Landmarks

Images of significant sites that played a part in the life of Marcel Tabuteau are pictured below. If there are others that you believe should be added, please click Submissions.

Tabuteau family, early 1890s
Marcel Tabuteau’s birthplace and family home (over his father’s clock shop) at 8 Rue Magenta in Compiègne, France (photo mid-1890s)
Tabuteau’s birthplace (recent)
Tabuteau’s birthplace as it looked a few years ago (pharmacy on the corner, now a real estate office)
Hôtel de Ville
An earlier view of the Hôtel de Ville (City Hall) in Compiègne, France. Built in the 16th century, it was the place of presentation and declaration of Tabuteau’s birth in 1887.
A more recent view of the Hôtel de Ville
A more recent view of the Hôtel de Ville.
École Pierre Sauvage for Boys
École Pierre Sauvage for Boys: The school Tabuteau attended as a youth. It is still in use but is now co-educational.
Catholic abbey church
The school (seen at the rear of this photo) comprises the original cloisters connected to the Catholic abbey church to the right. The monks are long gone and the church is now used for civic events.
The Paris Conservatoire
The Paris Conservatoire where Tabuteau studied from 1902 to 1904 was inaugurated in 1811.
The interior of the Paris Conservatoire concert hall
The interior of the Paris Conservatoire concert hall where Tabuteau played in two yearly concours and won his 1st Prize.
The exterior of Théâtre des Variétés in Paris
The exterior of Théâtre des Variétés in Paris where Tabuteau landed his first professional engagement following his ‘graduation’ in 1904.
The interior of Théâtre des Variétés
The interior of Théâtre des Variétés. Inaugurated in 1807, the theater was a prime venue for operetta.
La Savoie, a French steamship built in 1901
On May 6th of 1905, Tabuteau left for America on La Savoie, a French steamship built in 1901 (above). The ship ran with emigrants and other passengers between Le Havre and New York and was operated by Compagnie Général Transatlantique.
Hotel Lafayette in Greenwich Village
Upon his arrival in New York City on May 13th, 1905, Tabuteau stayed at the Hotel Lafayette in Greenwich Village (above). The café in the hotel was frequented by artists and writers, and was memorialized by artist John Sloan and photographer Bernice Abbott.
Chicago Symphony in front of the Ravinia Theater
Tabuteau’s first concerts with the New York Symphony began in the summer of 1905 at the Ravinia Theater at Ravinia Park near Chicago. He played 2nd oboe and English horn. In this photo (above), members of the Chicago Symphony are posing in front of the theater.
Willow Grove Amusement Park
Willow Grove Amusement Park near Philadelphia (above) was the next venue where the New York Symphony appeared. Opening in 1896 and continuing for 80 years, the Music Pavilion hosted other well-known groups including the Philadelphia Orchestra and John Philip Sousa’s band.
Victor Herbert’s Orchestra
Victor Herbert’s Orchestra
Music Hall of the Pittsburgh Exposition Society
The 3rd summer venue where the New York Symphony performed in 1905 was the Music Hall of the Pittsburgh Exposition Society. Completed in 1889, it was a popular venue for celebrated performers of the day.
Tabuteau took an apartment at 532 West 146th Street
Back in New York after the summer, Tabuteau took an apartment at 532 West 146th Street. This building in upper Manhattan (as it looks today), is quite a distance from Carnegie Hall and the Metropolitan Opera House.
Carnegie Hall, built in 1891, was home of Walter Damrosch’s New York Symphony Orchestra where Tabuteau played 2nd oboe and English horn during his first two years in America. Carnegie Hall had been built specifically for this orchestra.
The interior of Carnegie Hall as it looks today.
The interior of Carnegie Hall as it looks today.
Metropolitan Opera House in New York City
Built in 1883, the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City was the venue where Tabuteau played 1st oboe from 1908 to 1914 under Toscanini, Mahler and others.
An interior view of the Metropolitan Opera House.
An interior view of the Metropolitan Opera House.
1600 California Street
Tabuteau was unable to play the 1914-15 Metropolitan Opera season due to his French military obligation. Following his release, Tabuteau traveled to San Francisco, California to perform at the Panama-Pacific Exposition. During that time he lived in an apartment at 1600 California Street
Festival Hall of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition
Festival Hall of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco. Tabuteau was principal oboist of the Exposition Orchestra from its initiation in February of 1915.
San Francisco Civic Auditorium of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition.
San Francisco Civic Auditorium of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition. Tabuteau played in the special orchestra organized for the Beethoven/Wagner Festival held there in August of 1915.
510 Yeudell Street
510 Yewdall Street (in west Philadelphia) was Tabuteau’s first residence in the city.
510 Yeudell Street as it looks today.
