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Allen Evan Shawn (born August 27, 1948)[2] is an American composer, pianist, educator, and author based in Vermont.

Key Information

His music

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Shawn began composing at the age of ten, but dates his mature work from 1977. He has written a dozen orchestral works, including a symphony, two piano concertos, a cello concerto, and a violin concerto; three chamber operas; five piano sonatas and many additional works for piano; and a large catalogue of chamber music, songs and choral music. Among Shawn's available recordings are several of chamber music, four CDs of piano music, including a CD devoted to his piano work by German pianist Julia Bartha, a piano concerto performed by Ursula Oppens with the Albany Symphony Orchestra under the direction of David Alan Miller, and the chamber opera The Music Teacher, with a libretto by his brother, Wallace Shawn.

As author

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Shawn is the author of a book about Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg, Arnold Schoenberg's Journey, and a book about Leonard Bernstein, Leonard Bernstein: An American Musician.

He is also the author of Wish I Could Be There: Notes from a Phobic Life, which examines his experiences with anxiety and panic disorder, as well as his relationship with his autistic twin sister Mary,[3] and Twin: A Memoir, also about Mary and his relationship with her.[4] He discussed Twin with Terry Gross on WHYY's Fresh Air on January 3, 2011.[5]

Personal life

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Shawn is a son of The New Yorker editor William Shawn, and the brother of the actor and playwright Wallace Shawn. His family is of Jewish background. He received a bachelor's degree from Harvard University, a master's degree from Columbia University, and studied in France with Nadia Boulanger.[6]

He teaches composition and music history at Bennington College and was formerly married to novelist Jamaica Kincaid, with whom he has a son, Harold, and a daughter, Annie.

He is married to pianist Yoshiko Sato, with whom he has a son.[2]

Books

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  • Arnold Schoenberg's Journey (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2002, ISBN 0374105901)
  • Wish I Could Be There: Notes from a Phobic Life (New York: Viking, 2007, ISBN 9780670038428)
  • Twin: A Memoir (New York: Viking, 2011, ISBN 9780670022373)
  • Leonard Bernstein: An American Musician (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2014, ISBN 9780300144284)
  • In the Realm of Tones: A Composer's Memoir (University of Rochester Press, 2025, ISBN 9781648251177)

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Allen Shawn (born August 27, 1948)[1] is an American composer, pianist, educator, and author, renowned for his extensive body of orchestral, chamber, and operatic works, as well as memoirs exploring family dynamics and personal psychological challenges.[2][3] Born in New York City to journalist Cecille Lyon and William Shawn, the longtime editor of The New Yorker, Shawn grew up in a culturally rich environment alongside his older brother, playwright and actor Wallace Shawn, and his fraternal twin sister, Mary, who was diagnosed with severe autism early in life.[4][5] His family's artistic milieu profoundly influenced his development, with Shawn beginning to compose music at age ten under the guidance of piano teachers including Frances Densmore and Peter Munz.[6] He attended the Dalton School and later spent formative summers at the Kinhaven Music School in Vermont from 1962 to 1965, where he studied clarinet and piano while emerging as a young composer.[3] Shawn pursued formal studies in composition at Harvard University and Columbia University, where he earned his degrees and worked with mentors such as Leon Kirchner, Earl Kim, Jack Beeson, and Nadia Boulanger during a stint in Paris.[2][3] In 1985, he relocated to Vermont to join the faculty of Bennington College, where he has taught music composition and performed as a pianist, contributing to the institution's innovative liberal arts program.[7] His compositional output includes a symphony, concertos for piano, violin, oboe, cello (two), and a double concerto for clarinet and cello; four chamber operas such as The Music Teacher (2002–2003); nine piano sonatas; and numerous works for chorus, voice, and chamber ensembles, published by outlets like Galaxy Music/E.C. Schirmer, Boosey & Hawkes, and the American Composers Alliance.[2][8] Beyond music, Shawn has authored five books, including the critically acclaimed Arnold Schoenberg’s Journey (2002), a study of the influential composer's life and work, and In the Realm of Tones (2025),[9] alongside personal memoirs Wish I Could Be There: Notes from a Phobic Life (2007), which details his struggles with agoraphobia, and Twin: A Memoir (2010), reflecting on his sister's condition and its impact on the family.[2][4] His recordings, featuring performers like pianist Ursula Oppens and the Albany Symphony Orchestra, underscore his contributions to contemporary American music.[2]

