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Felicia Montealegre Bernstein

Felicia Montealegre Bernstein (née Felicia María Cohn Montealegre; February 6, 1922 – June 16, 1978) was an American actress born in Costa Rica.[1]

Felicia Montealegre Bernstein
Publicity photo, December 10, 1957
Born
Felicia María Cohn Montealegre

(1922-02-06)February 6, 1922
DiedJune 16, 1978(1978-06-16) (aged 56)
Burial placeGreen-Wood Cemetery
Education
OccupationActress
Television
Spouse
(m. 1951)
Children3

Montealegre appeared in televised dramas and theatrical roles.[2] She also performed with symphony orchestras in dramatic acting and narrating roles. Her collaborators included her husband Leonard Bernstein.[3]

Early life and education edit

Felicia María Cohn Montealegre was born on February 6, 1922, in San José, Costa Rica.[1] Her mother, Clemencia Cristina Montealegre Carazo,[4] was Costa Rican; her father, Roy Elwood Cohn,[5] was a United States mining executive stationed in Costa Rica. Felicia had two sisters, Nancy Alessandri and Madeline Lecaros.[6] Mariano Montealegre Bustamante, the first vice head of state of Costa Rica, was her great-great-grandfather.

Felicia moved to Chile at age 1 and was educated at the French School of Nuns.[7] She was raised Catholic and later converted to Judaism before marrying Leonard Bernstein. Her paternal grandfather was Jewish.[8]

Career edit

Broadway and theatrical career edit

 
Montealegre visiting her friend Louis Jourdan during his Broadway production of Tonight in Samarkand (1955)[9]

In 1944 at age 21, Montealegre established herself in New York, where she took piano lessons from Chilean pianist Claudio Arrau.[10] Upon her arrival in New York, Montealegre started acting lessons with Herbert Berghof at the Dramatic Workshop of the New School for Social Research.[11] She then continued studying with him at his newly founded acting school HB Studio.[12] In April 1945, Montealegre made her first New York acting appearance in the English-language premiere of Federico Garcia Lorca's If Five Years Pass at the Provincetown Playhouse. Montealegre made her Broadway debut on July 20, 1946, at the Booth Theatre as the ingénue in Ben Hecht's Swan Song.[13] In 1950, she was an understudy to Leora Dana in Samuel A. Taylor's The Happy Time on Broadway, starring Eva Gabor and Montealegre's then-lover Richard Hart.[14]

Montealegre's Shakespearean roles included Jessica in a 1953 production of The Merchant of Venice at New York City Center[15] and as Katharine in Henry V in a 1956 production at the Cambridge Drama Festival in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[16] Other notable stage appearances included Margot Wendice in Dial M for Murder at the Palm Beach Playhouse (Florida) in 1957[17] and Sally Bowles in Van Druten's I Am a Camera at the North Jersey Playhouse, starring alongside her lifelong friend and colleague Michael (Mendy) Wager.[18]

Montealegre returned to the Broadway stage in 1967 to play Birdie Hubbard in Lillian Hellman's The Little Foxes directed by family friend Mike Nichols.[19] She made her Metropolitan Opera debut in 1973 as Andromache in Berlioz's opera Les Troyens,[20] the work's first staging in New York City.[21] Montealegre made her final Broadway appearance in the 1976 play Poor Murderer, directed by her former acting teacher Herbert Berghof.[22]

Television career edit

 
Montealegre as Joan in Honegger's Joan of Arc at the Stake, May 9, 1958; photo by Carl Van Vechten

Beginning in 1949, Montealegre starred in leading roles on weekly television anthology dramas for Kraft Television Theatre (NBC),[23] Studio One (CBS), Suspense (CBS), The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre (NBC) and The Philco Television Playhouse (NBC), among others.[24] Montealegre made her television debut on NBC's Kraft Television Theatre on May 11, 1949, as Hygieia in Mary Violet Heberden's The Oath of Hippocrates, alongside actors Dean Harens and Guy Spaull.[23] In 1950, she appeared in the leading role of Nora Helmer in Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House, with John Newland as Krogstad and Theodore Newton as Thorvald.[25] She made her first appearance on the CBS Television Network's Studio One in the psychological thriller Flowers from a Stranger, which aired on May 25, 1949, with actor Yul Brynner.[26] She acted in eleven Studio One teleplays between 1949 and 1956, including Of Human Bondage (aired November 21, 1949),[27] based on W. Somerset Maugham's novel in which Montealegre played Mildred opposite Charlton Heston as Philip Carey.[28] In 1952, she co-starred alongside Heston again in The Wings of the Dove, based on the 1902 novel by Henry James.[29]

Montealegre appeared in four episodes of the CBS series Suspense (1949–1954), live teleplays featuring people in dangerous situations. She appeared first in an episode entitled "The Yellow Scarf" (aired June 7, 1949), where she played housekeeper Hettie, who finds herself in a strange scenario involving her mysterious employer Mr. Bronson, portrayed by Boris Karloff, and a social mission worker, Tom Weatherby, played by Douglass Watson.[30] The other three episodes were "The Tip" (1950), "Death Sabre" (1951), and "An Affair with a Ghost" (1954).[31]

