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	<title>Observer &#187; Isaac Stern, Across the Hall, In Apt. 19F</title>
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		<title>Observer &#187; Isaac Stern, Across the Hall, In Apt. 19F</title>
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		<title>Isaac Stern, Across the Hall, In Apt. 19F</title>

		<comments>http://observer.com/2001/10/isaac-stern-across-the-hall-in-apt-19f/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 08 Oct 2001 00:00:00 -0400</pubDate>
					<link>http://observer.com/2001/10/isaac-stern-across-the-hall-in-apt-19f/</link>
			<dc:creator>Adolph Green</dc:creator>
				
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		<description><![CDATA[<p>In 1963, the</p>
<p>building where I lived with my family went co-op. We were renting an apartment</p>
<p>on the seventh floor, and my wife, Phyllis, wanted us to buy another, larger</p>
<p>apartment on the 19th. As a child of the Depression, the expenditure of any sum</p>
<p>greater than $1.50 has always plunged me into a state of blind panic, flooding</p>
<p>my mind with images of jeering crowds thronging the Rialto to spit upon my</p>
<p>Jewish gabardine as a constable leads me in handcuffs to debtors' prison. The</p>
<p>purchase of New York real estate seemed to me the height of folly-after all,</p>
<p>how much could a duplex with a terrace overlooking Central Park possibly be</p>
<p>worth? In the end, it wasn't the magnificent views that won me over, nor the</p>
<p>fact that the apartment cost less than I currently spend every month on dinners</p>
<p>at Shun Lee West. The clincher was simple: Our next-door neighbor would be</p>
<p>Isaac Stern.</p>
<p> For the next 35 years, we</p>
<p>lived across the hall from each other, the Greens in 19E and the Sterns in 19F.</p>
<p>Our building has only two apartments to a floor, which not only guaranteed a</p>
<p>certain level of intimacy, but meant that all one had to do was open the door</p>
<p>to hear the rich tones of Isaac's Guarnerius as he practiced, a glorious sound</p>
<p>whether he was working on a Bach chaconne or just running his scales. One grew</p>
<p>used to the steady stream of great musicians-Eugene Istomin, Yefim Bronfman,</p>
<p>Emanuel Ax, Itzhak Perlman, Pinchas Zuckerman, Jaime Laredo, Yo-Yo Ma-who would</p>
<p>daily emerge from the elevator, seemingly ordinary citizens until they walked</p>
<p>into 19F and started to play. I have a recurring image of running into Isaac in</p>
<p>the hallway surrounded by piles of luggage: I'd be on my way to the grocery</p>
<p>store to buy a carton of orange juice and some cream cheese; he'd be on his way</p>
<p>to Vienna or Paris or Moscow to perform Haydn or Saint-Saëns or Tchaikovsky. As</p>
<p>a classical-music fanatic, I couldn't have been much happier if I'd discovered</p>
<p>that the Mozarts were looking at the junior six with two baths on the 18th</p>
<p>floor.</p>
<p> Luckily, Isaac turned out to</p>
<p>be much more than the fiddle player next door. Over the years we grew to be</p>
<p>great friends, and the lives of our two families became intertwined. The first</p>
<p>person to stop by and say hello after we moved in was Isaac's wife, Vera, who</p>
<p>gave us and the place a formidable once-over before breaking into a warm smile</p>
<p>and welcoming us to the neighborhood. Vera is an unstoppable force of nature,</p>
<p>whose energy, resolve and organizational skills, along with her generosity, gemütlichkeit and Talmudic skepticism,</p>
<p>created a loving, stable family life in the midst of Isaac's whirlwind comings</p>
<p>and goings.</p>
<p> The Sterns' children were</p>
<p>uniformly well-mannered and spoke perfect French; our kids had a more</p>
<p>roustabout quality, and their argot tended toward that found in the pages of Variety . Nevertheless, they spent</p>
<p>endless hours together, indeed grew up together. When our son, Adam, told us he</p>
