Pianist Andre Watts dies aged 77 of prostate cancer

14 July 2023, 19:04

Obit Andre Watts
Obit Andre Watts. Picture: PA

He made his New York Philharmonic debut aged 16 in a Young People’s Concert led by music director Leonard Bernstein in 1963.

Pianist Andre Watts, whose televised debut with the New York Philharmonic as a 16-year-old in 1963 launched an international career of more than a half-century, has died. He was 77.

Watts died on Wednesday at his home in Bloomington, Indiana of prostate cancer, his manager, Linda Marder, said on Friday.

Watts joined the faculty of the Indiana University Jacobs School of Music in 2004. He said in 2016 that he had been diagnosed with prostate cancer.

Watts won a Philadelphia Orchestra student competition and debuted when he was 10 in a children’s concert on January 12, 1957, performing the first movement of Haydn’s Concerto in D major.

He studied under Genia Robinor and made his New York Philharmonic debut in a Young People’s Concert led by music director Leonard Bernstein on January 12, 1963, a programme televised three days later on CBS.

Bernstein told the audience: “Now we come to a young man who is so remarkable that I am tempted to give him a tremendous build-up, but I’d almost rather not so that you might have the same unexpected shock of pleasure and wonderment that I had when I first him play.

“He was just another in a long procession of pianists who were auditioning for us one afternoon and out he came, a sensitive-faced 16-year-old boy from Philadelphia … who sat down at the piano and tore into the opening bars of a Liszt concerto in such a way that we simply flipped.”

Bernstein conducted Watts and the orchestra in Liszt’s Piano Concerto No 1.

“What Mr Watts had that was exceptional was a delicacy of attack that allowed the piano to sing,” Raymond Ericson wrote in The New York Times.

Obit Andre Watts
Andre Watts, aged 10, performing in Philadelphia in 1957 (Adrian Siegel/Philadelphia Orchestra via AP/PA)

Watts so impressed Bernstein that the conductor chose him to replace an indisposed Glenn Gould and play the Liszt concerto twice at Philharmonic Hall a few weeks later.

Within months, he had earned a recording contract and became among the most prominent pianists.

“When I’m feeling unhappy, going to the piano and just playing gently and listening to sounds makes everything slowly seem all right,” he said on a 1987 episode of Mister Rogers’ Neighbourhood.

Born in Nuremberg, Germany, on June 20, 1946, to a Hungarian mother and a black father who was in the US Army, Watts moved with his family to Philadelphia.

“When I was young, I was in the peculiar position with my school chums of not being white and not being black, either,” Watts told The Christian Science Monitor in 1982.

“Somehow I didn’t fit in very well at all. My mom said two things, ‘If you really think that you have to play 125% to a white’s 100% for equal treatment, it’s too bad. But fighting will not alter it.’ And, ‘If someone is not nice to you, it doesn’t have to be automatically because of your colour.’

“(That advice) taught me that when I’m in a complex personal situation, I don’t have to conclude it is a racial thing. Therefore, I think I have encountered fewer problems all along the way.”

Watts’ career was interrupted on November 14, 2002, when he was stricken by a subdural hematoma before a scheduled performance with the Pacific Symphony at the Orange County Performing Arts Centre in Costa Mesa, California. He had surgery in Newport Beach.

Watts then had surgery in 2004 to repair a herniated disc that caused nerve damage in his left hand. He made the last of more than 40 Carnegie Hall appearances with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra in 2017. He had been scheduled to appear at the New York Philharmonic this November to mark the centennial of Young People’s Concerts.

He was nominated for five Grammy Awards and won Most Promising New Classical Recording Artist in 1964 for the Liszt concerto with Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic.

He was nominated for a 1995 Emmy Award for Outstanding Cultural Programme and received a 2011 National Medal of Arts and National Humanities Medal from then-president Barack Obama.

Watts is survived by his wife Joan Brand Watts, stepson William Dalton, stepdaughter Amanda Rees and seven step-grandchildren. There were no immediate funeral plans.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Tanzania Flooding

Cyclone Hidaya weakens as it moves toward Tanzania’s coastline

Plane takes off at dusk

Snakes on a plane – almost – as reptiles found hidden in passenger’s trousers

Ukrainian leader

Russia puts Ukrainian President Zelensky on wanted list

Holy Fire ceremony

Orthodox worshippers greet ancient ceremony of the Holy Fire in Jerusalem

Heavy rains

Houston braces for more flooding in wake of storms

Dr Ghassan Abu Sitta

UK doctor denied entry to France for senate meeting on Gaza

Palestinians stand in the ruins of a home after an overnight Israeli strike that killed at least two adults and five boys and girls under the age of 16 in Rafah, southern Gaza Strip

Hamas in Cairo as Egyptian media report progress in ceasefire talks

Israel-Hamas conflict

Students protesting against Gaza war disrupt Cambridge open days

Youngsters wade through a flooded street caused by heavy rain in Peshawar, Pakistan

Pakistan records its wettest April since 1961 with above average rainfall

This drone footage obtained by The Associated Press shows the village of Ocheretyne, a target for Russian forces in the Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine

Drone footage shows damage in Ukraine village as residents flee Russian advance

Rescue workers at the site of a collapsed section of a highway on the Meizhou-Dabu Expressway in Meizhou, southern China’s Guangdong Province

Chinese truck driver praised for helping reduce casualties after road collapse

Gaza has descended into a full-blown famine, a top UN official has said

Gaza descends into ‘full-blown famine’ amid Israeli restrictions on food deliveries to the region, UN official declares

Indonesia Landslide

Flood and landslide hit Indonesia’s Sulawesi island, killing 14

Morgan Wallen Arrested

Court appearance for country singer Morgan Wallen postponed until August

Mark Hamill

Star Wars actor Hamill dubs Biden ‘Joe-bi-Wan Kenobi’ on trip to White House

Rockstar Mick Jagger briefly waded into Louisiana politics while on-stage in New Orleans

'You can't always get what you want' Louisiana governor endorsed by Trump claps back at Mick Jagger after on-stage jibe