Wicks married Robert Thomas in 1951. At the height of her career, she halted her career in order to raise her five children. Wicks later resumed her performing career intermittently and became a much sought-after teacher. She taught in a number of American faculties including
Louisiana State University, the
University of Michigan, and
Rice University. Wicks was invited to head the String Department at the Oslo Royal Academy in the early 1970s and was awarded a lifetime Professorship there. Many of the violinists of the leading Norwegian orchestras, including
Henning Kraggerud, were among her former students. In 1999, she was made a Knight 1st Class of the
Royal Norwegian Order of Merit for her contribution to music in that country. Wicks held the
Isaac Stern Chair at the
San Francisco Conservatory before retiring in 2005. Studio and concert recordings have been reissued on the
Music & Arts,
Biddulph and
Simax labels. Wicks died on November 25, 2020, at the age of 92. She had contracted
COVID-19 in her final year, but had tested negative for COVID by the time of her death. Her marriage to Robert Thomas ended in divorce. Her survivors include three of her children, Angela Thomas Jeffrey, Erik Thomas and Lise-Marie Thomas Wertanzl, and three grandchildren. Two of her children pre-deceased her, Philip Thomas (deceased in 2011) and Paul Thomas (deceased in 2017). ==Selected recordings==