<p>wanted to be bar-mitzvahed, we were surprised to learn that the idea had been</p>
<p>planted by the Sterns' elder son, Michael, rather than by the strict religious</p>
<p>upbringing we'd given him. It was widely assumed that our daughter, Amanda, and</p>
<p>their son, David, would get married: They took baths together, went to grammar</p>
<p>school together and held a joint graduation party that ended as a sleepover,</p>
<p>with the girls at our apartment and the boys across the hall-or so we hoped.</p>
<p>Their daughter, Shira, a few years older, always watched over the brood with</p>
<p>infinite patience and understanding, a trial by fire that may have indirectly</p>
<p>led to her becoming a rabbi. Some years ago, after Phyllis had undergone</p>
<p>surgery, the first person she saw when she came to was Shira, who happened to</p>
<p>be assigned to that hospital as part of her ministerial training.</p>
<p> Although I'd known Isaac</p>
<p>socially over the years, I got to know him in a different way as his neighbor.</p>
<p>When he was in town, he would often ring the bell after dinner and invite me</p>
<p>over for a drink. He loved to talk over an icy glass of vodka (he pronounced it</p>
<p>"wood-ka") or a rare cognac, which I invariably failed to appreciate</p>
<p>sufficiently. He claimed to posses the secret to the perfect martini: the substitution</p>
<p>of scotch for vermouth. He would watch with an air of almost paternal pride as</p>
<p>you sipped his creation, exclaiming "Aha!" when you told him it was wonderful.</p>
<p>At Isaac's funeral, Eugene Istomin finally expressed what none of us ever had.</p>
<p>"O.K., Isaac," he said, "now the truth has to come out: You made a lousy</p>
<p>martini."</p>
<p> Our conversation wandered from family news to gossip to world</p>
<p>events. Isaac was no neurasthenic artist, too fine for this world, but a man</p>
<p>deeply engaged in what was going on around him, caring, concerned and active.</p>
<p> And, of course, there was our</p>
<p>shared love of music, a topic either of us was happy to talk about endlessly. I</p>
<p>will always cherish the evenings we spent singing snatches of favorite</p>
<p>compositions to each other, sometimes testing each other's knowledge, sometimes</p>
<p>just reveling in our mutual enthusiasm. Isaac always believed that he didn't</p>
<p>have the same level of technique as some of the other great violinists (a</p>
<p>contention that many, myself included, would argue with), that his strength as</p>
<p>a performer came from his insight, passion and almost sensuous feel for the</p>
<p>music. Though he didn't have a mellifluous voice, when he sang a Beethoven</p>
<p>scherzo or the slow movement from a Brahms violin concerto, the source of his</p>
<p>genius was clear.</p>
<p> Isaac took a similarly</p>
<p>sensuous-if not quite as profoundly felt-delight in good food and drink. He was</p>
<p>aware of the figure he cut, and proud of it. Once, at a recital, he turned to</p>
<p>audience members seated on the stage behind him and said, "Pardon my back."</p>
<p>Then, facing the auditorium again, he added, "And pardon my front."</p>
<p> Despite his weight, Isaac was</p>
<p>remarkably, improbably agile and a fiercely effective (if unconventional)</p>
<p>tennis player. I have a clear picture of him on the court at Lenny Bernstein's</p>
<p>house in Connecticut, dashing from the baseline to the net and back like a</p>
<p>nimble and very aggressive bowling ball.</p>
<p> Many of my memories of Isaac are connected with Lenny, who was</p>
<p>probably my best friend. I went to Israel with them in 1967 after the Six-Day</p>
<p>War and I remember their going from town to town, from hospital to hospital,</p>
<p>visiting wounded soldiers, comforting scared civilians, unconcerned about their</p>
<p>own safety. They gave a concert with the Israel Philharmonic on Mount</p>
<p>Scopus-Lenny conducted Mahler's "Resurrection" Symphony, Isaac played</p>
<p>Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto-in the midst of a sandstorm, exploding land mines</p>