Early life and education

Family background

Allen Shawn was born on August 27, 1948, in New York City to William Shawn, the longtime editor of The New Yorker from 1952 to 1987, and Cecille Lyon Shawn, a journalist who had worked as a reporter for the Chicago Daily News and editor of a literary magazine before focusing on family life.[1][10] The couple had married in 1928 after meeting in Chicago, where both pursued early careers in journalism.[11] Shawn grew up in a family of three children, including an older brother, Wallace Shawn, who became a noted playwright and actor, and a twin sister, Mary, born the same year.[12][4] The siblings were raised in Manhattan's Upper East Side, immersed in an environment that emphasized intellectual pursuits and creativity.[13] The Shawn family was of Jewish heritage, though their observance was assimilated and understated, with few overt religious practices at home; however, this background influenced their cultural sensibilities, including an appreciation for Jewish humor and a subtle awareness of identity amid broader American intellectual life.[12][4] The household fostered an artistic and literary atmosphere, shaped by William Shawn's editorial influence at The New Yorker—which brought exposure to prominent writers and artists—and Cecille Shawn's journalistic roots, encouraging a home life that valued the arts, politics, and nature.[12][13] This setting provided early immersion in Manhattan's cultural scene through family connections to literary and artistic circles.[4]

Musical training and academic career

Shawn began his formal musical training as a child with piano lessons from Francis Dillon, a teacher who encouraged his early interest in composition; he started writing music at the age of 10.[14] He continued piano studies with Emilie Harris during summers.[14] Growing up in a family exposed to artistic pursuits, Shawn attended the Dalton School in Manhattan before boarding at the Putney School in Vermont for high school.[3] From 1962 to 1965, Shawn spent his summers at Kinhaven Music School in Weston, Vermont, an immersive environment that significantly advanced his skills as a composer and chamber musician.[3] There, under directors David and Dorothy Stout, he participated in intensive training that emphasized collaborative performance and creative development, laying a foundation for his later work.[14] Shawn pursued higher education in music at Harvard University, where he earned a bachelor's degree while studying composition with Earl Kim and Leon Kirchner.[14] He then obtained a master's degree in music composition from Columbia University, where he studied with Jack Beeson; he also worked with Nadia Boulanger during a stint in Paris.[14][2] After completing his graduate studies, Shawn established himself professionally in New York as a pianist from 1972 to 1985, performing in Broadway orchestral pits and composing incidental music for theater productions and modern dance companies.[1][15] This period marked his transition from student to working musician, blending performance with early compositional opportunities in applied settings.[14]

Musical career

Compositions

Allen Shawn has composed a large catalog encompassing orchestral, chamber, vocal, and piano music, as well as scores for ballet and theater.[16] His works include approximately a dozen orchestral pieces, such as a symphony, a piano concerto, a violin concerto, an oboe concerto, two cello concertos, and a double concerto for clarinet and cello, alongside music for string orchestra and larger ensembles.[2] He has also written three chamber operas—In the Dark (1976, libretto by Wallace Shawn), The Music Teacher (1983, libretto by Wallace Shawn), and The Ant and the Grasshopper (1999)—along with songs, choral works, and incidental music, including the score for his brother Wallace Shawn's film My Dinner with Andre (1981).[17][18] Shawn's compositional style blends tonal traditions with modernist elements, drawing on influences from 20th-century composers like Stravinsky, Schoenberg, and Bartók, as well as jazzy improvisation; this approach reflects his studies with teachers including Leon Kirchner, Earl Kim, Nadia Boulanger, and Jack Beeson.[2][14] Among his piano works, which form a substantial portion of his output, Shawn has composed ten sonatas, beginning with Piano Sonata No. 1 in 1982—a sprawling, four-movement piece characterized by its youthful energy and structural ambition.[19] His latest, Piano Sonata No. 10 (2025), is dedicated to composer Elizabeth Wright and features movements like a majestic opening, a nocturne evoking a music box, and a lively finale.[20] Other notable piano compositions include etudes, improvisations, and multi-movement suites that explore a range of expressive techniques, from lyrical introspection to rhythmic vitality. In chamber music, Shawn's oeuvre spans ensembles from duos to octets, with recent post-2020 works such as Oboe Chamber Music (2023), including pieces like Summer Pages and a Partita for oboe and strings, demonstrating his continued innovation in intimate settings.[21] Shawn's compositional evolution traces from his early mature works in the late 1970s, which often incorporated dramatic narrative elements seen in his chamber operas, to a broader exploration of orchestral forms in the 1980s and 1990s. His relocation to Bennington, Vermont, in 1985 marked a shift toward more introspective and nature-inspired compositions, influenced by the region's landscape and community; for instance, Five Orchestral Scenes (2002) dedicates each movement to a notable Vermont figure, evoking local character through vivid orchestration.[14][22] This period onward emphasizes chamber and piano genres, reflecting a deepening focus on personal expression and technical refinement amid his teaching at Bennington College.[2]

