about the
violin's identity. Very slowly I said 'No ---- problem', and it
turned out that in the second or two between the two words Mrs.
Hall almost died with disappointment. After that there was joy all
round." On May 12, the News-Times published "This Violin
Had Strings Attached," a lengthy story about the Gibson with
comments from Hall about her life with Altman. Two days later the
New York Times featured a front-page story, "A Stolen
Stradivarius, a 51-Year-Old Secret," along with a photo of Altman
serenading Muriel Humphrey, Senator Hubert Humphrey's wife.
When Ed Wicks read the reports of the violin's true origins, he
recalled the day when he said to Altman, "My God, this is a
Stradivarius." Seeing the violin displayed on several television
programs, he immediately recognized it as the violin he had worked
on and later guarded, for the bridge of the violin bore his
signature touches.
In that summer of 1987, on the 250th anniversary of the death
of Antonio Stradivari, the city of Cremona presented a six-week
display of 48 Stradivarius stringed instruments. Charles Beare
helped organize the event, which included Izthak Perlman's Soil
Stradvarius. Near it, the newly restored Gibson made its first
appearance, viewed with special interest by Marcelle Hall, who had
traveled to Italy especially to see the violin and celebrate its
return to the musical world.
Norbert Brainin, a British violinist and a member of the highly
esteemed Amadeus Quartet, purchased the Gibson Stradivarius soon
after. On February 26, 1988, Marcelle Hall received from Lloyds of
London her finder's fee: $263,475.75
A Legal Battle Over the Finder's Fee
What happened next led to years of litigation. Sherry Altman
Schoenwetter, Altman's daughter by his first marriage, had
occasion to review an accounting of her father's estate made to
the Bethel probate court by Marcelle Hall, the executrix.
Schoenwetter formally objected to the omission from her father's
estate of the finder's fee. On October 11, 1991, after a hearing
at which both Hall and Schoenwetter testified, Daniel W. O'Grady,
the Bethel probate judge, ruled that Hall had to return the money
to the estate. He stated that it was not for the court to rule on
whether or not Altman had stolen the violin for "Altman never made
clear to anyone how he came to possess the Gibson." The court had
only to rule on whether Marcelle had correctly carried out her
duties as executrix of Altman's estate. According to O'Grady, "The
Gibson was part of Altman's personal property. Therefore, the
violin as well as the right to any finder's fee passed to the
Altman's estate at his death." He also ruled that Hall had to add
10% interest to the estate's value for every year since she had
received the money.
Hall's lawyer then appealed the case to the Superior Court in
Danbury. There Marcelle testified that her husband in the last
days of his life had indeed told her how he came to possess the
Gibson. First he told her that he had purchased it from a friend
for $100. Then, closer to his death, Altman admitted he was the
thief, executing a plan he and his adoring mother had concocted to
bring him a violin necessary for his talent to be appreciated.
They lived near Carnegie Hall, and he played music in the Russian
Bear, a restaurant behind the auditorium. He had made friends with
the stage door guards and would often give them cigars and tell
them he'd guard the door while they stepped out for a smoke.
During one of these times (and during a break from playing in the
restaurant), he ran upstairs, grabbed the violin, and exited,
hiding it under his Russian peasant outfit. Hall admitted to the
Superior Court that she had told the insurance company only the
first story (that Altman purchased the violin for $100) and not
the second one (that her husband was the thief).
Judge T. Clark Hull of the Superior Court supported the probate
court's decision that the violin was part of the estate. Pulling
no punches, he stated that Altman's wife by keeping the finder's
fee herself had committed a "diabolical deed" equivalent "to an
unlawful theft of the estate's property." The decision was
released on October 3, 1995. Hall's lawyers then appealed to the
Connecticut Supreme Court. Fifteen months later on December 31,
1996, the five justices, in a 4-1 ruling, supported the original
Bethel probate court. Here the legal battle ended, but by now Hall
owed the estate a half million dollars in principal and interest.
On March 18, 1997, nearly ten years after Hall had received the
finder's fee, she declared herself broke. The News-Times
reported that she was now living in Claremont, New Hampshire.
"There's no money," she stated. "How will they get money from me?
I'm living on my Social Security. There's no victory here."