<p>and a fierce wind that knocked over music stands. I have no doubt that, if they</p>
<p>were alive, they would both be giving concerts for the victims of the World</p>
<p>Trade Center attack and their families, and would play a large part in helping</p>
<p>to heal our wounded hearts.</p>
<p> In 1982, we had a group of</p>
<p>friends over to celebrate New Year's Eve. After dinner, the Sterns, who had</p>
<p>been somewhere else, stopped by for a drink. I'm not quite sure how it</p>
<p>happened-though it may have been at my indelicate suggestion-but at some point</p>
<p>Isaac went across the hall to get his fiddle (he never referred to it any other</p>
<p>way). When he returned, Lenny sat down at the piano, a cigarette dangling from</p>
<p>his mouth, and they dove into Mozart's Sonatas for Violin and Piano. Over the</p>
<p>next three hours, they worked their way through the music, playing like</p>
<p>possessed angels, pausing only to refill their drinks, until they finished the</p>
<p>last sonata at four in the morning. It was as happy as I'd ever seen either of</p>
<p>them, or any of the rest of us, and it made me glad that I hadn't let Phyllis</p>
<p>talk me out of buying the apartment.</p>
<p> On Yom Kippur, Vera, who now lives on the sixth floor, came over</p>
<p>to break the fast. David, who is a conductor and lives in Paris, was there with</p>
<p>his wife, Katta, and their children, Talia and Sophia. Shira was in New Jersey,</p>
<p>where she and her husband are the heads of different congregations. Michael had</p>
<p>just flown to Beijing to conduct the Vienna Philharmonic-Isaac would have</p>
<p>insisted on it-and would be returning two days later for his father's funeral.</p>
<p>We were, of course, reminiscing about Isaac, and at one point we talked about</p>
<p>how he'd wanted to be buried on the grounds of his house in Connecticut. In one</p>
<p>of those moments of dark humor that inevitably arises during sad times, Vera</p>
<p>said, "Imagine, you buy the house and then you find out-bonus-you get Isaac</p>
<p>Stern!" We were lucky enough to have had that bonus for 35 years. Isaac, you</p>
<p>will be missed all over the world, and nowhere more than on the 19th floor.</p>
<p> -written with Adam Green</p>
]]></description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In 1963, the</p>
<p>building where I lived with my family went co-op. We were renting an apartment</p>
<p>on the seventh floor, and my wife, Phyllis, wanted us to buy another, larger</p>
<p>apartment on the 19th. As a child of the Depression, the expenditure of any sum</p>
<p>greater than $1.50 has always plunged me into a state of blind panic, flooding</p>
<p>my mind with images of jeering crowds thronging the Rialto to spit upon my</p>
<p>Jewish gabardine as a constable leads me in handcuffs to debtors' prison. The</p>
<p>purchase of New York real estate seemed to me the height of folly-after all,</p>
<p>how much could a duplex with a terrace overlooking Central Park possibly be</p>
<p>worth? In the end, it wasn't the magnificent views that won me over, nor the</p>
<p>fact that the apartment cost less than I currently spend every month on dinners</p>
<p>at Shun Lee West. The clincher was simple: Our next-door neighbor would be</p>
<p>Isaac Stern.</p>
<p> For the next 35 years, we</p>
<p>lived across the hall from each other, the Greens in 19E and the Sterns in 19F.</p>
<p>Our building has only two apartments to a floor, which not only guaranteed a</p>
<p>certain level of intimacy, but meant that all one had to do was open the door</p>
<p>to hear the rich tones of Isaac's Guarnerius as he practiced, a glorious sound</p>
<p>whether he was working on a Bach chaconne or just running his scales. One grew</p>
<p>used to the steady stream of great musicians-Eugene Istomin, Yefim Bronfman,</p>
<p>Emanuel Ax, Itzhak Perlman, Pinchas Zuckerman, Jaime Laredo, Yo-Yo Ma-who would</p>
