Fernand Halphen was the son of Georges Halphen, a diamond merchant, and of Henriette Antonia Stern (1836–1905), who was from the
Stern banking family. From the age of ten, he studied under the direction of
Gabriel Fauré before entering the
Paris Conservatory where he took a composition course taught by
Ernest Guiraud, who also taught
Paul Dukas,
Claude Debussy and
Erik Satie. After Guiraud's death in 1892, Halphen studied with
Jules Massenet, who also taught
Henri Rabaud,
Florent Schmitt,
Charles Koechlin and
Reynaldo Hahn. He won first prize for his fugue in 1895, and the next year won second place for the second Grand
Prix de Rome with his cantata
Mélusine, behind
Jules Mouquet and
Richard d'Ivry. Fernand Halphen is known principally as a composer. Among his notable works are the one-act opera
Le Cor Fleuri (libretto by
Ephraïm Mikhael and
André-Ferdinand Hérold), which debuted in the national theatre
Opéra-Comique, 10 May 1904, several symphonies, one of which was performed in Paris and in Monte Carlo, a suite for orchestra, the pantomime
Hagoseida, the ballet
Le Réveil du faune, some chamber music such as a sonata for violin and piano, works for organ as well as songs. Halphen served as a lieutenant in the thirteenth territorial infantry regiment during
World War I. Suffering from diphtheria contracted at the front, he was repatriated to Paris on 1 May 1917, and died on May 16.
Personal life On 15 February 1899, Fernand Halphen married (1878–1963). She also assembled an important collection of paintings including the works of
Monet,
Pissarro and of
Henri Rousseau, as well as the portrait of Fernand Halphen which was painted by
Renoir in 1880. The couple had one daughter, Henriette, born on 26 February 1911, and one son, Georges, born 9 March 1913. In 1995, Georges Halphen offered the portrait of his father, painted by Renoir, to the
Musée d’Orsay. It was to offer his wife a view which enchanted her, he said, that Fernand Halphen bought the house at la Chapelle-en-Serval, near
Chantilly (
Oise) and decided in 1908 to erect a country house in a wooded valley there: the
château Mont-Royal. His niece, Germaine (1884-1975) married
Baron Édouard de Rothschild of the prominent
Rothschild banking family of France. ==Halphen Foundation==