Read Moscow Nights: The Van Cliburn Story-How One Man and His Piano Transformed the Cold War Online
Authors: Nigel Cliff
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Composers & Musicians, #Historical, #Political
Medtner, Nikolai, 72
Mehle, Aileen “Suzy,” 339
Mehta, Zubin, 353
Meir, Golda, 336
Menshikov, Mikhail, 203, 212–13, 234, 236, 250–51, 275
Metro at Mayakovskaya station (Moscow), 144
Metropolitan Opera, 38, 223, 235–36, 338, 341
Mexico, 283
MGM, 219
Miansarov, Eduard
ex-wife Tamara, 144, 266
history of, 144
in Tchaikovsky Competition, 146, 149, 156, 163
Van’s friendship with, 130, 189, 195, 266
Van’s request that he visit America, 194
Van’s win and, 164–65, 171
Middle East, 87
MiG warplanes, 234, 258, 294, 296, 301–2
Mikhailov, Nikolai, 152, 164, 175, 180
Mikoyan, Anastas
Beria and, 60
Cuban Missile Crisis aftermath and, 302–3
at Kennedy’s funeral, 306
Khrushchev and, 90, 259, 307
praise for, 233
Stalin’s death and, 51, 53, 54–55
U.S. visit, 233–35
Van’s cable to, 289
Van’s second visit to Russia and, 269, 270–71, 272
Van’s win and, 173, 178
wife’s death, 303
Mikoyan, Artem, 234
Mikoyan, Aschen, 270, 272, 331, 361, 362, 365
Mikoyan, Ella, 269–70, 271–72, 361
Mikoyan, Stepan, 269
Ming Tombs reservoir, 229
missile gap, 278
Mississippi University for Women, 341
Mitropoulos, Dimitri, 67, 70, 145
Mohr, Franz, 351
Moiseyev Dance Company, 86
Mollova, Milena, 149, 163
Molotov, Vyacheslav “Iron Butt”
Beria and, 59–60
Bulganin mistaken for, 178
Khrushchev plotted against by, 89, 90, 91
Khrushchev’s power and, 62, 85
Stalin’s death and, 51–52, 54–55, 57
Momism, 76
Monroe, Marilyn, 79, 180, 245, 247, 321
Monroe, Vaughn, 222
Moolah Temple brass band, 218
moon landing, 325
Moor, Paul
fear of arrest, 178
at Richter’s recital with Van, 187
at Tchaikovsky Competition finals, 152
Van’s commonalities with, 151
Van’s confession to, 193, 199
as Van’s unofficial manager, 171
on Van’s victory tour, 189
Moscow, Russia
Chinese pianists sent to, 112
descriptions of, 125–28, 143–44
landscape, 123
music competition in (
See
First International Tchaikovsky Competition)
Prokofiev’s funeral in, 58
Stalin’s death and, 53, 55–58, 60
Van’s arrival in, 123–26
of Van’s imagination, 153
Van’s visits to, 1–3
World Festival of Youth and Students in, 91–94
Moscow Conservatory
Feinberg at, 112
gay witch hunt at, 232–33
graduates of, 33, 107, 108
Great Hall of, 106, 130, 134, 146, 165, 290, 331
Richter at, 57
Rubinstein brothers and, 45
Russia’s pride in, 106
Tchaikovsky as professor at, 5, 95, 108, 128
Van’s arrival at, 128
Vlassenko’s career at, 360
Moscow Kremlin
aged leaders in, 350
artists hauled into, 304
fronts for, 91
Hurok’s plan for recital at, 256
Khrushchev’s rocket program and, 88
meeting before Stalin’s death at, 51–52
Palace of Congresses, 172–73, 282, 292
reconstruction of cities and, 59
Stalin at, 26
telephone hotline with White House, 305
Truman and, 39
Van investigated in, 167
Van’s first view of, 126
Van’s reception at, 172–74
Van’s wish to see, 18–19, 26, 119
Vietnam War and, 315
White House relations with, 288
“Moscow Nights” (song)
on hotel balcony, 362
at Mikoyans’ apartment, 269
played at Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, 339
played at Soviet Embassy reception, 234
played at Soviet exhibition, 236
played at the White House, 357, 358
played at Van’s funeral, 365
played in Great Hall, 267–68
Teatr
journalist and, 264
Van’s improvised version of, 194–95
as winner of festival song contest, 93
Moscow Olympics (1980), 348
Moscow Philharmonic, 361, 362
Moscow Radio, 186, 326