510 Yewdall Street as it looks today.
Academy of Music
An early exterior view of Philadelphia’s renowned Academy of Music built in 1855-57 on south Broad Street.
Inside the Academy of Music
Inside the Academy of Music (a current view) where Tabuteau performed as principal oboist in the Philadelphia Orchestra for 39 years (1915-1954).
Music Pavilion in Ocean City
The Music Pavilion in Ocean City, New Jersey, where Tabuteau played in the summer to supplement his income during his earliest years with the Philadelphia Orchestra.
The Drake Hotel
The Drake Hotel, built in 1928-1929, became the Tabuteaus’ Philadelphia residence soon after the building was completed. They took an apartment on the 14th floor (1405). It is located less than three blocks from the Academy of Music.
a room in Tabuteau’s apartment at the Drake Hotel
A partial view of a room in Tabuteau’s apartment at the Drake Hotel.
R.M.S. Queen Mary, the Cunard Passenger Line’s premier ship on which Marcel and Louis Tabuteau frequently booked passage during their summer trips to and from France.
La Pingouinette
Tabuteau’s summer home from the mid 1920s until 1951 (except during the war years) was located in Le Brusc on Cape Sicié (near Toulon where Tabuteau’s brother, André, lived) and was affectionately named La Pingouinette. Photo by Laila Storch.
A view of the Mediterranean
A view of the Mediterranean at Cape Sicié, the location of the Tabuteaus’ summer home.
Location of Margaree Valley
Location of Margaree Valley (inland from Margaree Harbour) in Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada, where Tabuteau spent his summers during the war years: 1939-1945.
View of a section of Margaree Valley
View of a section of Margaree Valley where Tabuteau went fishing for salmon.
The Reading Railroad Terminal
The Reading Railroad Terminal that houses the market where the Tabuteaus (and others assigned) shopped for Marcel’s culinary components.
The Reading Terminal Market
The Reading Terminal Market opened in 1893 on the ground floor of the train shed.
Curtis Institute of Music
The multi-structured Curtis Institute of Music where Tabuteau taught from 1925 to 1954.
Casimir Hall at the Curtis Institute of Music
Casimir Hall at the Curtis Institute of Music where Tabuteau conducted his ensemble classes. It was renamed Curtis Hall in the 1940s.
15 South 21st Street in Philadelphia
The exterior of 15 South 21st Street in Philadelphia (3rd section to the right) that housed Hans Moennig’s 3rd floor repair shop, an indispensable venue for many woodwind players during the mid 20th-century.
Hans Moennig by his workbench
An interior view showing Hans Moennig by his workbench. Tabuteau and his students were frequent visitors.
MT's studio
Tabuteau rented a room on the 4th floor of the now-demolished Ludlow Building at 15 South 16th Street where he made reeds, practiced and taught. This is his reed desk.
On July 11, 1934, Marcel Tabuteau married Louise André in Paris at the Hôtel de Ville. They were both in their 40s at the time.
4 Rue du Vert-Bois in Paris was the location of the F. Loreé shop frequented by Tabuteau in his later years.
the Lorée shop in the early 1960s.
'Time out’ at the Lorée shop in the early 1960s.
Packer Memorial Chapel
The Packer Memorial Chapel at Lehigh University in Bethlehem PA (built 1885-1887) where Tabuteau played for the Bethlehem Bach Festival.
An interior view of the chapel.
An interior view of the chapel.
In 1950, the Tabuteaus bought La Coustiéro in La Lèque on Cape Sicié with an eye towards renovating the 25-room mansion in order to make it their new home. The mansion, perched on a cliff above the Mediterranean, was not far from La Pingouinette in Le Brusc, their original summer home on Cape Sicié. The Tabuteaus moved into La Coustiéro during the summer of 1952, but sold it in 1959 when they moved to Nice.
Toulon and environs
Toulon and environs. Cape Sicié is located on the tip of the large peninsula that juts out into the Mediterranean.
church of Saint-Pierre in Prades
The 14th-century church of Saint-Pierre in Prades (France) where most of the the 1950 Bach Festival concerts were held. Eminent musicians were invited to perform with Pablo Casals to commemorate the bicentenary of the death of Johann Sebastian Bach. Tabuteau performed here for the 1950 and 1953 festivals.
The church interior.
The church interior.
The Catalan towns of Prades and Perpignan in Southern France (north of Spain), location of the Casals Festivals.
The Castle and Courtyard of the Kings of Majorca
The Castle and Courtyard of the Kings of Majorca in Perpignan, France, was built in 1276. The 1951 Festival was held here, but it returned to Prades the following summer. Tabuteau performed in this festival.
Hotel Negresco in Nice
Hotel Negresco in Nice, France, where the Tabuteaus moved after selling La Coustiéro in 1959.
The Miramar
The Miramar at 111 Promenade des Anglais where the Tabuteaus lived from November 1960 until Marcel’s death in 1966.
Casino Café de Paris
Of the three casinos Tabuteau frequented during his last years in Nice, his favorite was Casino Café de Paris in nearby Monte Carlo.