Dramatic works with orchestra edit

In 1957, Montealegre performed her first dramatic role in a classical music concert as the narrator in Lukas Foss's Parable of Death, based on the mystical poem by Rilke, for a concert of the Syracuse Friends of Chamber Music.[32] She performed the title role of Joan in Arthur Honegger's Joan of Arc at the Stake (French: Jeanne d'Arc au bûcher) several times, including in 1958 with her husband, Leonard Bernstein, conducting the New York Philharmonic and Leontyne Price in the role of Margaret.[33] Bernstein wrote the narration for his Symphony No. 3: Kaddish with Montealegre in mind, and she narrated its American premiere with soprano Jennie Tourel and Charles Munch conducting the Boston Symphony Orchestra on January 31, 1964.[34]

Social activism edit

 
Montealegre arrested on the steps of the United States Capitol Building, 1972

In 1963, Montealegre became the first chair of the Women's Division of the New York Civil Liberties Union, where her efforts focused on educational programs and fundraising events.[35] Montealegre told the San Francisco Examiner in 1964, "It's amazing how little even knowledgeable people know about the Constitution and what people are fighting for."[36]

Montealegre supported the anti-war grassroots campaign Another Mother for Peace.[37] Initiated on Mother's Day of 1967, volunteers mailed postcards to President Lyndon B. Johnson and members of Congress with the message that "War is not healthy for children and other living things. Talk peace."[38] Two years later, she was also one of 100 individuals arrested in an antiwar protest in Washington, D.C.[6]

On January 14, 1970, Montealegre hosted a fundraiser at the Bernsteins' Park Avenue apartment to support the families of Panther 21, members of the Black Panther Party who had been jailed for nine months without set trial dates or financial resources to cover legal fees and their families' economic hardships.[39] The next day, Charlotte Curtis described the event in The New York Times,[40] and by June, Montealegre became a critical focus of Tom Wolfe's New York magazine cover story "Radical Chic: That Party at Lenny's".[41] The story popularized the term "radical chic". Montealegre sharply condemned the response in a letter to The New York Times, writing: "The frivolous way in which it was reported as a 'fashionable' event is ... offensive to all people who are committed to humanitarian principles of justice."[42] In the aftermath, the Bernsteins' residence was picketed by Jewish Defense League protesters, and the family received hate mail.[43] Many years later, Leonard Bernstein's FBI file revealed the Bureau fabricated the letters and staged agents to foment the protests.[44]

As vice-chairman of the Citizens' Inquiry on Parole and Criminal Justice, Inc., Montealegre co-authored a March 1974 report of the New York State parole system, in collaboration with Coretta Scott King, Victor Marrero, Ramsey Clark, and others.[45] The report criticized the theory behind and practice of the New York State Board of Parole and recommended its abolishment as an institution, provided an alternative could be found.[46] She explained its aim was "to awaken the public and to tell the inmates themselves what to expect".[47]

Montealegre worked behind the scenes for Amnesty International in Chile during its political unrest of the 1970s.[48][49] In memory of his late wife, Leonard Bernstein established the Felicia Montealegre Bernstein Fund of Amnesty International USA. The first of its kind, the Fund provided crucial organizing assistance and technological resources to support human rights activities.[50]

Personal life edit

 
Leonard and Felicia Bernstein leaving for Israel, 1957

Montealegre met composer-conductor Leonard Bernstein in 1946 at a party given by Claudio Arrau.[10] After their first engagement to be married was broken off, she had a relationship with actor Richard Hart until his death on January 2, 1951.[51][52] She and Bernstein married on September 9, 1951, and had three children: Jamie, Alexander, and Nina.[6]

The Bernsteins regularly hosted parties and welcomed friends into their home. Family friend and photographer John Gruen remarked, "There was always food, generosity and merriment, word games and puzzles ... It gave our lives a panache in those years."[53] Montealegre maintained close friendships with many artists and intellectuals, including Marc Blitzstein, Lillian Hellman, Jennie Tourel, Richard Avedon, Martha Gellhorn, Stephen Sondheim, Cynthia O'Neal, and Michael "Mendy" Wager, with whom she kept regular correspondence.[54]

Montealegre was a fashion icon who often gave the first showing of new designer looks at public events. By making the New York Philharmonic season opener concerts a fashionable event, her appearances inspired new audiences to engage with classical music. In a 1958 interview with The New York Times, she said, "Fads can become serious. Some people may attend to show off their mink, find they enjoy the music and become devoted to the Philharmonic." Her wardrobe was reported in the press, and she was noted for her impeccable taste.[55] Montealegre designed the interiors of each of the Bernsteins' family homes, along with professional decorator and friend Gail Jacobs.[56][57]

Montealegre was hailed by the Guild of Professional Beauticians as one of "The Ten Best Coiffured Women of 1964" along with well-known female contemporaries such as Eileen Ford, Anne Klein, and Debbie Reynolds.[58] She also cut hair for her friends and family. When she met pianist Glenn Gould for the first time, she immediately decided he needed a haircut. Bernstein recalled, "Before I knew it, Felicia—before 'Have a drink' or anything —had him in the bathroom, washed his hair and cut it, and he emerged from the bathroom looking like an angel."[59]

