The sharp rap of Arturo Toscanini’s
baton that cuts the ear like a whiplash brought the
rehearsal of the NBC Symphony Orchestra to a sudden,
shocking stop. Overtones from chords of Wagner’s
“Faust Overture,” killed in mid-career,
vibrated through the throat-gripping silence.
The men stared at their music, bowed
their heads a little in anticipation of the storm.
“Play that again,” the Maestro commanded
William Bell, the bass tuba player, who had just finished
a solo. On Mr. Bell’s face there was an
expression of mixed worry and wonderment. Mr.
Toscanini noticed the troubled anxious look.
“No, no, no,” he said,
with that childlike smile of his that suffuses his
whole face with an irresistible light. “There
is nothing wrong. Play it again; please, play
it again, just for me. It is so beautiful.
I have never heard these solo passages played with
such a lovely tone.”
There you have a side of Mr. Toscanini
that the boys have forgotten to tell you about.
For years newspaper and magazine writers (in the last
couple of seasons the Maestro has even “made”
the Broadway columns!) have doled out anecdotes concerning
his terrible temper.
From these stories there emerged a
demoniacal little man with the tantrums of a dozen
prima donnas, a temperamental tyrant who, at the dropping
of a stitch in the orchestral knitting, tore his hair,
screamed at the top of his inexhaustible Latin lungs,
doused his trembling players with streams of blistering
invective.
That’s how you learned that,
to the king of conductors, a musician playing an acid
note is a “shoemaker,” a “swine,”
an “assassin” or even something completely
unprintable.
So far as they went the stories were
true. Mr. Toscanini, as all the world knows by
now, is the world’s N musical purist.
Nothing but perfection satisfies him. He hates
compromise, loathes the half-baked and mediocre, refuses
to put up with “something almost as good.”
As Stefan Zweig puts it: “In
vain will you remind him that the perfect, the absolute,
are rarely attainable in this world; that, even to
the sublimest will, no more is possible than an approach
to perfection.... His glorious unwisdom makes
it impossible to recognize this wise dispensation.”
His rages, then, are the spasms of
pain of a perfectionist wounded by imperfection.
It was his glorious unwisdom that caused him, at a
rehearsal not long ago, to fling a platinum watch to
the floor, where, of course, it was smashed into fragments.
In the shadows of the studio that
afternoon lurked John F. Royal, program director of
NBC. Next day he presented the Maestro with two
$1 watches, both inscribed, “For Rehearsals
Only.” Mr. Toscanini was so amused that
he forgot to get angry with Mr. Royal for breaking
the grimly enforced rule barring all but orchestra
members from rehearsals.
The sympathetic program director also
had the shattered platinum watch put together by what
must have been a Toscanini among watchmakers.
By that time the incident had become such a joke that
the orchestra men dared to give the Maestro a chain,
of material and construction guaranteed to be unbreakable,
to attach the brace of Ingersolls to the dark, roomy
jacket which for years he has worn at rehearsals.
Less than a week later that same choleric
director, with the burning deep-set black eyes, the
finely chiseled features and the halo of silver hair
surrounding a bald spot that turns purple in his passions,
walked into a room where a girl of this reporter’s
acquaintance stood beside a canary cage, making a
rather successful attempt at whistling, in time and
tune with the bird.
For a moment the man who can make
music like no one else on earth listened to the girl
and her pet. Then he sighed and said:
“Oh, if I could only whistle!”
Those who know Mr. Toscanini intimately
find in those six simple words the key to his character.
He is, they say, the most modest man who ever lived,
a man sincerely at a loss to understand the endless
fuss that is made about him.
Time and again he has told his friends
that he has no fonder desire than to be able to walk
about undisturbed, to saunter along the avenue, look
into shop-windows, do the thousand-and-one common little
things that are permitted other human beings.
