Honor Judith Rosenbaum's leadership on her 10th anniversary as JWA’s CEO by making a donation!
Close [x]

Show [+]

If Wanda Landowska were alive today...

On February 21, 1942 (sixty-six years ago yesterday) Wanda Landowska -- a Warsaw-born Jewish musician with a mastery of the harpsichord -- made history with a performance of Bach's "Goldberg Variations" at New York's Town Hall. It was the first time in the 20th century that the piece, originally written for the harpsichord, was performed publicly on that instrument. A student of Landowska's later remembered that hearing her performance was "like being in front of one of the greatest wonders of nature."

Landowska's story offers us something else to wonder about: her unconventional personal history. It goes like this: In 1909, she co-authored a book with her husband Henry Lew (who died in 1919). In 1941, she fled Nazi-occupied Paris with Denise Restout, the woman known as her life partner. The two eventually made their way to the United States where they settled permanently.

Landowska's story is likely one of many throughout history. But narratives that fall outside of the hetero-normative canon aren't always told. Rarely are they celebrated. Certainly today, a relationship trajectory like Landowska's would be wildly sensationalized and subject to intense scrutiny. Anyone following the "news" knows it's nearly impossible to escape the slew of cover story "scandals" plucked from the lives of our politicians and pop-stars (presidential candidates are no exception). Were Landowska not a 20th century harpsichordist but a 21st century American Idol celebrity, I'm sure that, she too, would have herself a prized cover of Us Weekly with GAY! affixed to her name.

What interests me, though, is how stories like Landowska's get told and transmitted over time. What gets subverted, scandalized, or celebrated? What's included and what's left out in recounting women's collective history? Can we, today, identify Landowska as a lesbian when she might not have used that word herself? How do we effectively -- and visibly -- identify role models in ways that are honest and full? Perhaps most importantly, what's our role in making sure that the life complexities of women like Wanda Landowska don't simply get ignored or exoticized?

3 Comments
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

That Landowska and Restout were not an "item," as the previous commenter asserts, because there was another woman from Lakeville, CT doesn't imply that Landowska and Restout were never a couple.

It happens often with couples of all kinds that as they age together their passions cool, and I have observed older lesbian couples continue to live in close proximity and remain friendly -- because their early relationship forged a deep bond of kinship -- while they each pursue younger lovers.

As a personal friend of the late Denise Restout (you had the name spelled incorrectly) I have never even thought that she was Wanda's 'partner' sexually. It was not at all like that.

If anything it was another woman who lived in Lakeville CT with Landowska and Restout who would have been involved with Landowska.

Why does this stuff have to be hashed over on the net? These people are no longer with us to verify or negate their sexual orientation...and who cares now?

But, was Landowska ostracized or ignored? Or, did her personal relationship remain simply private--a good thing, I think--while her achievements as a musician were lauded?

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

Donate

Help us elevate the voices of Jewish women.

donate now

Get JWA in your inbox

Read the latest from JWA from your inbox.

sign up now

How to cite this page

Namerow, Jordan. "If Wanda Landowska were alive today... ." 22 February 2008. Jewish Women's Archive. (Viewed on October 7, 2024) <https://jwa.org/blog/wanda-landowska>.