According to Schoenwetter's attorney, Christopher Donohue, his
client did not receive "one red cent" as a result of all the
litigation.
Marcelle Hall died on June 18, 2001. The Claremont Eagle
Times obituary, ostensibly written by Hall's family, made no
mention of Julian Altman. Hall had divorced her first husband in
1970, but in the obituary her married life was summed up as
follows: "She was predeceased by her husband, Robert Samuel Hall,
who died in 1986."
Joshua Bell Gains Possession of the Gibson Stradivarius
Joshua Bell now owns and plays the Gibson Stradivarius. As Bell,
36, moved up through the ranks of violinists to reach the top of
his art, much of that time he owned and performed on another
Stradivarius, the "Tom Tyler," the violin he played for the
musical score of the movie "The Red Violin." His desire to own the
Gibson came after he had had the opportunity to sample its sound
when he appeared in a concert with Norbert Brainin. Brainin
graciously allowed Bell to play a bit on the Gibson he then owned.
As Bell stated in an interview years later, "I thought it was the
most amazing sounding violin I'd ever heard." The owner, seeing
Bell's reaction, jokingly said: "Maybe someday you'll have this
violin. Well, if you can come up with $4 million."
As fate would have it, in August 2001, Bell stopped at Beare's
London office and learned that Brainin was about to sell the
Gibson, not to a violinist, but to a German industrialist. "I was
practically in tears," Bell recalled. Determined to own the
Gibson, he contacted Brainin and within a few days had negotiated
a price. To gain the necessary funds, he sold the Tom Taylor
Stradivarius for a bit more than $2 million, and then managed to
come up with the additional amount needed. Was it worth it? Well,
his recording made with the Gibson Stradivarius is now the current
best selling CD in classical music. Considering the history of the
violin heard on the recording, the title is quite appropriate:
"Romance of the Violin."
Some Reflections On The Rediscovery Of The Gibson
Stradivarius
Ed Wicks often thinks back on those days when he worked on the
Gibson Stradivarius, but he remains puzzled about a key point of
Marcelle Hall's testimony: that she discovered materials about the
Huberman theft somewhere between the violin case and its canvas
cover. In the court case brought by Altman's daughter, Marcelle
Hall exhibited the materials: newspapers clippings dated Feb. 19,
1936 and the Strad magazine. Wicks can't believe he would
not have noted the presence of newspaper clippings and a magazine
article should they have been present in the double violin case
left with him.
At the trial, what was presented as evidence was not the double
violin case in which she had picked up the violin from Wicks, but
"a leather case enclosed in a zippered protective canvas sheath,"
undoubtedly a case for a single violin. Altman's daughter recalls
her father storing his violin in a single, not a double case. If
Hall did discover the materials in a violin case, it would not
have been in the double case that Ed Wicks describes. Where did
she find them? Perhaps they were in a single violin case that he
had left at home after he went to jail, or even in the sealed
container.
How much credence could be put on any of Hall's testimonies?
Consider the following. Cathy Mears, one of Hall's nieces began
collaboration with her aunt in 1991 to produce a book about the
reappearance of the Gibson Stradivarius. In court testimony, Mears
stated that she ceased working with her aunt on the project as a
result of "two inconsistencies in the story about the manner in
which Julian Altman acquired the violin told to her on various
occasions by Marcelle Hall." In an interesting addendum, Mears
testified that "throughout the entire period of the collaboration,
Marcelle Hall maintained that Julian Altman stole the violin."
Could it be that Hall knew that the violin was a Stradivarius
for some time before Altman's death? It isn't that Altman wasn't
playing his own game at times. For example, a friend of Altman's
told a Washington Post reporter in 1987: "Julian would tell
people that his violin was a Stradivarius, and they would just
laugh at him. They thought he was kidding." Also a letter in the
court file indicates that Altman's sister, Sylvia, had known of
the theft from a recording she accidentally stumbled across. In it
Altman and his mother discussed the theft. Hall could have gained
the truth of the violin from Altman, even from pillow talk. After
all they had been together for 17 years before his death.