In her spare time, Montealegre took up painting and studied with postwar artists Daniel Schwartz and Jane Wilson, wife of John Gruen.[60] Montealegre died of breast cancer which had metastasized to her lungs in East Hampton, New York, on June 16, 1978, at the age of 56.[61]

Acting credits edit

Television edit

Year Title Role(s) Notes
1949–1956 Kraft Television Theatre Various 11 episodes
1949–1956 Studio One Various 11 episodes
1949–1954 Suspense Various 4 episodes
1949 The Chevrolet Tele-Theatre Christine Vole season 2, episode 7: "The Witness for the Prosecution"
The Silver Theatre season 1, episode 6: "Patient Unknown"
1950 Lights Out season 2, episode 27: "The Emerald Lavalier"
Starlight Theatre season 1, episode 20: "Forgotten Melody"
The Philco Television Playhouse Various 4 episodes
1951 Lights Out Leda season 3, episode 29: "Leda's Portrait"
Lux Video Theatre Viola Cole season 1, episode 15: "The Purple Doorknob"
1952 Goodyear Theatre Empress Carlotta Amelia season 1, episode 10: "Crown of Shadows"
1953 The Web season 3, episode 40: "Encore"
The Revlon Mirror Theater season 1, episode 5: "The Enormous Radio"
1954 Goodyear Theatre season 3, episode 7: "Moment of Panic"
You Are There season 2, episode 35: "The Death of Rasputin"
1955 Person to Person Self season 3, episode 4
1956 The Kaiser Aluminum Hour Ismene season 1, episode 5: Antigone
1957 Omnibus Self season 6, episode 11: "Bernstein: A Musical Travelogue"
1961 Play of the Week season 2, episode 21: "The Sound of Murder"
1966 The Match Game Self season 5, episode 46
1968 The Merv Griffin Show Self season 5, episode 94
1977 Camera Three Self season 22, episode 29: Façade

Theatre edit

Year Title Role(s) Notes
1953 The Merchant of Venice Jessica New York City Center
1967 The Little Foxes Birdie Hubbard Ethel Barrymore Theatre, Broadway
1976 Poor Murderer Fourth Actress Ethel Barrymore Theatre, Broadway

In popular culture edit

Montealegre features prominently in Tom Wolfe's 1970 essay "Radical Chic: That Party at Lenny's".[62]

Carey Mulligan portrayed Montealegre in Bradley Cooper's 2023 drama film Maestro which chronicles her relationship with Bernstein (played by Cooper), for which she received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.[63]