Performances, recordings, and awards

Shawn has performed as a pianist, interpreting both his own compositions and works by other composers, often in collaboration with colleagues and students. Since 1985, he has served on the faculty of Bennington College in Vermont, where he teaches composition and piano, mentoring students in performance and creative practice.[7][8] In the 1970s and 1980s, while based in New York City, Shawn composed and performed incidental music for modern dance companies, such as the Lucinda Childs Dance Company at the Joyce Theater, and for theater productions including those at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club. His orchestral works have received premieres in Vermont and other locations, including his Cello Concerto No. 2 performed by the Berkshire Symphony at Williams College and recent chamber performances at Bennington College featuring student collaborators. In 2025, his Piano Sonata No. 10 premiered, dedicated to pianist Elizabeth Wright.[14][23][24][20] Shawn's music has been documented through several recordings on Albany Records, including Five Piano Sonatas (2018), featuring five of his piano sonatas performed by himself and guests; Cello Music (2016), showcasing works for cello duo, quartet, and solo with piano; and Piano Works, Vol. III (2014), which includes etudes and other solo pieces. Additional releases encompass chamber music albums such as Fantasia and Other Pieces (2020) and earlier volumes of piano music.[2][25][26][27] Among his professional recognitions, Shawn received the 1995 Goddard Lieberson Fellowship from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, supporting his compositional work, and the 2001 Academy Award in Music from the same institution. His teaching at Bennington has influenced generations of musicians, with reflections on music education appearing in his later memoir Wish I Could Be There.[7][14]

Literary career

Biographies

Allen Shawn has authored two notable biographical works on prominent 20th-century composers, drawing on his background as a composer to provide insightful analyses of their lives and music.[28] His first book, Arnold Schoenberg's Journey, published in 2002 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux, explores the life of the Austrian-American composer Arnold Schoenberg, focusing on his personal struggles, exile from Nazi Germany in 1933, and evolution from tonal to atonal and twelve-tone composition techniques.[29][28] The work combines biographical narrative with detailed examinations of Schoenberg's early self-taught years in Vienna, his time as a cabaret composer in Berlin, and later American period, emphasizing how personal and historical upheavals shaped his innovative musical language.[29] Shawn's research incorporates archival materials such as photographs and self-portraits, alongside his own perspective as a composer trained under Schoenberg's pupil Leon Kirchner, to humanize Schoenberg and clarify the expressive intent behind his often-misunderstood atonal methods.[28] In 2014, Shawn published Leonard Bernstein: An American Musician with Yale University Press as part of the Jewish Lives series, offering a comprehensive portrait of the American conductor, composer, and educator Leonard Bernstein's multifaceted career.[30] The biography traces Bernstein's rise from his Boston upbringing to leading the New York Philharmonic, while delving into his compositions ranging from Broadway hits like West Side Story to symphonic works such as Kaddish and Chichester Psalms, and highlights the influence of his Jewish heritage on pieces drawing from synagogue traditions and Hebrew texts.[31] Shawn's analysis is grounded in extensive archival research and interviews with contemporaries, presenting Bernstein as a bridge between popular and classical music amid the cultural shifts of mid-20th-century America.[30] Both biographies share recurring themes, particularly the interplay between personal identity and musical creation, as well as the experiences of Jewish artists navigating 20th-century upheavals in American and European classical music contexts.[30][28] Shawn examines how Schoenberg's exile and Bernstein's cultural dualities informed their innovations, underscoring the role of inspiration over mere technical innovation in their legacies.[29] These works have received praise for their accessibility to non-specialists and depth of musical insight; Arnold Schoenberg's Journey won the ASCAP Deems Taylor Award and was commended for offering a fresh, less ideological view of atonal techniques, while Leonard Bernstein: An American Musician was described as an "excellent" and "engrossing" balanced portrait that vividly revives both the man and his music.[32][33][30]

