Alice Samter was born in
Berlin to a middle-class family. She trained and worked as an accountant while studying
piano, improvisation, choral work and school music at Klindworth-Scharwenka Conservatory and the Academy of Music in Berlin. In 1945 she received a degree in music and became a teacher in the
Spandau schools where she began to compose school opera. After she retired from teaching in 1970, she became a composer full-time. She was a member of several organizations of composers, including GEDOK Berlin, the International Working Group on Women and Music and the International League of Woman Composers (USA). Her work has been performed internationally, and in 1988 she was awarded the
Federal Cross of Merit. In 1999 she established the Alice Samter Foundation at the
Berlin University of the Arts to support music students at the university. She also donated funds to the
Berlin State Library for the purchase of
Clara Schumann and
Fanny Mendelssohn manuscripts. Samter's family home was destroyed by a bomb during the war and she moved with her mother and adopted sister to an apartment in
Charlottenburg where she continued to live for the rest of her life. She was the subject of documentary films through
West German Broadcasting (WDR), and her papers are housed in the Berlin State Library. She wrote her last song in 2003. ==Works==