References edit

  1. ^ a b National Archives and Records Administration; Washington, D.C.; Decimal Files, compiled 1910–1949; Record Group: 59, General Records of the Department of State, 1763–2002; Series ARC ID: 2555709; Series MLR Number: A1 3001; Series Volume Number: 345; F. [better source needed]
  2. ^ "Felicia Montealegre, performer". Playbill. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
  3. ^ "New York Philharmonic, 1958 Apr 24, 25, 27". New York Philharmonic Shelby White & Leon Levy Digital Archives (concert program: Honegger / Jeanne d'Arc au bûcher (Joan of Arc at the Stake)). April 1958. Retrieved February 4, 2024.
  4. ^ "FamilySearch.org". ancestors.familysearch.org. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
  5. ^ "Roy Cohn". geni_family_tree. Retrieved March 1, 2023.
  6. ^ a b c Robert McG. Thomas Jr. (June 17, 1978). "Felicia Montealegre C. Bernstein, Actress, Composer's Wife, Dead". The New York Times. p. 24. Retrieved October 12, 2023.
  7. ^ Ramírez, N. (April 14, 2022). "Carey Mulligan visita Santiago para preparar su nuevo papel en que interpretará a una actriz chilena". El Mercurio (in Spanish). Retrieved January 16, 2024.
  8. ^ Secrest 1994, p. 148.
  9. ^ ​Tonight in Samarkand​ at the Internet Broadway Database
  10. ^ a b Simeone, Nigel (2013). The Leonard Bernstein Letters. Yale University Press. p. 559. ISBN 978-0-300-17909-5.
  11. ^ Secrest 1994, p. 150.
  12. ^ "Notable Alumni". HB Studio. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  13. ^ "Daily News 20 Jul 1946, page 301". Retrieved September 6, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.[title missing]
  14. ^ "The Happy Time, Plymouth Theatre, 1950". Playbill. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  15. ^ John Chapman (March 1, 1953). "Another Good Play Arrives". Sunday News. p. 95. Retrieved December 23, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  16. ^ "The Boston Globe 05 Jul 1956, page 34". Retrieved September 6, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.[title missing]
  17. ^ "The Palm Beach Post 28 Mar 1957, page 32". Retrieved September 6, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.[title missing]
  18. ^ "The Record 17 Dec 1957, page 36". Retrieved September 6, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.[title missing]
  19. ^ "Newsday (Nassau Edition)". December 19, 1967. p. 70. Retrieved September 6, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.[title missing]
  20. ^ "Newsday (Suffolk Edition)". October 17, 1973. p. 100. Retrieved September 6, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.[title missing]
  21. ^ Schonberg, Harold C. (October 23, 1973). "The Opera: Les Troyens at the Met at Last". The New York Times. Retrieved September 6, 2023.
  22. ^ "Daily News 20 Sep 1976, page 30". Retrieved September 6, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.[title missing]
  23. ^ a b Hawes, William (2001). Live television drama, 1946–1951. Jefferson, NC London: McFarland. p. 253. ISBN 978-0-7864-0905-1.
  24. ^ Hawes, William (2001). Live television drama, 1946–1951. Jefferson, NC London: McFarland. pp. Various. ISBN 978-0-7864-0905-1.
  25. ^ "KNBH Television Channel 4". Los Angeles Evening Citizen News. April 19, 1950. p. 22. Retrieved July 19, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  26. ^ "Flowers from a Stranger". The Evening Sun. Baltimore. May 25, 1949. p. 38. Retrieved July 19, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  27. ^ Stretch, Bud (November 21, 1949). "Air Waves". Courier-Post. Camden, New Jersey. p. 6. Retrieved July 19, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  28. ^ "Studio One: Of Human Bondage (1949)". Retrieved March 13, 2021 – via Internet Archive.
  29. ^ Newton, Dwight (March 13, 1952). "Day and Night with Radio and Television". San Francisco Examiner. p. 16. Retrieved July 19, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  30. ^ "Suspense episode list season 1", ctva.biz
  31. ^ Suspense TV series 1949–1954) at IMDb  
  32. ^ "Lukas Foss interviewed by Ellen Taaffe Zwilich at Carnegie Hall on April 30, 1996" (PDF). The Library of Congress, Music Division. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
  33. ^ "New York Philharmonic Program (ID: 2124), 1958 Apr 24, 25, 27". New York Philharmonic Shelby White & Leon Levy Digital Archives. April 24–27, 1958. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
  34. ^ "Boston Symphony Orchestra concert program, Monday Series, Season 83 (1963–1964), Concert 4, seq. 1". collections.bso.org. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
  35. ^ "There's Glamour in the Bernstein Name". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. July 10, 1963. p. 44. Retrieved September 20, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  36. ^ "Mrs. Leonard Bernstein ... a Nostalgic Visit". San Francisco Examiner. April 29, 1964. p. 29. Retrieved September 20, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  37. ^ "About AMP". AnotherMother. Retrieved September 20, 2023.
  38. ^ "The Daily Reporter 01 May 1967, page 14". Retrieved September 20, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.[title missing]
  39. ^ Hoffman, Barbara (October 18, 2014). "Leonard Bernstein's New York". New York Post. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
  40. ^ Curtis, Charlotte (January 15, 1970). "Black Panther Philosophy Is Debated at the Bernsteins". The New York Times. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
  41. ^ Wolfe, Tom (April 15, 2008). "Tom Wolfe on Radical Chic and Leonard Bernstein's Party for the Black Panthers". New York. Retrieved March 13, 2021.
  42. ^ Bernstein, Felicia (January 21, 1970). "Letters to the Editor of The Times". The New York Times. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
  43. ^ Chisholm, Kate. "The Panther 21 Fundraiser and "Radical Chic"". leonardbernstein.com. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
  44. ^ Blumenthal, Ralph (July 29, 1994). "Files Detail Years of Spying on Bernstein". The New York Times. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
  45. ^ "Summary Report of New York Parole by Citizens' Inquiry on Parole and Criminal Justice, Inc" (PDF). U.S. Depart of Justice, Office of Justice Programs. Retrieved September 27, 2023.
  46. ^ "Report on New York Parole". Office of Justice Programs. Retrieved September 27, 2023.
  47. ^ "Bernstein at Home". The Bridgeport Post. June 1, 1975. p. 65. Retrieved September 27, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  48. ^ Secrest 1994, p. 323.
  49. ^ "Human rights in Chile". Amnesty International. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
  50. ^ Healy, John G. "Leonard Bernstein and Amnesty International". leonardbernstein.com. Retrieved October 11, 2023.
  51. ^ "Richard Hart: Yearning for the Stage". Films of the Golden Age (77): 66. Summer 2014.
  52. ^ "Richard Hart". neptune.spaceports.com.
  53. ^ Secrest 1994, p. 295.
  54. ^ "Bernstein, Felicia". Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA. Retrieved October 18, 2023.
  55. ^ Burton, Humphrey (1995). Leonard Bernstein. London Boston: Faber and Faber. p. 298. ISBN 978-0-571-17368-6.
  56. ^ "About | Gail Jacobs Interior Design". gailjacobsinteriordesign.com. Retrieved October 18, 2023.
  57. ^ Secrest 1994, p. 294.
  58. ^ "Battle Creek Enquirer 31 Dec 1964, page 6". Retrieved October 18, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.[title missing]
  59. ^ MacGreevy, John, ed. (1983). Glenn Gould by himself and his friends. Toronto: Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-18995-8.
  60. ^ Carranza, Fabiola. "What Ever Happened to Felicia Montealegre?". Canadian Art. Retrieved October 18, 2023.
  61. ^ Bernstein, Jamie. Famous Father Girl. Harper. ISBN 9780062641373.
  62. ^ Wolfe, Tom (June 8, 1970). "Radical Chic: That Party at Lenny's" (PDF). New York. Retrieved July 19, 2023.
  63. ^ "Carey Mulligan on Going 'All In' to Play Opposite Bradley Cooper in Maestro". Vogue. October 10, 2023. Retrieved October 18, 2023.