Memoirs

Allen Shawn's memoirs offer introspective explorations of his personal challenges, family dynamics, and artistic life, blending autobiography with broader reflections on mental health, disability, and creativity. In Wish I Could Be There: Notes from a Phobic Life (2007, Viking), Shawn chronicles his lifelong struggles with severe anxiety disorders, including agoraphobia, claustrophobia, and fears of heights and water, which have profoundly shaped his daily existence and limited his travel and public engagements.[34] The book delves into family secrecy as a contributing factor, particularly the institutionalization of his autistic twin sister Mary at age eight, an event that triggered his separation anxiety and was shrouded in silence within the household, alongside revelations about his father William Shawn's extramarital affair.[35] Shawn examines coping mechanisms such as medication like Xanax and avoidance behaviors, while interweaving scientific insights into the neurobiology of fear, portraying his phobic life not as defeat but as a navigable reality that coexists with professional success in music.[34] Shawn's second memoir, Twin: A Memoir (2010, Viking), centers on his twin sister Mary, diagnosed with autism and severe intellectual disabilities, whose removal from the family home at age eight created a profound sense of absence and unresolved grief.[36] The narrative reconstructs the emotional ripple effects on the Shawn family, exploring themes of genetic predisposition—Shawn speculates on possible hereditary links between Mary's condition and his own anxiety—and the era's institutional practices that prioritized separation over integration.[37] Through poignant recollections of rare visits to Mary's care facilities and reflections on sibling bonds severed by circumstance, the book humanizes the hidden lives of those with disabilities in prominent families, emphasizing compassion amid the pain of disconnection.[36] In his most recent work, In the Realm of Tones: A Composer's Memoir (2025, University of Rochester Press), Shawn reflects on his evolution as a composer over six decades, beginning with early pieces at age ten and encompassing works for theater, dance, and concert halls, alongside his 40-year teaching tenure at Bennington College.[38] The memoir intertwines artistic influences—such as studies with Leon Kirchner and Nadia Boulanger, and encounters with figures like J.D. Salinger—with personal themes of social class privilege in mid-20th-century New York, the challenges of aging, loneliness, political engagement, and the role of music education in personal growth.[38] Shawn navigates the fragmentation of modern music while affirming composition as a vital thread connecting his inner world to broader human experiences. These memoirs have been widely acclaimed for their unflinching honesty and literary depth. Wish I Could Be There earned praise for its revelatory examination of mental health stigma, described as "brave, eccentric and utterly compelling" by Michiko Kakutani in The New York Times.[34] Twin was lauded for illuminating the familial impacts of autism, with Kakutani calling it an "extraordinary... unsparing but deeply compassionate inquiry."[39] Early responses to In the Realm of Tones highlight its "beautifully written, charming, honest and melancholy" prose, positioning it as a thought-provoking blend of art and autobiography.[40]