All speculation aside, Ed Wicks can help correct another error
found in several recent articles about the Gibson's appearance
when it resurfaced in 1985: that the violin was covered with "shoe
polish," ostensibly to camouflage its true identity. Wicks states
categorically that nothing like "shoe polish" was on the violin
when he turned it over to Hall. Here is probably how the "shoe
polish" story arose. When Charles Beare came to Bethel on May 8,
1985 to view and receive the violin for Beare Ltd, he made notes
of the event. Later, in the Strad magazine article
(December 1987), he described the Gibson Strad when he first saw
it in Bethel:
"Out in the better light of the garden, away from the crowd and the
popping champagne corks, I had a good look at Huberman's
remarkable violin. In 1911, when the young virtuoso purchased it,
Alfred Hill of W. E. Hill and Sons wrote 'The red varnish is in a
pure state, as applied by the maker.' Now you could barely see it,
submerged as it was beneath layer upon layer of dirt and polish. .
. .Nevertheless the violin was clearly a masterpiece, and in the
pale sunlight its handsome wood and red varnish glowed
reassuringly."
Probably a reporter decided to add "shoe" to Beare's "polish"
reference. In this way are mysteries compounded. In fact, this
story has enough mysterious aspects so that no more need be added.
Will it ever be known how Altman acquired the Gibson
Stradivarius and when Hall came to know of it? It's very unlikely.
The truth is buried now in Claremont, New Hampshire and in Bethel,
Connecticut with the two major players of the story.
The writer thanks Edward and Ann Wicks,
Sherry Altman, Roseann Billeas of the Danbury Superior Court Law
Library, Wayne McElreavy, who supplied the Hall obituary, and Ladd
Library of Bates College for the loan of the book "Capolavori di
Antonio Stradivari" by Charles Beare.
© James Pegolotti July 26, 2004
THE "GIBSON" STRAD OF 1713
Antonio Stradivari: The Cremona Exhibition of 1987 by Charles
Beare
This violin, of flat, masculine build, an outstanding concert
instrument, is famous for having been stolen from the Polish
virtuoso violinist Bronislaw Huberman at Carnegie Hall, in New
York, in 1936. Huberman had played a concert on his Guarneri, and
on returning to his dressing room discovered that his treasured
Stradivari had disappeared. No trace of it was found until spring
of 1987, when it was offered to Lloyd's of London, the legal
owners, by the widow of Julian Altman, a cafe violinist who
claimed to have bought it for a modest sum the day after the
theft.
W. E. Hill and Sons purchased the violin in the nineteenth century
from an old French family, subsequently selling it to Alfred
Gibson, a prominent English violinist who also owned one of the
Stradivari violas exhibited in Cremona. In 1911 it returned to
Hills and was sold to Huberman, at which time Alfred Hill wrote
that "the fine red varnish which covers it is in a pure state as
applied by the maker". Three months before the opening of the
exhibition the varnish was almost unrecognizably submerged beneath
layers of dark grime and shellac, but after a minor restoration
and a very careful clean-up at J and A Beare it duly took its
place, its deep red colour once more revealed for all to admire.
The violin's tone turned out to be absolutely outstanding, and in
February 1988 it was sold by J and A Beare, acting on behalf of
Lloyd's, to the well-known violinist Norbert Brainin, formerly of
the Amadeus Quartet.
Copyright Text (c) Charles Beare 1993
A FAMED VIOLIN'S FANTASTIC JOURNEY
Long-lost Stradivarius strikes a chord in heart of modern master
10/28/2001
By Mark Wrolstad / The Dallas Morning News
The mystique of the name Stradivarius has resonated beyond
classical music for generations, finding a place in the popular
imagination and even urban legend.
You don't have to know a violin from a viola to know the stories -
some apocryphal - about one of the exquisitely rare instruments
turning up in an attic or junk shop.
Now add another stanza to what may be the most contorted tale of
all the world's prized violins - a masterwork lost for half a
century, today in the hands of a new master.
Joshua Bell, the young superstar violinist who played the solos
for a movie about a violin's travels through the ages, took his
role in the true-life version this month by paying nearly $4
million for the famed Gibson Stradivarius, which is nearly three
centuries old.
Dealers in Dallas who work for the leading restorer and seller of
stringed instruments helped complete the sale.
"I instantaneously fell in love with the instrument like I never
have before with a violin," Mr. Bell, 33, said Friday from his
home in New York. "This is like a dream come true."
