Victor Borge-The Rest of the Story

Billbrpt@AOL.COM Billbrpt@AOL.COM
Sun, 24 Dec 2000 12:00:49 EST


---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment
List,

Here is the entire text of the report from Reuters:

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Pianist Victor Borge, who died in his sleep Saturday 
at his Greenwich, Connecticut home, was known as the unmelancholy Dane of 
international show business. He would have turned 92 on Jan. 3. 

"The cause of death was heart failure," his daughter, Sanna Feirstein, told 
Reuters. 

"He had just returned from a wonderfully successful trip to Copenhagen ... 
and it was really heartwarming to see the love he experienced in his home 
country," she said. 

Borge was one of five performers selected for the Kennedy Center Honors in 
1999. 

"He went to sleep, and they went to wake him up this morning, and he was 
gone," said his agent, Bernard Gurtman. 

"He had so much on the table, and to the day he died he was creative, and 
practicing piano several hours a day," Gurtman told Reuters. "He was just a 
great inspiration." 

Funeral services will be private, his daughter said. 

Borge made a career of falling off piano stools, missing the keys with his 
hands and getting tangled up in the sheet music. 

One of his inspirations was a pianist who played the first notes of the Grieg 
A Minor Concerto and then fell on the keys dead. 

He said that the only time he got nervous on stage was when he had to play 
seriously and adds that if it had not been for Adolf Hitler he probably would 
never have pursued a career as a concert-hall comedian. 

Until he was forced to flee Denmark in 1940 he was a stage and screen idol in 
his native country. 

LAMPOONED HITLER 

But as a Jew who had lampooned Hitler, Borge -- his real name was Boerge 
Rosenbaum -- was in danger and fled first to Sweden and then to the United 
States, where he arrived penniless and unknown and by a fluke got booked on 
the Bing Crosby radio show. He was an instant success. 

He became an American citizen in 1948, but thought of himself as Danish. It 
was obvious from the numerous affectionate tributes and standing ovations at 
his 80th birthday concert in Copenhagen in 1989 that Danes felt the same way. 

In the concert at Copenhagen's Tivoli gardens, Borge  played variations on 
the theme of "Happy Birthday to You" in the styles of Mozart, Brahms, Wagner 
and Beethoven -- all executed with such wit that the orchestra was convulsed 
with laughter that a woman performing a piccolo solo was unable to draw 
breath to play. 

"Playing music and making jokes are as natural to me as breathing," Borge 
told Reuters in an interview after that concert. 

"That's why I've never thought of retiring because I do it all the time 
whether on the stage or off. I found that in a precarious situation, a smile 
is the shortest distance between people. When one needs to reach out for 
sympathy or a link with people, what better way is there? 

"If I have to play something straight, without deviation in any respect, I 
still get very nervous. It's the fact that you want to do your best, but you 
are not at your best because you are nervous and knowing that makes you even 
more nervous." 

His varied career included acting, composing for films and plays and writing 
but he was best known for his comic sketches based on musical quirks and 
oddities. 

UNPREDICTABLE ROUTINE 

His routines were unpredictable, often improvised on stage as his quick wit 
responded to an unplanned event -- a noise, a latecomer in the audience -- or 
fixed on an unlikely prop -- a fly, a shaky piano stool. 

Borge was born in Denmark on January 3, 1909, son of a violinist in the 
Danish Royal Orchestra. 

His parents encouraged him to become a concert pianist, arranging his first 
public recital when he was 10. In 1927 he made his official debut at the 
Tivoli Gardens. 

Borge's mischievous sense of humor was manifest from an early age. Asked as a 
child to play for his parent's friends he would announce "a piece by the 
85-year-old Mozart" and improvise something himself. 

When his mother was dying in Denmark during the occupation, Borge visited 
her, disguised as a sailor. 

"Churchill and I were the only ones who saw what was happening," he said in 
later years. "He saved Europe and I saved myself." 

>From 1953 to 1956, he appeared in New York in his own production "Comedy in 
Music," a prelude to world tours that often took him to his native 
Scandinavia. 

On radio and television, Borge developed the comedy techniques of the 
bungling pianist that won him worldwide fame. 

Many of his skits were based on real-life events. One of his classics evolved 
from seeing a pianist playing a Tchaikovsky concerto fall off his seat. 

Borge's dog joined the show after it wandered on stage while he was at the 
keyboard -- an entrance nobody would believe had been unplanned. 

One incident could not be repeated. A large fly flew on to Borge's nose while 
he was playing. "How did you get that fly to come on at the right time?" 
people asked. "Well, we train them," Borge explained. 

Borge's book, "My Favorite Intervals," published in 1974, detailed 
little-known facts of the private lives of composers describing Wagner's pink 
underwear and the time Borodin left home in full military regalia but forgot 
his trousers. 

In 1975, Borge was honoured in recognition of the 35th anniversary of his 
arrival in the United States and his work as unofficial goodwill ambassador 
from Denmark to the United States. He celebrated his 75th birthday in 1984 
with a series of concerts at Carnegie Hall and in Copenhagen 

Borge received a host of honors from all four Scandinavian countries for his 
contributions to music, humor and worthy causes. 

Borge, who had lived in Greenwich since 1964, is survived by five children, 
nine grandchildren, and one great grandchild. His wife of many years, Sanna, 
died earlier this year. 


---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: https://www.moypiano.com/ptg/pianotech.php/attachments/15/66/90/fd/attachment.htm

---------------------- multipart/alternative attachment--


This PTG archive page provided courtesy of Moy Piano Service, LLC