<p>daily emerge from the elevator, seemingly ordinary citizens until they walked</p>
<p>into 19F and started to play. I have a recurring image of running into Isaac in</p>
<p>the hallway surrounded by piles of luggage: I'd be on my way to the grocery</p>
<p>store to buy a carton of orange juice and some cream cheese; he'd be on his way</p>
<p>to Vienna or Paris or Moscow to perform Haydn or Saint-Saëns or Tchaikovsky. As</p>
<p>a classical-music fanatic, I couldn't have been much happier if I'd discovered</p>
<p>that the Mozarts were looking at the junior six with two baths on the 18th</p>
<p>floor.</p>
<p> Luckily, Isaac turned out to</p>
<p>be much more than the fiddle player next door. Over the years we grew to be</p>
<p>great friends, and the lives of our two families became intertwined. The first</p>
<p>person to stop by and say hello after we moved in was Isaac's wife, Vera, who</p>
<p>gave us and the place a formidable once-over before breaking into a warm smile</p>
<p>and welcoming us to the neighborhood. Vera is an unstoppable force of nature,</p>
<p>whose energy, resolve and organizational skills, along with her generosity, gemütlichkeit and Talmudic skepticism,</p>
<p>created a loving, stable family life in the midst of Isaac's whirlwind comings</p>
<p>and goings.</p>
<p> The Sterns' children were</p>
<p>uniformly well-mannered and spoke perfect French; our kids had a more</p>
<p>roustabout quality, and their argot tended toward that found in the pages of Variety . Nevertheless, they spent</p>
<p>endless hours together, indeed grew up together. When our son, Adam, told us he</p>
<p>wanted to be bar-mitzvahed, we were surprised to learn that the idea had been</p>
<p>planted by the Sterns' elder son, Michael, rather than by the strict religious</p>
<p>upbringing we'd given him. It was widely assumed that our daughter, Amanda, and</p>
<p>their son, David, would get married: They took baths together, went to grammar</p>
<p>school together and held a joint graduation party that ended as a sleepover,</p>
<p>with the girls at our apartment and the boys across the hall-or so we hoped.</p>
<p>Their daughter, Shira, a few years older, always watched over the brood with</p>
<p>infinite patience and understanding, a trial by fire that may have indirectly</p>
<p>led to her becoming a rabbi. Some years ago, after Phyllis had undergone</p>
<p>surgery, the first person she saw when she came to was Shira, who happened to</p>
<p>be assigned to that hospital as part of her ministerial training.</p>
<p> Although I'd known Isaac</p>
<p>socially over the years, I got to know him in a different way as his neighbor.</p>
<p>When he was in town, he would often ring the bell after dinner and invite me</p>
<p>over for a drink. He loved to talk over an icy glass of vodka (he pronounced it</p>
<p>"wood-ka") or a rare cognac, which I invariably failed to appreciate</p>
<p>sufficiently. He claimed to posses the secret to the perfect martini: the substitution</p>
<p>of scotch for vermouth. He would watch with an air of almost paternal pride as</p>
<p>you sipped his creation, exclaiming "Aha!" when you told him it was wonderful.</p>
<p>At Isaac's funeral, Eugene Istomin finally expressed what none of us ever had.</p>
<p>"O.K., Isaac," he said, "now the truth has to come out: You made a lousy</p>
<p>martini."</p>
<p> Our conversation wandered from family news to gossip to world</p>
<p>events. Isaac was no neurasthenic artist, too fine for this world, but a man</p>
<p>deeply engaged in what was going on around him, caring, concerned and active.</p>
<p> And, of course, there was our</p>
<p>shared love of music, a topic either of us was happy to talk about endlessly. I</p>
<p>will always cherish the evenings we spent singing snatches of favorite</p>
<p>compositions to each other, sometimes testing each other's knowledge, sometimes</p>
<p>just reveling in our mutual enthusiasm. Isaac always believed that he didn't</p>
<p>have the same level of technique as some of the other great violinists (a</p>
