Afa Dworkin
(Jose Juarez/Special to The Detroit News)
Aaron Dworkin
(Lon Horwedel/Special to The Detroit News)
(Lon Horwedel/Special to The Detroit News)
The Detroit News
January 31, 2017
Joseph Conyers, assistant principal bass for the celebrated
Philadelphia Orchestra, was used to being just about the only black kid
in the orchestra when he was a youngster in Savannah, Georgia.
So
he was dazzled when he came to Detroit for the 2004 Sphinx Competition,
which annually brings 18 young African-American and Latino string
players up to age 30 to Orchestra Hall to compete for a top prize that’s
now $50,000.
“When I got to Detroit, for the first time I was
around other young African-American musicians who were as excited about
classical music as I was,” Conyers said. Just 16 at the time, he felt
like he’d stumbled into Oz.
Conyers laughed. “I was just so happy.”
Detroit’s
Sphinx Organization, which works to expose youngsters to classical
music and boost the number of African-American and Latino string players
in professional orchestras and ensembles, celebrates its 20th
anniversary this year. From an undergraduate’s unlikely proposal in
1996, the program has grown into an engine of professional uplift that’s
helped advance the careers of hundreds of alumni.
This
year’s Sphinx Competition runs from Feb. 8-12 at Orchestra Hall, with
performances open to the public Feb. 10 and Feb. 12. (See box.)
Since
its 1996 founding by Aaron Dworkin, now dean of the School of Music,
Theatre & Dance at the University of Michigan, the Detroit-based
nonprofit has reached 100,000 students with its competition, programs
and performances nationwide.
Today its operating budget is just short of $5 million a year.
Sphinx,
now run by Dworkin’s life partner, Afa, has over the years awarded $2.5
million in music scholarships for aspiring musicians to attend top
schools and summer intensives like Sphinx’s own Performance Academies.
For
Danielle Belen, now a UM professor of violin, winning the 2008 Sphinx
Competition when she was 24 opened more doors than the Californian could
possibly imagine.
“It was a wild year,” Belen said. “Right off
the bat I found myself soloing with all these orchestras — Cleveland,
San Francisco, the Boston Pops. It really opened my eyes to my aptitude
and potential.”
For Harlem Quartet member Melissa White, taking
the top prize in 2001 for younger players led to coveted solo gigs with
the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, the Atlanta Symphony, the Pittsburgh
Symphony Orchestra, and others too numerous for her to recall off the
top of her head.
Even more impressive, she scored a private lesson
with the late, great violinist Isaac Stern — one of the giants of 20th
century classical music.
“That,” she said, “blew my mind.”
Winning
a Sphinx Competition prize — or even just being a finalist — “puts you
in a different league and a different mindset,” White said. “It’s just
huge.”
The Sphinx reach is impressive.
“I admire, in the
deepest and most reverential way, the work that Aaron began and Afa has
continued,” said Deborah Rutter, president of the Kennedy Center for the
Performing Arts in Washington.
At Carnegie Hall, where the Sphinx
Virtuosi chamber orchestra performs every year, Executive and Artistic
Director Clive Gillinson applauds how Sphinx helped lodge the question
of diversity in the larger discussion about classical music.
“We’ve
always been great supporters and believers in their mission,” he said,
“and have built a closer and closer relationship over the years.”
Robert
Lynch, president and CEO of Americans for the Arts in the nation’s
capital, summarized what he likes about Sphinx in one short sentence:
“It delivers on its promise.”
Comments by email:
1) Thanks so much, Bill! Afa [Afa S. Dworkin]
2) Thank you! [Joseph Conyers]
Comments by email:
1) Thanks so much, Bill! Afa [Afa S. Dworkin]
2) Thank you! [Joseph Conyers]
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