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| October
1-2, 2011 |
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19-20, 2011 |
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28-29, 2012 |
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17-18, 2012 |
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14-15, 2012 |
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Wine &
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Friday, October 21, 2011 |
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| October
16-17, 2011 |
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13-14, 2011 |
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4-5, 2012 |
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29-30, 2012 |
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Greenwich
Symphony 1958 to 2010

In the
1940s a group of amateur musicians began playing
together in Greenwich. Several concerts under the
baton of Kenneth Wendrich led to the founding of the
Greenwich Philharmonia in 1958, with Catherine
Converse as first president. Marian Jeffrey
succeeded Mrs. Converse in 1967. Under her
leadership the orchestra began a steady rise in
growth and prestige. John Nelson became music
director in 1967. The orchestra – now fully
professional and 85 strong – was awarded its first
grants from the Connecticut Commission on the Arts
and from local corporations and benefactors,
enabling it to expand the season to five dual
Saturday evening and Sunday afternoon performances.
The Philharmonia Auxiliary, headed by Dorothy
Gluckmann, established its annual award to a gifted
high school senior, and began to serve, support, and
promote the orchestra in a variety of important
ways.
In 1975 David Gilbert was named Music Director and
Conductor. Associate Conductor Patricia Handy, who
presents the Pre-Concert Lectures and conducts the
GSO's highly acclaimed Young People's Concerts
series, joined in 1979. The Greenwich Philharmonia
was renamed the Greenwich Symphony Orchestra in its
25th anniversary season, 1982 to 1983, and the
Auxiliary became the Symphony Guild. That season
marked the GSO's first dual concert with the
Greenwich Choral Society, and the establishment of
the endowment fund, which was greatly enhanced by
gala benefit concerts starring Victor Borge in 1986
and 1999. Following Olwen Jones and Mahlon Perkins,
Mary Radcliffe was named president in 1983.
In 1987 the Greenwich Arts Council and Department of
Parks and Recreation sponsored the first annual
''Greenwich Pops into Summer'' free outdoor concert,
presented by the GSO and Greenwich Choral Society.
Throughout its history, the GSO has been managed by
its experienced and dedicated volunteer Board of
Directors. Consequently, it enjoys the lowest
administrative overhead ratio of any orchestra with
a comparable budget in the American Symphony
Orchestra League.
Over the years, the GSO has featured such
outstanding soloists as Emanuel Ax, Barry Douglas,
Pamela Frank, John O'Conor, Peter Serkin, and Dawn
Upshaw. We thank our audience and friends who, with
their dedicated and generous support, help us
present a wide variety of great orchestral music in
Greenwich.
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