That same humility, that same incurable
bewilderment at public acclaim must have been apparent
to all who ever attended a Toscanini concert, saw
him at the close of a superb interpretation bowing
as one of the group of players and making deprecating
gestures that seemed to say: “What you
have heard was a great score brought to life by these
excellent musicians-why applaud me?”
At rehearsals he is the strictest
of disciplinarians but not a prima donna conductor.
He demands the utmost attention and concentration
from his men, brooks no disturbance or interruption.
On the other hand, he is punctual to a fault, arrives
fifteen minutes ahead of time, never asks for special
privileges of any kind.
He has been described as the world’s
most patient and impatient orchestral director.
In rehearsal he will take the men through a passage,
a mere phrase, innumerable times to achieve a certain
tonal or dynamic effect. But he explodes when
he feels that he is faced with stupidity or stubbornness.
Some famous conductors have added
the B of Barnum to the three immortal B’s of
music-Bach, Beethoven and Brahms. Those
wielders of the stick are great showmen as well as
great musicians.
Not so Mr. Toscanini. In his
platform manner there is nothing calculated for theatrical
effect. He doesn’t care in the least what
he looks like “from out front.” His
gestures are designed not to impress, enrapture or
englamour the musical groundlings, but to convey his
sharply defined wishes to his men and transmit to them
the flaming enthusiasm that consumes him.
His motions are patiently sincere,
almost unconscious. He enters carrying his baton
under his right arm, like a riding crop. Orchestra
and audience rise. He acknowledges this mark of
respect and the tumultuous applause with a quick bow,
an indulgent smile and a gesture that plainly say:
“Thanks, thanks, all this is very nice, you’re
a lot of kind, good children, but for heaven’s
sake let’s get down to business.”
While waiting a few seconds for listeners
and players to settle themselves he rests his baton
against his right shoulder, like a sword. Then
the sharp rap. The Maestro closes his eyes.
Another rap, sharper than the first. Oppressive,
electrical silence. He lifts the baton as if
saluting the orchestra. The concert begins.
As a rule the right hand gives the
tempo and tracks down every smallest melody, wherever
it may hide in the score. In passages for the
strings, the baton indicates the type of bowing the
conductor wants from the violins, violas
or cellos.
The left hand, with the long thumb
separate from the other fingers, is the orchestra’s
guide to the Maestro’s interpretative desires.
It wheedles the tone from the men. It coaxes,
hushes, demands increased volume. It moves, trembling,
to the heart to ask for feeling, closes into a fist
to get sound and fury from the brasses, thunder from
the drums. Through it all, the Maestro talks,
sings, whistles and blows out his cheeks for the benefit
of trumpeters and trombonists.
After a concert, keyed to feverish
excitement, he often plays over piano scores of every
number that appeared on the program. Then he
may lie awake all night, worrying over two possible
tempi in which he might have taken some passage-shadings
in rhythm that the average listener would not, could
not discern.
He is never satisfied with himself.
Some years ago, when he was still conducting at the
Scala in Milan, he came home one night after the opera.
Mr. Toscanini does not eat before a performance, and
his family wait with the evening meal until he joins
them.
As he stepped into the hall he saw
his wife and daughters walking into the dining room.
“Where are you going?” he asks them.
“In to supper, of course,” one of them
told him. The Maestro exploded: “What?
After THAT performance? Oh, no, you’re
not. It shall never be said of my family that
they could eat after such a horrible show!” All
of them, including the great man himself, went to
bed without supper that night.
It stands to reason that a man of
this type detests personal publicity. The interviews
he has granted in the fifty-six years of his career-Mr.
Toscanini, who is seventy-five, began conducting at
nineteen-can be counted on the fingers of
one hand. He feels and has often told friends
that all he has to say he can say in musical terms;
that he gladly leaves to others what satisfaction they
may derive from publicly bandying words.
But his frequent brushes with news
photographers don’t come under this head.
The existence of numerous fine camera studies of the
Maestro proves that he doesn’t dislike being
photographed. Nor does he dislike photographers.
But he hates flashlights because they hurt his eyes.