Sources

Further reading edit

  • "About Felicia Montealegre", leonardbernstein.com

External links edit

felicia, montealegre, bernstein, this, spanish, name, first, paternal, surname, cohn, second, maternal, family, name, montealegre, née, felicia, maría, cohn, montealegre, february, 1922, june, 1978, american, actress, born, costa, rica, publicity, photo, decem. In this Spanish name the first or paternal surname is Cohn and the second or maternal family name is Montealegre Felicia Montealegre Bernstein nee Felicia Maria Cohn Montealegre February 6 1922 June 16 1978 was an American actress born in Costa Rica 1 Felicia Montealegre BernsteinPublicity photo December 10 1957BornFelicia Maria Cohn Montealegre 1922 02 06 February 6 1922San Jose Costa RicaDiedJune 16 1978 1978 06 16 aged 56 East Hampton New York U S Burial placeGreen Wood CemeteryEducationHerbert Berghof StudioDramatic WorkshopOccupationActressTelevisionKraft Television TheatreStudio OneSuspenseOmnibusThe Philco Television PlayhouseSpouseLeonard Bernstein m 1951 wbr Children3 Montealegre appeared in televised dramas and theatrical roles 2 She also performed with symphony orchestras in dramatic acting and narrating roles Her collaborators included her husband Leonard Bernstein 3 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Broadway and theatrical career 2 2 Television career 2 3 Dramatic works with orchestra 3 Social activism 4 Personal life 5 Acting credits 5 1 Television 5 2 Theatre 6 In popular culture 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life and education editSee also Montealegre Felicia Maria Cohn Montealegre was born on February 6 1922 in San Jose Costa Rica 1 Her mother Clemencia Cristina Montealegre Carazo 4 was Costa Rican her father Roy Elwood Cohn 5 was a United States mining executive stationed in Costa Rica Felicia had two sisters Nancy Alessandri and Madeline Lecaros 6 Mariano Montealegre Bustamante the first vice head of state of Costa Rica was her great great grandfather Felicia moved to Chile at age 1 and was educated at the French School of Nuns 7 She was raised Catholic and later converted to Judaism before marrying Leonard Bernstein Her paternal grandfather was Jewish 8 Career editBroadway and theatrical career edit nbsp Montealegre visiting her friend Louis Jourdan during his Broadway production of Tonight in Samarkand 1955 9 In 1944 at age 21 Montealegre established herself in New York where she took piano lessons from Chilean pianist Claudio Arrau 10 Upon her arrival in New York Montealegre started acting lessons with Herbert Berghof at the Dramatic Workshop of the New School for Social Research 11 She then continued studying with him at his newly founded acting school HB Studio 12 In April 1945 Montealegre made her first New York acting appearance in the English language premiere of Federico Garcia Lorca s If Five Years Pass at the Provincetown Playhouse Montealegre made her Broadway debut on July 20 1946 at the Booth Theatre as the ingenue in Ben Hecht s Swan Song 13 In 1950 she was an understudy to Leora Dana in Samuel A Taylor s The Happy Time on Broadway starring Eva Gabor and Montealegre s then lover Richard Hart 14 Montealegre s Shakespearean roles included Jessica in a 1953 production of The Merchant of Venice at New York City Center 15 and as Katharine in Henry V in a 1956 production at the Cambridge Drama Festival in Cambridge Massachusetts 16 Other notable stage appearances included Margot Wendice in Dial M for Murder at the Palm Beach Playhouse Florida in 1957 17 and Sally Bowles in Van Druten s I Am a Camera at the North Jersey Playhouse starring alongside her lifelong friend and colleague Michael Mendy Wager 18 Montealegre returned to the Broadway stage in 1967 to play Birdie Hubbard in Lillian Hellman s The Little Foxes directed by family friend Mike Nichols 19 She made her Metropolitan Opera debut in 1973 as Andromache in Berlioz s opera Les Troyens 20 the work s first staging in New York City 21 Montealegre made her final Broadway appearance in the 1976 play Poor Murderer directed by her former acting teacher Herbert Berghof 22 Television career edit nbsp Montealegre as Joan in Honegger s Joan of Arc at the Stake May 9 1958 photo by Carl Van Vechten Beginning in 1949 Montealegre starred in leading roles on weekly television anthology dramas for Kraft Television Theatre NBC 23 Studio One CBS Suspense CBS The Chevrolet Tele Theatre NBC and The Philco Television Playhouse NBC among others 24 Montealegre made her television debut on NBC s Kraft Television Theatre on May 11 1949 as Hygieia in Mary Violet Heberden s The Oath of Hippocrates alongside actors Dean Harens and Guy Spaull 23 In 1950 she appeared in the leading role of Nora Helmer in Henrik Ibsen s A Doll s House with John Newland as Krogstad and Theodore Newton as Thorvald 25 She made her first appearance on the CBS Television Network s Studio One in the psychological thriller Flowers from a Stranger which aired on May 25 1949 with actor Yul Brynner 26 She acted in eleven Studio One teleplays between 1949 and 1956 including Of Human Bondage aired November 21 