THIRD VAN CLIBURN INTERNATIONAL PIANO COMPETITION
SEPTEMBER 29–OCTOBER 12, 1969
ED LANDRETH AUDITORIUM AT TEXAS CHRISTIAN UNIVERSITY • TARRANT COUNTY CONVENTION CENTER THEATRE
FORT WORTH, TEXAS, USA
Ezra Rachlin, jury chairman
AWARDS AND PRIZES
Best Performance of Commissioned Work: Minoru Nojima ($500 gold watch)
Best Performance of Chamber Music: Diane Walsh ($600)
Best Performance of Schumann: Cristina Ortiz (Annunciata Beall Gold Memorial Medal)
Highest Ranking Pianist of the Americas: Cristina Ortiz ($500)
WINNERS’ UPDATES
CRISTINA ORTIZ Now based in London, the first woman to win Cliburn gold has performed extensively with major orchestras and given master classes worldwide. Her 30 albums cover a wide-ranging repertoire and include, most recently, a Naxos release of solo piano works by York Bowen.
MINORU NOJIMA One of Japan’s most respected pianists, Mr. Nojima made his Carnegie Hall debut the year after winning silver at the Cliburn and went on to a busy performing career. He was president of the Toyko School of Music and served as a juror for the 2013 Van Cliburn International Piano Competition. Minoru passed away in 2022 at the age of 76.
MARK WESTCOTT The third-prize winner went on to win the 1972 William Kapell Competition and maintained an active touring schedule until a hand injury halted his career. Mr. Westcott later authored Playing With Love, a reflection on his career and decade-long battle with cancer, and he taught piano in Portland, Oregon. He passed away March 30, 2024.
GERALD ROBBINS Mr. Robbins has distinguished himself in chamber music and is artist-in-residence with the Lyric Piano Quartet at Queens College, CUNY, and a member of the chamber music faculty at the Manhattan School of Music. His pursuits also include conducting and exploring neglected 19th-century repertoire.
DIANE WALSH Ms. Walsh, a Steinway Artist, won acclaim on Broadway in 2009 for giving 113 performances of Beethoven’s Diabelli Variations in her integral role in Moises Kaufman’s play 33 Variations, which starred Jane Fonda. Ms. Walsh has made 18 recordings, most recently of Bach suites, and frequently performs as a soloist and a chamber musician.
MICHIKO FUJINUMA The sixth-place winner became a professor at Toho Gakuen University School of Music. Ms. Fujinuma frequently conducts master classes and is often invited to serve on the juries of piano competitions.
JURY
Ezra Rachlin, chairman (United States)
Abram Chasins (United States)
Leon Fleisher (United States)
Peter Frankl (Hungary)
Nicole Henriot-Schweitzer (France)
Bruce Hungerford (Australia)
Motonari Iguchi (Japan)
Mindru Katz (Israel)
Constance Keene (United States)
Lili Kraus (United Kingdom)
Leonard Pennario (USA)
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Conductor: Ezra Rachlin
Chamber Music: Eudice Shapiro (Violin) and Laszlo Varga (Cello)
Orchestra: Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra
Commissioned Work: Norman Dello Joio, Capriccio on the Interval of a Second