Mr. Bell, hailed for his lyric musicianship and varied musical
interests that have made him an international crossover hit,
bought a violin whose history is almost as dark as the grime that
covered it when the instrument resurfaced after a deathbed
confession in 1985.
The Strad - a conversational abbreviation in concert and collector
circles for violins made by Antonius Stradivarius - has been
stolen twice, last disappearing from New York's Carnegie Hall in
1936.
Even after a cafe musician, dying in jail, admitted he had the
stolen violin all those years, an insurer's payment to get it back
led to litigation between the thief's heirs.
"It's a bit ironic that he's buying an instrument with so much
intrigue surrounding it," said Michael Selman, general manager of
JandA Beare Ltd. in Dallas, the company that sold the violin for
well-known British violinist Norbert Brainin.
"If the movie The Red Violin hadn't been made, this would have
been the one to write a book about," Mr. Selman said of the 1999
film in which Mr. Bell played the music.
Among the yarns of famous violins reappearing, Mr. Selman said,
"This is the story, and it involves one of the very fine violins
in the world."
This one was constructed in 1713, during what's known as the
Golden Period - when Stradivarius made instruments renowned for
unequaled tone.
The violin later became known as the Gibson Strad, taking its name
from early owner Alfred Gibson, as is customary for valued
instruments.
Of the more than 1,100 violins made during Stradivarius' lifetime,
about half are thought to still exist. (Through the centuries,
manufacturers around the world usurped the famous name, producing
hundreds of thousands of violins stamped "Stradivarius" -
explaining all of those garage-sale discoveries.)
Ninety years ago, the Gibson Strad was owned by Polish virtuoso
Bronislaw Huberman, from whom it was stolen twice.
In 1919, the violin was taken from his hotel room in Vienna but
was quickly returned after the thief supposedly offered it to a
dealer.
The next time, Mr. Huberman didn't get it back.
He was on stage at Carnegie Hall in 1936 when the violin was
stolen from his dressing room.
Eventually, he accepted a full settlement of about $30,000 from
the insurer, Lloyd's of London.
For the next 51 years, the violin was officially missing, though
it apparently frequented cafes and clubs in the New York area with
a violinist named Julian Altman.
Its trail went undetected until 1987 when a 69-year-old widow with
an evolving story contacted Lloyd's about the long-lost violin.
Marcelle Hall said Mr. Altman had revealed his lifelong secret in
1985 while dying of stomach cancer: He bought the Gibson Strad for
$100 the day after a friend stole it from Carnegie Hall.
Mr. Altman died at age 70 shortly after he and Ms. Hall were
married.
Lloyd's agreed to pay Ms. Hall a finder's fee of $263,475 -
one-quarter of its value.
A half-century of filth was lifted from the Strad - "like taking
dirt off the Sistine Chapel," Mr. Bell said - and in 1988, the
insurer sold it to Mr. Brainin for $1.2 million.
Nearly a decade later, Mr. Altman's daughter, Sherry Schoenwetter,
gave up trying to get her share of Ms. Hall's payment. The
Connecticut Supreme Court ruled in 1996 that Ms. Hall should have
included the money in her husband's estate.
But Ms. Hall had spent the small fortune and had few assets left.
The lengthy court fight did elicit from Ms. Hall a second detailed
account of the stolen Strad.
She testified that Mr. Altman confessed to stealing the violin in
a plot concocted with his mother and that she found old newspaper
stories about the theft in the violin case.
Mr. Altman, who was known around Carnegie Hall, had ducked out of
his job with a gypsy orchestra at the nearby Russian Bear cafe,
Ms. Hall said. He diverted a security guard with a fine cigar,
went to the dressing room and hid the violin under his coat, she
said. A trial judge described the testimony as "more dramatic than
the most contrived TV mystery show."
Chris Donohue, Ms. Schoenwetter's attorney, said Ms. Hall's story
was "probably true," but his client was never paid. "Not one red
cent."
About the time the litigation ended, Mr. Bell appeared at a
concert with Mr. Brainin and had his first encounter with the
violin that one day would be his.
"He let me play a few notes, and I thought it was the most
amazing-sounding violin I'd ever heard," Mr. Bell said.
He recalled the owner's joking response: "Maybe someday you'll
have this violin. Well, if you can come up with $4 million."