1949 27 based on W Somerset Maugham s novel in which Montealegre played Mildred opposite Charlton Heston as Philip Carey 28 In 1952 she co starred alongside Heston again in The Wings of the Dove based on the 1902 novel by Henry James 29 Montealegre appeared in four episodes of the CBS series Suspense 1949 1954 live teleplays featuring people in dangerous situations She appeared first in an episode entitled The Yellow Scarf aired June 7 1949 where she played housekeeper Hettie who finds herself in a strange scenario involving her mysterious employer Mr Bronson portrayed by Boris Karloff and a social mission worker Tom Weatherby played by Douglass Watson 30 The other three episodes were The Tip 1950 Death Sabre 1951 and An Affair with a Ghost 1954 31 Dramatic works with orchestra edit In 1957 Montealegre performed her first dramatic role in a classical music concert as the narrator in Lukas Foss s Parable of Death based on the mystical poem by Rilke for a concert of the Syracuse Friends of Chamber Music 32 She performed the title role of Joan in Arthur Honegger s Joan of Arc at the Stake French Jeanne d Arc au bucher several times including in 1958 with her husband Leonard Bernstein conducting the New York Philharmonic and Leontyne Price in the role of Margaret 33 Bernstein wrote the narration for his Symphony No 3 Kaddish with Montealegre in mind and she narrated its American premiere with soprano Jennie Tourel and Charles Munch conducting the Boston Symphony Orchestra on January 31 1964 34 Social activism edit nbsp Montealegre arrested on the steps of the United States Capitol Building 1972 In 1963 Montealegre became the first chair of the Women s Division of the New York Civil Liberties Union where her efforts focused on educational programs and fundraising events 35 Montealegre told the San Francisco Examiner in 1964 It s amazing how little even knowledgeable people know about the Constitution and what people are fighting for 36 Montealegre supported the anti war grassroots campaign Another Mother for Peace 37 Initiated on Mother s Day of 1967 volunteers mailed postcards to President Lyndon B Johnson and members of Congress with the message that War is not healthy for children and other living things Talk peace 38 Two years later she was also one of 100 individuals arrested in an antiwar protest in Washington D C 6 On January 14 1970 Montealegre hosted a fundraiser at the Bernsteins Park Avenue apartment to support the families of Panther 21 members of the Black Panther Party who had been jailed for nine months without set trial dates or financial resources to cover legal fees and their families economic hardships 39 The next day Charlotte Curtis described the event in The New York Times 40 and by June Montealegre became a critical focus of Tom Wolfe s New York magazine cover story Radical Chic That Party at Lenny s 41 The story popularized the term radical chic Montealegre sharply condemned the response in a letter to The New York Times writing The frivolous way in which it was reported as a fashionable event is offensive to all people who are committed to humanitarian principles of justice 42 In the aftermath the Bernsteins residence was picketed by Jewish Defense League protesters and the family received hate mail 43 Many years later Leonard Bernstein s FBI file revealed the Bureau fabricated the letters and staged agents to foment the protests 44 As vice chairman of the Citizens Inquiry on Parole and Criminal Justice Inc Montealegre co authored a March 1974 report of the New York State parole system in collaboration with Coretta Scott King Victor Marrero Ramsey Clark and others 45 The report criticized the theory behind and practice of the New York State Board of Parole and recommended its abolishment as an institution provided an alternative could be found 46 She explained its aim was to awaken the public and to tell the inmates themselves what to expect 47 Montealegre worked behind the scenes for Amnesty International in Chile during its political unrest of the 1970s 48 49 In memory of his late wife Leonard Bernstein established the Felicia Montealegre Bernstein Fund of Amnesty International USA The first of its kind the Fund provided crucial organizing assistance and technological resources to support human rights activities 50 Personal life edit nbsp Leonard and Felicia Bernstein leaving for Israel 1957 Montealegre met composer conductor Leonard Bernstein in 1946 at a party given by Claudio Arrau 10 After their first engagement to be married was broken off she had a relationship with actor Richard Hart until his death on January 2 1951 51 52 She and Bernstein married on September 9 1951 and had three children Jamie Alexander and Nina 6 The Bernsteins regularly hosted parties and welcomed friends into their home Family friend and photographer John Gruen remarked There was always food generosity and merriment word games and puzzles It gave our lives a panache in those years 53 Montealegre maintained close friendships with many artists and intellectuals including Marc Blitzstein Lillian Hellman Jennie Tourel Richard Avedon Martha Gellhorn