This has bolstered the popular notion-based
on the fact that he conducts from memory-that
his sight is so poor as to amount almost to blindness.
Mr. Toscanini is neither blind nor
half-blind. He does not use a strong magnifying
glass to study his scores, note by note. He is
near-sighted, but not more so than millions of others,
and reads with the aid of ordinary spectacles.
He has always conducted from memory
because he believes that having the score in his head
gives a conductor greater freedom and authority to
impose his musical will upon his men. At rehearsals
the score is kept on a stand a few feet from the Maestro.
From time to time he consults it to verify a point
at dispute. He has never been known to be wrong.
His memory is, of course, phenomenal.
Anything he has once seen, read and particularly,
heard, he not only remembers but is unable to forget.
The other day he and a friend were discussing the concerto
played by a certain pianist on his American debut in
1911. Mr. Toscanini remembered it as Beethoven’s
Fourth Piano Concerto; the friend maintained it was
the Second.
The Maestro said: “I recall
the concert very well. He was soloist with the
Philharmonic.” And he reeled off all the
other compositions on that program of twenty-seven
years ago.
To settle the argument the skeptical
friend called the office of the Philharmonic.
Mr. Toscanini had been right about the Beethoven Concerto
and had correctly remembered the purely orchestral
numbers as well.
He is a profound student, not only
of music but of all available literature bearing upon
it. A music critic who visited him in Salzburg
a few years ago, just before he was to conduct Wagner’s
“Die Meistersinger,” found him in a room
littered with books on the opera, books on Wagner,
volumes of the composer’s correspondence.
The Maestro, who has been coming to
this country since 1908, speaks better English than
most of us. He knows his English literature and
is in the sometimes disconcerting habit of quoting
by the yard from the works of Shakespeare, Keats,
Shelley and Swinburne.
Almost as great a linguist as he is
a musician, he coaxes and curses his men in perfect,
idiomatic French, German and Spanish as well as English
and Italian.
He likes reading, listening to the
radio-he is fond of good jazz-and
driving out in the country. He loves speed.
An American friend who some years ago accompanied
him on a motor trip from Milan to Venice groaned when
the speedometer began hovering around 78. “What’s
the matter with you?” the Maestro wanted to
know. “We’re only jogging along.”
Whenever possible he flies.
Since 1926 he and Mrs. Toscanini have
occupied an apartment in the Astor-the
same suite of four smallish rooms. The place is
furnished by the hotel, but the Maestro always brings
his beloved knickknacks-his miniature of
Beethoven, his Wagner and Verdi manuscripts, his family
photographs.
He has no valet and dislikes being
pawed by barbers. He shaves himself, and Mrs.
Toscanini or one of the daughters cuts his hair.
He eats very little-two plates of soup
(preferably minestrone), a piece of bread and a glass
of chianti do him nicely for dinner.
He begrudges the time spent in eating
and sleeping. Like the child he is at heart,
he loves staying up late. Occasionally he takes
a nocturnal prowl.
The other night, after a concert,
he asked a friend to take him somewhere-“some
place where they won’t know me and make a fuss
over me.”
The friend took him to a little place
in the Village. The moment Mr. Toscanini entered,
the proprietor dashed forward, bowed almost to the
ground and said: “Maestro, I am greatly
honored ... I’ll never forget this hour
...” Then he led the party to the most conspicuous
spot in the room.
Mr. Toscanini wanted a nip of brandy,
but the innkeeper insisted that he try some very special
wine of the house’s own making. From a
huge jug he poured a brownish-red, viscous liquid into
a couple of tumblers. The Maestro’s companion
says it tasted like a mixture of castor oil, hair
tonic and pitch.
Turning white at the first sip, Mr.
Toscanini drained his glass at a gulp. Outside,
his friend asked him: “Why did you drink
that vile stuff?”
The Maestro said: “The
poor fellow meant well, and I didn’t want to
refuse. A man can do anything.”