Personal life

Family relationships

Allen Shawn's relationship with his father, William Shawn, the longtime editor of The New Yorker, was marked by a mix of admiration and tension. He respected his father's editorial precision and intellectual rigor, which influenced the family's emphasis on verbal expression, yet this was complicated by pervasive secrecy, including William's long-term affair with journalist Lillian Ross that began in the early 1950s and was not revealed to his sons until they were in their thirties.[41][42][4] This disclosure eroded trust and highlighted the emotional reserve in their bond, though they shared a close musical connection, with William playing piano to foster family unity.[41] Shawn's mother, Cecille Lyon Shawn, played a stabilizing role amid the family's challenges, offering protection and affection despite the strains of her husband's affair and their daughter's needs. She supported the difficult decision to institutionalize Mary at age eight, driven by overwhelming caregiving demands, but later expressed profound joy during a rare 1999 visit from Mary, awakening from a period of withdrawal with "amazement, wonder, and joy."[41][42] Her anxious demeanor and efforts to maintain normalcy underscored her commitment to family cohesion, even as she navigated personal conflicts.[43] The most profound family dynamic for Shawn centered on his twin sister, Mary, diagnosed with severe autism around age two and institutionalized at age eight, leading to lifelong separation and minimal contact, limited to annual visits. This early parting inflicted a deep emotional toll, evoking guilt, loss akin to an "unmourned death," and suppressed grief that Shawn later linked to his own anxieties, with the twinship becoming a taboo subject within the family.[41][42][5] Despite the distance, Shawn made consistent efforts to visit her, reflecting enduring concern amid the pain of her isolation.[44] Shawn maintained a close bond with his older brother, Wallace Shawn, a playwright and actor, rooted in their shared intellectual heritage from their father's world. Their relationship included collaborative creative work, such as co-authoring the play-opera The Music Teacher, which premiered Off-Broadway in 2006, blending Wallace's writing with Allen's composition.[45] This partnership provided a counterpoint to the family's isolating secrecy, though Allen often felt like an only child after Mary's departure and Wallace's independent path.[41][44] Shawn was married to author Jamaica Kincaid from 1979 to 2001, with whom he has two children. He later married artist and choreographer Yoshiko Chuma.[1][46] The Shawn family's culture of secrecy—encompassing Mary's condition, William's affair, and unspoken emotional struggles—profoundly shaped Allen's worldview, fostering a sense of isolation and driving his turn to music as a nonverbal outlet for processing these dynamics. This environment of denial and high expectations for normalcy influenced his creativity, emphasizing themes of hidden truths and familial bonds in his work.[41][42][43]

Health challenges

Allen Shawn began experiencing severe anxiety and phobias during his teenage years, which evolved into agoraphobia that significantly restricted his ability to travel.[47] These phobias include fears of heights, open spaces, bridges, tunnels, subways, elevators, and large crowds, leading him to avoid flying and situations that feel uncontrollable or isolating.[48] As a result, his daily life outside familiar environments often feels like navigating a restrictive maze, limiting spontaneous outings or long-distance trips.[46] The onset of Shawn's anxiety has been linked to familial stressors, particularly the institutionalization of his twin sister, Mary, who was diagnosed with autism at a young age and removed from the family home when they were eight years old.[49] This event created a profound sense of loss and secrecy within the family, which Shawn believes triggered his phobias by internalizing the trauma.[49] While direct genetic connections between his anxiety and his sister's autism remain speculative, the shared twin experience and family dynamics have been cited as contributing factors to his mental health challenges.[4] To manage his conditions, Shawn has engaged in long-term psychotherapy, medication, and lifestyle adjustments, including relocating to rural Vermont in 1985 for a more stable, low-stress environment.[49][7] His home in Vermont provides a sense of security, allowing him to limit exposure to triggering situations while maintaining professional commitments nearby.[46] These approaches have helped him cope with symptoms over decades, though complete resolution has not occurred.[49] Shawn's health challenges have influenced his career by fostering a preference for localized teaching roles, such as his long-term position on the music faculty at Bennington College in Vermont, rather than extensive touring or performances requiring air travel.[6] This arrangement enables consistent composition and education without the strain of unfamiliar settings. He has reflected that his fears, while limiting, have paradoxically shaped his creative process, enhancing introspection in his musical output.[49] As of 2025, Shawn continues to manage his anxiety through ongoing therapy and medication, reporting gradual improvements that support his productivity, as evidenced by recent compositions such as Piano Sonata No. 10, premiered that year and dedicated to pianist Elizabeth Wright.[20] This work demonstrates his sustained ability to channel personal experiences into art despite persistent challenges.[20]

References

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