Stephen Sondheim Cynthia O Neal and Michael Mendy Wager with whom she kept regular correspondence 54 Montealegre was a fashion icon who often gave the first showing of new designer looks at public events By making the New York Philharmonic season opener concerts a fashionable event her appearances inspired new audiences to engage with classical music In a 1958 interview with The New York Times she said Fads can become serious Some people may attend to show off their mink find they enjoy the music and become devoted to the Philharmonic Her wardrobe was reported in the press and she was noted for her impeccable taste 55 Montealegre designed the interiors of each of the Bernsteins family homes along with professional decorator and friend Gail Jacobs 56 57 Montealegre was hailed by the Guild of Professional Beauticians as one of The Ten Best Coiffured Women of 1964 along with well known female contemporaries such as Eileen Ford Anne Klein and Debbie Reynolds 58 She also cut hair for her friends and family When she met pianist Glenn Gould for the first time she immediately decided he needed a haircut Bernstein recalled Before I knew it Felicia before Have a drink or anything had him in the bathroom washed his hair and cut it and he emerged from the bathroom looking like an angel 59 In her spare time Montealegre took up painting and studied with postwar artists Daniel Schwartz and Jane Wilson wife of John Gruen 60 Montealegre died of breast cancer which had metastasized to her lungs in East Hampton New York on June 16 1978 at the age of 56 61 Acting credits editTelevision edit Year Title Role s Notes 1949 1956 Kraft Television Theatre Various 11 episodes 1949 1956 Studio One Various 11 episodes 1949 1954 Suspense Various 4 episodes 1949 The Chevrolet Tele Theatre Christine Vole season 2 episode 7 The Witness for the Prosecution The Silver Theatre season 1 episode 6 Patient Unknown 1950 Lights Out season 2 episode 27 The Emerald Lavalier Starlight Theatre season 1 episode 20 Forgotten Melody The Philco Television Playhouse Various 4 episodes 1951 Lights Out Leda season 3 episode 29 Leda s Portrait Lux Video Theatre Viola Cole season 1 episode 15 The Purple Doorknob 1952 Goodyear Theatre Empress Carlotta Amelia season 1 episode 10 Crown of Shadows 1953 The Web season 3 episode 40 Encore The Revlon Mirror Theater season 1 episode 5 The Enormous Radio 1954 Goodyear Theatre season 3 episode 7 Moment of Panic You Are There season 2 episode 35 The Death of Rasputin 1955 Person to Person Self season 3 episode 4 1956 The Kaiser Aluminum Hour Ismene season 1 episode 5 Antigone 1957 Omnibus Self season 6 episode 11 Bernstein A Musical Travelogue 1961 Play of the Week season 2 episode 21 The Sound of Murder 1966 The Match Game Self season 5 episode 46 1968 The Merv Griffin Show Self season 5 episode 94 1977 Camera Three Self season 22 episode 29 Facade Theatre edit Year Title Role s Notes 1953 The Merchant of Venice Jessica New York City Center 1967 The Little Foxes Birdie Hubbard Ethel Barrymore Theatre Broadway 1976 Poor Murderer Fourth Actress Ethel Barrymore Theatre BroadwayIn popular culture editMontealegre features prominently in Tom Wolfe s 1970 essay Radical Chic That Party at Lenny s 62 Carey Mulligan portrayed Montealegre in Bradley Cooper s 2023 drama film Maestro which chronicles her relationship with Bernstein played by Cooper for which she received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress 63 References edit a b National Archives and Records Administration Washington D C Decimal Files compiled 1910 1949 Record Group 59 General Records of the Department of State 1763 2002 Series ARC ID 2555709 Series MLR Number A1 3001 Series Volume Number 345 F better source needed Felicia Montealegre performer Playbill Retrieved March 1 2023 New York Philharmonic 1958 Apr 24 25 27 New York Philharmonic Shelby White amp Leon Levy Digital Archives concert program Honegger Jeanne d Arc au bucher Joan of Arc at the Stake April 1958 Retrieved February 4 2024 FamilySearch org ancestors familysearch org Retrieved March 1 2023 Roy Cohn geni family tree Retrieved March 1 2023 a b c Robert McG Thomas Jr June 17 1978 Felicia Montealegre C Bernstein Actress Composer s Wife Dead The New York Times p 24 Retrieved October 12 2023 Ramirez N April 14 2022 Carey Mulligan visita Santiago para preparar su nuevo papel en que interpretara a una actriz chilena El Mercurio in Spanish Retrieved January 16 2024 Secrest 1994 p 148 Tonight in Samarkand at the Internet Broadway Database a b Simeone Nigel 2013 The Leonard Bernstein Letters Yale University Press p 559 ISBN 978 0 300 17909 5 Secrest 1994 p 150 Notable Alumni HB Studio Retrieved September 6 2023 Daily News 20 Jul 1946 page 301 Retrieved September 6 2023 via Newspapers com title missing The Happy Time Plymouth Theatre 1950 Playbill Retrieved September 6 2023 John Chapman March 1 1953 Another Good Play Arrives Sunday News p 95 Retrieved December 23 2023 via Newspapers com The Boston Globe 05 Jul 1956 page 34 Retrieved September 6 2023 via Newspapers com title missing The Palm Beach Post 28 Mar 1957 page 32 