Van Cliburn's talent alone might have earned him a place among the 20th-century giants of his instrument, alongside classical pianists like
Arthur Rubinstein and Vladimir Horowitz. But after a magical Moscow spring in 1958, Mr. Cliburn's fame eclipsed even those musical contemporaries, rivaling that of another young superstar of his time, Elvis Presley.
Mr. Cliburn was "The Texan Who Conquered Russia," according to a Time
magazine cover. At the height of the Cold War, the lanky 23-year-old from East
Texas traveled to Moscow and won the first Tchaikovsky International
Competition, an event created to showcase Soviet cultural superiority. Mr.
Cliburn's unlikely triumph was thus said to bring a thaw in tensions between
the rival superpowers and created a mythic parable about the power of art to
unite mankind.
The man at the heart of that parable died Wednesday morning at his
mansion near Fort Worth. It had been announced Aug. 27 that Mr. Cliburn, who
turned 78 in July, was suffering from advanced bone cancer.
"In 1958, he proved to the world that music is a transcendental force
that goes beyond political boundaries and cultural boundaries and unifies
mankind. He was a very concrete example of that," said Veda Kaplinsky, head of
the piano department at the Juilliard School in New York. "Beyond that, his
legacy is that of a person who personified grace, humility, talent, kindness
and sincerity. He was a human being first and foremost. He never lost that."
While the world mourns a cultural icon, many in North Texas remember a
friend -- a shy man of uncommon graciousness.
A friend to American presidents, foreign leaders and Hollywood
celebrities, Mr. Cliburn also became a fixture in the life of Fort Worth. In
the 1980s, he moved from a New York City apartment to a mansion in the
exclusive Fort Worth suburb of Westover Hills. In the decades since, he was
often seen at local cultural events or handing out medals to winners of the
prestigious Fort Worth piano competition that bears his name.
A famous night owl, Mr. Cliburn was well-known for his off-hours visits
to the Ol' South Pancake House on University Drive, always dressed in his
trademark dark suits. A man of deep Christian faith, he was a member at
Broadway Baptist Church, sneaking into a back pew just before services began
each Sunday he was in town.
"One of the most profound truths that has characterized my life is St.
Paul's advice to 'pray without ceasing,'" Mr. Cliburn told Brent Beasley, his
pastor at Broadway Baptist, shortly before his death. "That's how I have lived
my life."
Beasley and others who spent time with Mr. Cliburn after his recent
diagnosis described a man bent on reminiscing from the moment he woke updaily,
but a person unafraid of the end.
"He actually made the comment, 'I'm more afraid of living than dying,'"
Beasley said.
For all his local familiarity, Mr. Cliburn largely belonged to the world.
Through much of the 1960s and 1970s, he was among the most sought-after
soloists and recording artists of his generation. But he would always be,
first and foremost, the humble young man of the Tchaikovsky triumph, which
came when the cloud of nuclear confrontation hovered over the world.
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News Column
Van Cliburn, Legendary Pianist, Dies at 78
February 27, 2013
Tim Madigan
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