<p>contention that many, myself included, would argue with), that his strength as</p>
<p>a performer came from his insight, passion and almost sensuous feel for the</p>
<p>music. Though he didn't have a mellifluous voice, when he sang a Beethoven</p>
<p>scherzo or the slow movement from a Brahms violin concerto, the source of his</p>
<p>genius was clear.</p>
<p> Isaac took a similarly</p>
<p>sensuous-if not quite as profoundly felt-delight in good food and drink. He was</p>
<p>aware of the figure he cut, and proud of it. Once, at a recital, he turned to</p>
<p>audience members seated on the stage behind him and said, "Pardon my back."</p>
<p>Then, facing the auditorium again, he added, "And pardon my front."</p>
<p> Despite his weight, Isaac was</p>
<p>remarkably, improbably agile and a fiercely effective (if unconventional)</p>
<p>tennis player. I have a clear picture of him on the court at Lenny Bernstein's</p>
<p>house in Connecticut, dashing from the baseline to the net and back like a</p>
<p>nimble and very aggressive bowling ball.</p>
<p> Many of my memories of Isaac are connected with Lenny, who was</p>
<p>probably my best friend. I went to Israel with them in 1967 after the Six-Day</p>
<p>War and I remember their going from town to town, from hospital to hospital,</p>
<p>visiting wounded soldiers, comforting scared civilians, unconcerned about their</p>
<p>own safety. They gave a concert with the Israel Philharmonic on Mount</p>
<p>Scopus-Lenny conducted Mahler's "Resurrection" Symphony, Isaac played</p>
<p>Mendelssohn's Violin Concerto-in the midst of a sandstorm, exploding land mines</p>
<p>and a fierce wind that knocked over music stands. I have no doubt that, if they</p>
<p>were alive, they would both be giving concerts for the victims of the World</p>
<p>Trade Center attack and their families, and would play a large part in helping</p>
<p>to heal our wounded hearts.</p>
<p> In 1982, we had a group of</p>
<p>friends over to celebrate New Year's Eve. After dinner, the Sterns, who had</p>
<p>been somewhere else, stopped by for a drink. I'm not quite sure how it</p>
<p>happened-though it may have been at my indelicate suggestion-but at some point</p>
<p>Isaac went across the hall to get his fiddle (he never referred to it any other</p>
<p>way). When he returned, Lenny sat down at the piano, a cigarette dangling from</p>
<p>his mouth, and they dove into Mozart's Sonatas for Violin and Piano. Over the</p>
<p>next three hours, they worked their way through the music, playing like</p>
<p>possessed angels, pausing only to refill their drinks, until they finished the</p>
<p>last sonata at four in the morning. It was as happy as I'd ever seen either of</p>
<p>them, or any of the rest of us, and it made me glad that I hadn't let Phyllis</p>
<p>talk me out of buying the apartment.</p>
<p> On Yom Kippur, Vera, who now lives on the sixth floor, came over</p>
<p>to break the fast. David, who is a conductor and lives in Paris, was there with</p>
<p>his wife, Katta, and their children, Talia and Sophia. Shira was in New Jersey,</p>
<p>where she and her husband are the heads of different congregations. Michael had</p>
<p>just flown to Beijing to conduct the Vienna Philharmonic-Isaac would have</p>
<p>insisted on it-and would be returning two days later for his father's funeral.</p>
<p>We were, of course, reminiscing about Isaac, and at one point we talked about</p>
<p>how he'd wanted to be buried on the grounds of his house in Connecticut. In one</p>
<p>of those moments of dark humor that inevitably arises during sad times, Vera</p>
<p>said, "Imagine, you buy the house and then you find out-bonus-you get Isaac</p>
<p>Stern!" We were lucky enough to have had that bonus for 35 years. Isaac, you</p>
<p>will be missed all over the world, and nowhere more than on the 19th floor.</p>
<p> -written with Adam Green</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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