Retrieved September 6 2023 via Newspapers com title missing The Record 17 Dec 1957 page 36 Retrieved September 6 2023 via Newspapers com title missing Newsday Nassau Edition December 19 1967 p 70 Retrieved September 6 2023 via Newspapers com title missing Newsday Suffolk Edition October 17 1973 p 100 Retrieved September 6 2023 via Newspapers com title missing Schonberg Harold C October 23 1973 The Opera Les Troyens at the Met at Last The New York Times Retrieved September 6 2023 Daily News 20 Sep 1976 page 30 Retrieved September 6 2023 via Newspapers com title missing a b Hawes William 2001 Live television drama 1946 1951 Jefferson NC London McFarland p 253 ISBN 978 0 7864 0905 1 Hawes William 2001 Live television drama 1946 1951 Jefferson NC London McFarland pp Various ISBN 978 0 7864 0905 1 KNBH Television Channel 4 Los Angeles Evening Citizen News April 19 1950 p 22 Retrieved July 19 2023 via Newspapers com Flowers from a Stranger The Evening Sun Baltimore May 25 1949 p 38 Retrieved July 19 2023 via Newspapers com Stretch Bud November 21 1949 Air Waves Courier Post Camden New Jersey p 6 Retrieved July 19 2023 via Newspapers com Studio One Of Human Bondage 1949 Retrieved March 13 2021 via Internet Archive Newton Dwight March 13 1952 Day and Night with Radio and Television San Francisco Examiner p 16 Retrieved July 19 2023 via Newspapers com Suspense episode list season 1 ctva biz Suspense TV series 1949 1954 at IMDb nbsp Lukas Foss interviewed by Ellen Taaffe Zwilich at Carnegie Hall on April 30 1996 PDF The Library of Congress Music Division Retrieved April 12 2023 New York Philharmonic Program ID 2124 1958 Apr 24 25 27 New York Philharmonic Shelby White amp Leon Levy Digital Archives April 24 27 1958 Retrieved April 12 2023 Boston Symphony Orchestra concert program Monday Series Season 83 1963 1964 Concert 4 seq 1 collections bso org Retrieved April 12 2023 There s Glamour in the Bernstein Name St Louis Post Dispatch July 10 1963 p 44 Retrieved September 20 2023 via Newspapers com Mrs Leonard Bernstein a Nostalgic Visit San Francisco Examiner April 29 1964 p 29 Retrieved September 20 2023 via Newspapers com About AMP AnotherMother Retrieved September 20 2023 The Daily Reporter 01 May 1967 page 14 Retrieved September 20 2023 via Newspapers com title missing Hoffman Barbara October 18 2014 Leonard Bernstein s New York New York Post Retrieved October 11 2023 Curtis Charlotte January 15 1970 Black Panther Philosophy Is Debated at the Bernsteins The New York Times Retrieved October 11 2023 Wolfe Tom April 15 2008 Tom Wolfe on Radical Chic and Leonard Bernstein s Party for the Black Panthers New York Retrieved March 13 2021 Bernstein Felicia January 21 1970 Letters to the Editor of The Times The New York Times Retrieved October 11 2023 Chisholm Kate The Panther 21 Fundraiser and Radical Chic leonardbernstein com Retrieved October 11 2023 Blumenthal Ralph July 29 1994 Files Detail Years of Spying on Bernstein The New York Times Retrieved October 11 2023 Summary Report of New York Parole by Citizens Inquiry on Parole and Criminal Justice Inc PDF U S Depart of Justice Office of Justice Programs Retrieved September 27 2023 Report on New York Parole Office of Justice Programs Retrieved September 27 2023 Bernstein at Home The Bridgeport Post June 1 1975 p 65 Retrieved September 27 2023 via Newspapers com Secrest 1994 p 323 Human rights in Chile Amnesty International Retrieved October 11 2023 Healy John G Leonard Bernstein and Amnesty International leonardbernstein com Retrieved October 11 2023 Richard Hart Yearning for the Stage Films of the Golden Age 77 66 Summer 2014 Richard Hart neptune spaceports com Secrest 1994 p 295 Bernstein Felicia Library of Congress Washington D C 20540 USA Retrieved October 18 2023 Burton Humphrey 1995 Leonard Bernstein London Boston Faber and Faber p 298 ISBN 978 0 571 17368 6 About Gail Jacobs Interior Design gailjacobsinteriordesign com Retrieved October 18 2023 Secrest 1994 p 294 Battle Creek Enquirer 31 Dec 1964 page 6 Retrieved October 18 2023 via Newspapers com title missing MacGreevy John ed 1983 Glenn Gould by himself and his friends Toronto Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 18995 8 Carranza Fabiola What Ever Happened to Felicia Montealegre Canadian Art Retrieved October 18 2023 Bernstein Jamie Famous Father Girl Harper ISBN 9780062641373 Wolfe Tom June 8 1970 Radical Chic That Party at Lenny s PDF New York Retrieved July 19 2023 Carey Mulligan on Going All In to Play Opposite Bradley Cooper in Maestro Vogue October 10 2023 Retrieved October 18 2023 Sources Secrest Meryle 1994 Leonard Bernstein A Life New York A A Knopf ISBN 978 0 679 40731 7 via Internet Archive Further reading edit About Felicia Montealegre leonardbernstein comExternal links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Felicia Montealegre Felicia Montealegre Bernstein at IMDb nbsp Felicia Montealegre Bernstein at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Felicia Montealegre Bernstein amp oldid 1221728215, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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