Betty Freeman

This article is about the philanthropist. For other uses, see Elizabeth Freeman (disambiguation).

Betty Wishnick-Freeman (2 June 1921 3 January 2009) was an American philanthropist and photographer.

Biography

Freeman was born in Chicago, Illinois. At age 3, she moved with her parents and two brothers to Brooklyn, later moving to New Rochelle, New York and attending New Rochelle High School. Her father was a chemical engineer who had graduated from the Illinois Institute of Technology, and her mother was a mathematics teacher and graduate of the University of Wisconsin. Freeman was a graduate of Wellesley College (1942), where she majored in English literature with a minor in music.[1] She had originally trained to be a concert pianist, practicing six to eight hours per day for twenty years, but eventually, by the mid-1960s, gave up this dream to pursue concert managing. Following her graduation, she married Stanley Freeman, and the couple had four children. Their marriage ended in divorce. Freeman's second marriage was to the Italian sculptor and painter Franco Assetto (1911-1991), with whom she lived half of each year in Turin. The marriage lasted until Assetto's death.

Freeman was a long-standing supporter of contemporary music, with grants and commissions to various American composers early in their careers.[1] The composers she assisted include Lou Harrison, John Cage, La Monte Young, Christopher Rouse,[2] Philip Glass, Steve Reich, John Adams, Anders Hillborg, Pierre Boulez, Harrison Birtwistle, Virgil Thomson, Helmut Lachenmann, and Kaija Saariaho. John Cage dedicated his Freeman Etudes to her (although she did not commission them), Lou Harrison dedicated his Serenade for Betty Freeman and Franco Assetto to Freeman and her husband, Steve Reich dedicated Variations for Winds, Strings, and Keyboards (1979) and Vermont Counterpoint (1982) to her, and John Adams's opera Nixon in China (1985–87) was dedicated to her. The American gamelan Si Betty, built by Harrison and William Colvig in 1979, was named for Freeman. Bequeathed by Harrison to long-time collaborator and composer Jody Diamond, it has been housed at Harvard University since 2007. She began a series of musicales at her Beverly Hills residence in 1981, which continued until just after the death of her second husband.[3]

Freeman financed a 1973 documentary film about the composer and instrument builder Harry Partch, The Dreamer That Remains.[4] She subsequently developed an interest in photography.

She wrote books about the American artists Clyfford Still and Sam Francis. She was also an art collector.

Freeman is survived by her four children from her first marriage, her daughters Shelley Butler and Claudia Brotman, and her sons Robert Freeman and Corey Freeman, along with 3 grandchildren. Her brothers John Wishnick and William Wishnick survived their sister.[4]

Books

Films

References

  1. 1 2 Anthony Tommasini (1998-03-19). "A Medici of Modern Arts In Tune With Composers; Betty Freeman, Long a Patron of Americans, Shifts Her Maverick Focus to Europeans". New York Times. Retrieved 2015-07-11.
  2. Rothstein, Edward (January 28, 1994). "Review/Music; Cello Piece Pays Tribute To Departed Composers". The New York Times. Retrieved May 24, 2015.
  3. Elaine Woo (2009-01-07). "Betty Freeman, art philanthropist and photographer, dies at 87". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2010-11-05.
  4. 1 2 Anthony Tommasini (2009-01-07). "Betty Freeman, Patron of New Music, Dies at 87". New York Times. Retrieved 2015-07-11.

External links

Interviews

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