Dorothy Humel Hovorka, Leader in Cultural Enterprises
1987 SPECIAL CITATION FOR DISTINGUISHED SERVICE TO THE ARTS
Dorothy Humel Hovorka’s many contributions
to culture and the arts seemed to cry out for the establishment of a
special award. Such was the case in 1966 when the Cleveland Orchestra's
board of trustees, the Musical Arts Association, created for her its
Distinguished Service Award, which would henceforth recognize annually
a person or organization that had demonstrated extraordinary service to
the orchestra.
Hovorka’s love
affair with the Cleveland Orchestra and symphonic music went back to
1949, when, as a young piano prodigy who had studied with José Iturbi,
she made the first of six solo appearances with the orchestra, the last
in 1959 under guest conductor Arthur Fiedler.
A
longtime member of the Musical Arts Association (MAA), she led the
orchestra’s Women’s Committee from 1959 to 1961 and chaired the
biennial conference of the Association of Major Symphony Orchestra
Volunteers held in Cleveland in 1961. She subsequently became the only
Clevelander ever to lead this national organization. Among the many
visionary ideas she would bring to her decades-long service on the
MAA’s executive committee (1969–present) was the concert-preview
lectures given before symphony performances in Severance Hall, a
program that continues to this day.
When
the now-legendary Lake Erie Opera Theatre was launched in 1964, Hovorka
was tapped to be president, overseeing seven seasons of fully staged
opera productions with the Cleveland Orchestra in Severance Hall. The
organization offered, as well, Opera for Young People performances, 17
of which were presented in Cleveland parks during a citywide summer
arts festival she helped organize in 1967.
As
president of the Cleveland Music School Settlement (1972–74), Hovorka
spearheaded the establishment of the collaborative program that
continues to serve as a bridge connecting children and teachers with
University Circle’s cultural institutions. But it was no doubt her
chairmanship of the Michelson-Morley Centennial Celebration at Case
Western Reserve University (CWRU) in 1987 that was foremost in the
minds of the Cleveland Arts Prize in awarding Hovorka a Special
Citation for Distinguished Service to the Arts that year.
Commemorating
an historic experiment involving the nature of light carried out by two
scientists at Case School of Applied Science and Western Reserve
University, the six-month-long celebration featured 17 Nobel laureates
as speakers, five musical commissions (one premiered by the Cleveland
Orchestra) and the installation of a permanent light sculpture atop
Crawford Hall. Students from 300 schools in six counties took part in
six competitions—in violin, organ, art, poetry, physics and
chemistry. For her leadership of this impressive endeavor, for which
she helped to raise $1 million in underwriting, Hovorka was presented
with Case Western Reserve University's highest honor, the University
Medal.
She would be honored
again in 2000 for her extraordinary record of fund raising on behalf of
CWRU. Yet, even then, Hovorka was not ready to rest on her
well-deserved laurels. As part of an elite team of four heading up a
campaign to raise $50 million for endowments, operations and needed
capital improvements in CWRU's College of Arts and Sciences, she helped
raise almost $91 million.
—Dennis Dooley
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