Five years later, they met again - Mr. Bell and the Gibson Strad,
that is.
In August, he stopped at Beare's London office and found that it
was about to be sold to a German industrialist.
"It made me nauseous, the thought of that," he said.
He put the violin to his chin again and played. "I was practically
in tears, and I said, 'You cannot take this violin.' "
Mr. Bell talked with Mr. Brainin. Negotiations took just two days.
"Which is very unusual," Mr. Bell said. "You usually spend months
trying to make sure it's the right violin.
"I could only go so far with price, and I think he liked the fact
that I'd be playing his violin."
Mr. Bell had to sell an old friend, his 1732 Strad, the one he
played for the Oscar-winning score of The Red Violin.
The escalating market for Strads quickly brought him more than $2
million from a collector who will lend the violin to a young
performer.
The Gibson Strad, it so happens, has a "glorious varnish" that's
"extremely red."
"It's ironic for me that I'm ending up with the red violin," Mr.
Bell said.
It will be with him from now on, his performance violin on stage
and in the studio, he said, making the promise of countless love
affairs.
"Always."
Reprinted with permission of The Dallas Morning News.
THE TOM TAYLOR STRAD OF 1732 This example is one which is
quite famous in our country, having long been owned by the eminent
violinist Jacques Gordon, formerly concertmaster of the Chicago
Symphony Orchestra, head of a string quartet which bears his name,
and of recent years head of the violin department at Eastman
College of Music of the University of Rochester. (Gordon acquired
one of the "de Rougemont" Strads of 1703 in 1944).
The history of the instrument is recorded from the time that it
was in possession of Dr. Camidge, organist of York Minster,
presumably John Camidge (there were a number of organists in his
family) who received the Degree of Doctor of Music in 1819. In
1837 the violin was acquired by the Reverend William Flower who in
his time owned several Stradivari instruments. During the sojourn
of Louis Spohr in England, he used the violin when he appeared as
soloist at a Musical Festival held at Norwich in 1839. At the
death of Reverend Flower, the violin passed to his grandson, Tom
Taylor, by whose name it has since been recorded. His wife (née
Laura Wilson Barker) was a fine musician, a composer, and a finely
gifted and highly accomplished player of the piano as well as the
violin. She played with such artists as Spohr and Paganini. The
violin remained in her possession after the death of Tom Taylor,
until her death at Coleshill, Buckinghamshire, England, may 22,
1905 at the advanced age of eighty-five. Inherited by her
daughter, Lucy, it was purchased from her by a German, passing
from him to the collection of the Berlin dealer Hammig. Erich
Lachmann purchased it from Hammig in 1927 and brought it to the
U.S.A. in 1928. Subsequently it became part of the Wurlitzer
Collection. Documents which accompanied the violin included some
letters from Lucy Taylor which contained reference to her mother's
violin; these include information that as a girl of thirteen Laura
Wilson Barker played with Paganini and later with Spohr, who
suggested her coming to Cassel as his pupil. Joachim was also a
friend and often played on the violin, and an interesting anecdote
is related in the following, contained in one of the letters
mentioned:
"Once when Madame Joachim, the famous prima donna, was staying
with Mrs. Tom Taylor, the Professor arrived and found his wife
singing to a distinguished audience there. In the middle of a
song, a servant rushed in and informed her mistress that the top
story of the house was ablaze. Even for this, Mrs. Taylor would
not have the great singer interrupted, but Professor Joachim was
alarmed for the safety of the Stradivari, which he at once picked
up and took to his waiting carriage, with the remark 'Whatever
else happens, the Strad must be saved'."
Albert F. Metz purchased the violin from Wurlitzer in recent
years. He placed it at the disposition of the brilliant young
artist Patricia Travers who has used it during recent years on her
concert tours. A vast American public realizes that the reputation
of the violin as being tonally outstanding is no mere tradition ú
Miss Travers has brought it to us as an unquestionable reality!
1732 THE TOM TAYLOR. A specimen described by the late Alfred E.
Hill as an entirely typical work of the master, in every part his
work..." in contradiction to others, parts of which were made by
one or other of his sons."
Reprinted with permission from How Many Strads: Our Heritage
from the Master by Ernest Doring, published by Bein and Fushi,
Inc.
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