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What's New!

Marc Mostovoy Replies to the Facebook Posts Attacking Marcel Tabuteau

An audio interview with Joan Browne (Champie), a private Tabuteau student in the early 1950s.

A photograph of the music stand that was in Tabuteau’s private studio in Philadelphia.

An autographed photo of Marcel Tabuteau inscribed to Joan Browne Champie.

An autographed photo of Marcel Tabuteau inscribed to Vladimir Sokoloff.

Marc Mostovoy Replies to the Facebook Posts
Attacking Marcel Tabuteau

When she learned of Joan Champie’s death, and read the obituaries, Katherine Needleman, principal oboe of the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra and one of two oboe professors at the Curtis Institute of Music, posted on her Facebook page and again via video a message of outrage. Needleman’s central paragraph, in which she addresses herself directly to Marcel Tabuteau, is as follows:

“I don’t care if it was 1952 or 1954. I don’t care what you did for oboe reeds, as if anyone cares that you sometimes scraped them longer with your knife than your predecessors—what an innovation! I don’t care what you did for phrasing, and I don’t care how many (mostly men) students you inspired with your abusive teaching, which lived on for generations because they were unable to self-assess and grow past it. I don’t care about your number system. If you did not admit Joan to Curtis because she was a woman, and if you “let” her sweep your floor as a reward, this is how I remember you. *** you, Marcel Tabuteau. You know what would’ve been a real innovation that would have provided us all some benefit? Being a Very Big Fancy Man who supported women in music.

Needleman’s outrage is the result of the mention, in Joan Champie’s obituary, that Tabuteau hesitated to accept women at the Curtis Institute because 1) the likelihood of their being able to pursue a successful career was limited; and 2) because, after a successful lesson, Tabuteau “allowed her to sweep the floor.” 

Point 1 is, very obviously, one of the sad facts of orchestral life in the United States in the 1940s and 1950s, and, alas, even beyond. Conductors at that time rarely hired women oboists. The increasing presence of women in symphony orchestras in the United States, and around the world, is one of the signs of the remarkable gains made by women since the mid-twentieth century, gains akin to those that have been made in this country by other groups long dismissed or long oppressed.

Point 2, apparently troubling–although possibly the result of Tabuteau’s well-known mischievous sense of humor, needs to be understood in context. Those of us who knew Tabuteau or who knew others who knew him well, acknowledge that he could be a difficult taskmaster and act cold in lessons—not only to his rare female students, but to all of those who came to his studio. And yet most of his students remained faithful and dedicated to him because of his demonstrative artistry and the richness of his teaching. As Joan Champie herself said, after explaining to me in an interview how trying it could be to withstand Tabuteau’s sometimes severe remarks, “each lesson was a gift.” Champie was a courageous young woman whose desire to learn from an artist obviously quieted the discomfort that she felt.

