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Stephanie Winters

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Stephanie Winters is an American cellist, living in Copenhagen, with a wide-ranging career as a keynote speaker, facilitator and wellbeing coach. Winters creates leadership-themed programs and has performed for organizations such as Lincoln Center, The World Bank, National Institutes of Health and Harvard University and acts as a workshop facilitator. She has performed and recorded with various musicians including Richie Havens, Enya, Dar Williams, Ellie Goulding, Paula Cole, Corrine Bailey Rae and The O'Jays. She has played on more than 100 CDs and toured extensively in the North America, Europe and Southeast Asia.

Education[edit]

Winters began her cello studies as a fourth grader in the Levittown public school music program and then attended the Pre-College Division of the Juilliard School. Winters earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in cello performance from the State University of New York at Purchase (Purchase College Conservatory of Music) and a Master of Arts from Columbia University in Music Education. She has taught instrumental performance at the New School (1987–93) and privately. Winters is also a certified Feldenkrais Method practitioner and personal trainer.

Career[edit]

From 1991-99, Winters performed in the alternative-folk duo The Nudes with Walter Parks. The Nudes released three CD albums: The Nudes (1993), Velvet Sofa (1996),[1] and Boomerang (1998), and licensed recordings to an HBO series. Billboard magazine described the duo's first CD as unlike "anything else on the airwaves."[2]

From 2004 to 2008, Winters and Parks toured as a trio with Richie Havens. Various venues included the Cannes Film Festival, Carnegie Hall, Monte Carlo Sporting Festival (Monaco), Chiasso Festate (Switzerland), Solidays (France) and Womad Festival (Australia, New Zealand). She played on Haven's CDs Grace of the Sun (2004) and Nobody Left to Crown (2008).

Winters has performed live on National Public Radio, BBC, CBC, Radio France, and Radio Switzerland. Her television appearances include Saturday Night Live, Regis and Kelly, Good Morning America and One Shot Not (Paris).

She also co-developed and taught the program 'Bach to the Future' for the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts Meet the Artist Schools Series with Paul Guzzone; and designed thematic concerts by the Stephanie Winters Cello Ensemble for the Center's Meet the Artist Custom Programs.[3]

Winters performed the inaugural concert of original songs with Dina Richardson at the David Rubenstein Atrium at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, New York, NY 2009. With Duncan McCargo, she was commissioned to write and perform a new production Titanic Tales: Stories of Courage and Cowardice,[4] at the David Rubenstein Atrium at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts on April 12, 2012. The production features spoken word passages from survivors' accounts, along with music originally performed on the ill-fated liner.

Winters is Founder, Artistic Director, Producer, and Cellist of the Bach Cello Suites Festival 300 Anniversary Celebration, a mobile festival, which previewed at the Sandler Center for the Performing Arts in Virginia Beach on October 23, 2019.[5] The Festival made its world premier at Weill Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall March 3, 2020 in New York City.[6] Winters reprised her Carnegie Hall performance of Bach's Fifth Cello Suite as a special guest artist with Atlanta Baroque Orchestra in June 2021. [7]

Recordings[edit]

Winter's solo debut CD, Through the Storm, was re-released in 2009 with two new tracks, "Mercy Street" by Peter Gabriel and "Magnolia" by Richie Havens. Other tracks include pieces by Béla Bartók, Miles Davis, Ornette Coleman, Carlos Paredes, Thomas A. Dorsey, and her brother James Winters, as well as two of her own compositions. Winters plays all cello parts (as many as 32 at once) on the CD. Producer Alan Williams engineered the CD and arranged several of the cuts.

Family life[edit]

Winters is married to Duncan McCargo, a university professor.[8]

References[edit]

  1. Review by Mike Joyce, The Nudes Unadorned Folk, Washington Post, 8 March 1996
  2. Billboard 4 December 1993
  3. Meet The Artist School Series, Meet the Artist School Series, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, Spring 2009
  4. Coming Up: Titanic Tales at Lincoln Center, ABC13, April 11, 2012
  5. Bach Cello Stuites Festival, Sander Center, October 23, 2019
  6. Carnegie Hall website March 3, 2020
  7. Atlanta Arts, June 8, 2021
  8. Rohrlich, Marianne (2011-09-23). "Splurging on Everything but the Dress". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-04-04.

Additional sources[edit]

External links[edit]


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