Moscow River, 292
Moscow State Symphony, 150–51, 176, 194, 255
Moscow State University, 192
Moscow University, 93
Moskva,
289
Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus
back in favor, 30
Liu Shikun’s performance of, 111
Requiem Mass, 103
Sonata in C Major, K. 330, 136
Sonata in E-flat Major, 41–42
Tchaikovsky Competition and, 109
Van’s performances of, 65, 67, 69, 136, 139, 324
Munger, Mrs. Stephen I., 64
Murrow, Edward R., 216
music as common ground, 4, 11
Music Panel, 80–81, 105, 108–9, 182, 218
mutual assured destruction (MAD), 305
My Favorite Chopin,
322
Nabokov, Nicolas, 28–29
Nagy, Imre, 196
NASA, 100, 259
Nasser, Gamal Abdel, 87, 196
National Defense Education Act, 100
National Guild of Piano Teachers, 225
National Hotel, 289, 290, 294, 316, 331, 361
National Symphony, 300
NATO, 87, 230, 250
Neuhaus, Heinrich, 57, 133, 138, 155, 158, 176, 265
Neuhaus, Zinaida, 265
New Haven, Connecticut, 224
Newsome, C. L., 24
New York City
in 1951, 37–39
conductors’ battle in, 11
Khrushchev’s visits to, 244–45, 274–77
parade for Van (1958), 1
Rachmaninoff in, 8–10
Tchaikovsky’s visit to, 7–8
Van’s arrival from Russia, 199–202
New York City Ballet, 298
New York City Fire Department, 206, 207
New York Coliseum, 236, 237
The New Yorker,
208–9, 236–37
New York Herald Tribune,
210
New York Philharmonic
Leventritt Competition and, 66
Lewisohn Stadium, 219
State Department-sponsored tour, 237
Van as conductor for, 283–84
Van’s performances with, 70–71, 101, 183, 341
New York Police Department (NYPD), 220, 274
New York Times
Arts as Bridges editorial, 167
on Bolshoi Ballet in America, 298
on Boston Symphony in Russia, 86
Johnson and, 323
at Khrushchev’s death, 328
on Mikoyan’s reception at Soviet embassy, 234
on Nixon’s trip to Soviet Union, 332
Robert Lowell’s invitation decline, 313
Secret Speech published in, 85
on Soviet youth apathy, 316
on spring thaw in Moscow, 231
Tchaikovsky Competition publicized in, 117
Van in Brussels and, 221–22
Van’s Leventritt victory and, 161
on Van’s patriotism, 324
Van’s return to U.S. and, 200–201
on Van’s second visit to Russia, 268
Van’s Tchaikovsky Competition win and, 166
New York World-Telegram and Sun, 71
Nikolaevna, Olga, 345
1960 presidential election, 278
Niven, David, 246
Nixon, Richard
at American National Exhibition, 237–40
Kennedy’s victory over, 278
Khrushchev’s U.S. visit and, 241
Kitchen Debate, 239–40, 250, 329
Republican nomination clinched by, 323
Van and, 211, 336–37
visits to Soviet Union, 329–33, 336–37
visit to China, 329
Watergate and resignation, 339
“Nostalgia” (Cliburn), 187, 216
Novak, Kim, 246–47
Novodevichy Cemetery (Moscow), 58, 326
nuclear arms race, 260, 305, 325, 333, 348, 351–52, 358
nuclear weapons.
See also
atomic bombs; Cuban Missile Crisis; hydrogen bombs
Eisenhower and, 252, 278–79
Gorbachev and, 358
Khrushchev and, 196, 245, 252, 281–83, 288–89, 352
Reagan and, 352, 358
USSR detonation of, 98
Nureyev, Rudolf, 280
Nurmukhamedova, Saida, 192
Oborin, Lev, 133, 139, 166
O’Bryan, Sirrildia, 15
O’Bryan, Solomon, 19
O’Bryan, William Carey, 15
Ogdon, John, 287, 347
Ogonyok,
204
Oistrakh, David, 56, 79, 132
Oldham, Denver, 133
Operation Mongoose, 296
Order of Friendship, 364
Ormandy, Eugene, 79, 335
Osborne Apartment House, 77–78, 217, 223, 254–55, 285
Ostankino Television Technical Center, 272
Outstanding Young American Pianists (OYAPs), 102
Paganini, Niccolò, 324
Palace of Culture, 289
Pale of Settlement, 44–45
Palisades Park, 75
parade for Van in NYC, 1, 206–10
Paris Summit, 250, 251–52, 258, 260–61, 262
Partita in E Minor (Bach), 42