What is most distressing in Needleman’s tirade is the dismissal of Tabuteau’s reed-making, which was part of his effort to achieve a kind of sound that combined the best of the French and Viennese schools of oboe-playing (a kind of sonority that Katherine Needleman herself well produces) and the dismissal of Tabuteau’s concern with phrasing, which, as it gradually infiltrated the players who sat around him, became one of the elements that caused critics such as The New Yorker’s Winthrop Sargeant to call Eugene Ormandy’s band the “Rolls Royce” of American orchestras.

Needleman’s reference to Tabuteau’s “abusive teaching” goes too far. That teaching has lived on for generations not because Tabuteau’s students “were unable to self-assess and grow past it,” but because it incorporated logical and inspiring methods of making music come alive.

I take no pleasure in refuting Katherine Needleman’s profane tirade. Nor does anyone on our board think of the bad old days of male chauvinism as the good old days. The Marcel Tabuteau First-Hand website continues to remain dedicated to promoting the musical ideas of a man who in our view had a highly positive impact on the development of musical performance in the United States during his lifetime, and during the period since his death. I ask those reading this response and my initial reply below to forward it to others who might be aware of Needleman’s Facebook attacks, so that the facts may be known.

Marc Mostovoy
Website administrator

To Katherine Needleman: A Belated Reply to
Your August 15th, 2024, Facebook Post:
“𝐎𝐃𝐄 𝐓𝐎 𝐉𝐎𝐀𝐍 𝐂𝐇𝐀𝐌𝐏𝐈𝐄.”

Katherine—your post on Joan Champie was just recently brought to my attention: https://www.facebook.com/profile/100058038401756/search/?q=joan%20champie. Having interviewed Joan last year, I thought it would be appropriate to respond. Kindly post this letter on your Facebook page and website. Thank you.

First I want to say that I wish you did have the opportunity to get to know Joan. She was a wonderful person and so inspiring. I felt privileged to have interacted with her even though it was only for a short period of time near the end of her life. Having gained insight into her relationship with Marcel Tabuteau through our conversations (including the live interview), I wanted to pass on to you what I learned from her.

As Joan pointed out to me, it’s important to understand that things were very different in her time. Viewed through the lens of today, Tabuteau’s treatment of her seems unjust. But she was a trooper and willing to accept the indignities because of the invaluable things he taught her. She felt it was well worth it as did all the other students who studied with him.

The reason Tabuteau did not like taking women students was because conductors of the major orchestras at that time wouldn’t think of hiring a woman oboist—even a Tabuteau student. Tabuteau felt putting all his time and effort into training a woman was futile because there was no career path for them, and he tried to dissuade women from taking up the instrument for their own sakes. But there were some women who wouldn’t take no for an answer, and he reluctantly taught them. They included Joan, Laila Storch, Thelma Neft, Marguerite Smith, Martha Scherer, and Marjorie Jackson. And may I point out that everyone cherished the time they spent with Tabuteau despite the rough time he gave them. He also dished out the same tough treatment to their male counterparts as you know.

Now you might ask why Tabuteau treated all his students as he did. It certainly would not be acceptable today. But that’s the way it was then. Gillet (his teacher) and many teachers of that generation practiced that method. Tabuteau continued it because that is what he knew and grew up with. The students who couldn’t take it dropped out, but those who persevered were grateful for what Tabuteau taught them. As a footnote, many of Tabuteau’s students said it was great training to go through because it prepared them for playing under the difficult conductors they encountered afterward such as Toscanini, Stokowski, Reiner, and Szell—all dictators in their own right. 

Laila Storch’s biography contains numerous tributes by his students: woodwind, string and brass players; pianists, vocalists – all attesting how important he was to their musical lives. Tabuteau gave them something special that their own teachers couldn’t. Those who learned from him can’t all be wrong in their praise. He was a giant to them.

Throughout your post, you chastise Tabuteau for his behavior, measuring it by today’s values. I ask you to please take a step back and try to see things as they were then. Also try to appreciate what Tabuteau did to advance oboe playing and for the musicianship he instilled in so many. Today (July 2nd) being his birthday, let’s grant him the credit he deserves. 

Finally, most oboists of the Tabuteau school wouldn’t agree with you in dismissing his importance in regard to reeds, phrasing, and so forth. Indeed, Tabuteau paved the way for you too, Katherine, whether or not you wish to acknowledge it. Surely, he was far from perfect, but does he really deserve the full treatment you give him? I think not. 

Marc Mostovoy

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