Dorothy Ziegler

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Born
Dorothy Miriam Ziegler

July 20, 1922
Muscatine, Iowa
DiedMarch 1, 1972(1972-03-01) (aged 49)
South Miami, Florida
Occupation(s)Musician, music educator, conductor, vocal coach
Dorothy Ziegler
A smiling white woman with dark set hair; she is wearing a white blouse.
Dorothy Ziegler, from a 1963 newspaper
Born
Dorothy Miriam Ziegler

July 20, 1922
Muscatine, Iowa
DiedMarch 1, 1972(1972-03-01) (aged 49)
South Miami, Florida
Occupation(s)Musician, music educator, conductor, vocal coach

Dorothy Ziegler (July 20, 1922 – March 1, 1972) was an American musician, a trombonist with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra. She also taught piano at St. Louis Institute of Music, and conducted operas.

Dorothy Miriam Ziegler was born in Muscatine, Iowa,[1] the daughter of Elmer Ziegler and Wilma Busch Ziegler. Her parents and brother were also musicians.[2][3] In 1940, she toured South America and the Caribbean in the All-America Youth Orchestra, conducted by Leopold Stokowski.[4][5] In 1943, she graduated from the Eastman School of Music,[6][7] where she studied with Emory Remington.[8]

In 1946 Ziegler earned a master's degree in piano from the University of Southern California.[3] 1947 she went to France for a summer of piano studies with Robert Casadesus and Gaby Casadesus.[9] She attended the Juilliard Institute for Opera Conductors in 1957, and studied conducting with Nadia Boulanger, Felix Waldman, Max Rudolph, and Boris Goldovsky.[3]

Career

Personal life

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