Mae Doelling Schmidt (néeMary Metzke; 22 May 1888 Chicago – 11 March 1965 Chicago) was an American virtuoso pianist, composer, clubwoman, and music educator from Chicago. She was on the faculty of the American Conservatory of Music.
Early life
Mae Doelling Schmidt, born Mary Metzke, was the youngest of four girls born to Julius (aka August) Metzke (surname also spelled Mätzke; 1847–1907) and Marie J. Schwechert (maiden; 1854–1892), both German immigrants from Prussia who married in Chicago on August 28, 1878. Mae's mother died when she was 4 years old.
Adoptee parents
Separated from her sisters when she was a toddler, Mae, when she was five, was adopted by German-born Chicagoans, Paul Wilhelm Doelling (1846-1909)[Notes 1] and Ida B. Doelling (née Ida B. Wolff; 1852–1911)[1][2][3] – who both immigrated to the United States in 1882. He was a cigar maker.[4] Paul and Ida Doelling also adopted Paula Hoffman in 1891.[5]
In 1904, while studying in Berlin, Dölling competed and won a Mendelssohn Prize in piano (one of four winning pianists). The prize included a stipend of 200 Deutsche Marks[10] (equivalent to about 1398 euros in 2021).
Career
Mae Doelling played piano in concerts and recitals, notably as a soloist with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the Women's Symphony Orchestra of Chicago, and the Milwaukee Symphony. She was a member of the Zukovsky Trio, with Alexander Zukovsky (1880–1942) (violin)[Notes 2] and Theodore du Moulin (1888–1978) (cello).[11] A 1922 report described Doelling as "forceful when necessary", but adding that "she relies on brains rather than physical strength to bring out the beauties of the music."[12] She often included her own compositions in her programs. Her piano compositions included "Two Studies" (1922), "Venetienne" (1939), "Swiss Music Box" (1939), "Romance" (1939), "Tarantella for 2 solo pianos."[13][14]
Mae Doelling Schmidt taught piano at the American Conservatory of Music.[15][16] One of her piano students, Mae Willems (née Mary J. Willems; 1902–1967), who was blind, went on to become a celebrated pianist, singer, and music educator in Chicago.[13][14] Doelling also gave presentations on the music of China and Latin America, to children and community groups.[17][18] She was an officer in the Illinois Federation of Women's Clubs,[7] and represented Chicago at a meeting of the National Federation of Music Clubs.[8]
Schmidt actually performed the concerto earlier, on March 3 1934, for a private event hosted by plant pathologist Fred Reuel Jones, PhD (1884–1956), and wife, Edith Jones (née Edith Katharine Seymour; 1896–1984), at the College Club in Madison, Wisconsin, for 75 guests that included her sister, Mrs. Chester Barlow (née Louise Theadora Metzke; 1885–1976) – the second youngest of the four.[19] The College Club at 12 East Gilman Street was the Madison branch of the American Association of University Women.
Personal life
On July 4 1922 Mae Doelling married musician Richard Walter Schmidt (1888–1945) in Chicago at her residence at Pine Lodge, 3616 Pine Grove Avenue in the Norwood Park neighborhood.[20] She died March 11, 1965 – age 76 – at the Illinois Masonic Hospital in Chicago. She was buried four days later at Arcadia Park Cemetery, Near Norwood Park. She was a widow when she died.[21][7]
^The "oe" in "Doelling" is a digraph (pair of characters) that represent the Germanic pronunciation for the umlaut o, or ö. The German spelling of Doelling is Dölling, which sometimes, in English, is transcribed as Dolling.
^Alexander Harry Zukovsky (1880–1942) was concertmaster of the Chicago Symphony for 18 years. He made his American debut with the Cincinnati Orchestra November 29, 1909, performing the TchaikovskyViolin Concerto, Leopold Stokowski conducting. The performance was also Stowkowski's American debut. ("Music Notes," Chicago Tribune, November 7, 1909, sec. 2, p. 4, col. 4; accessible viaNewspapers.com)
^Clayton Frick Summy (1852–1932), a native of Landisville, Pennsylvania, was a leading music publisher in Chicago.
^Josephine Spring Hancock Logan (née Josephone Hancock; 1862–1943) was a poet and wife of Frank Granger Logan (1851–1937), the namesake and benefactor of the Logan Medal of the Arts. Josephone was also the founder of the Society for Sanity in Art