The Florida Symphony Orchestra was founded in 1950 by Helen Ryan and Joy Hawley, with an initial projected budget of $30,000. Other notable early FSO supporters were Harrison Hollander and contralto,
Charlotte Peege. The FSO's first music director was Paris-born conductor
Yves Chardon. Helen Ryan was the first President of the FSO. Ryan was a visionary, with a "battling spirit," who was much beloved by her orchestra and the Central Florida community. At her funeral at
St. James Catholic Cathedral in downtown Orlando, musicians of the FSO, under the baton of
Pavle Dešpalj, played a deeply moving musical tribute in Ryan's honor. The FSO was the primary force in the creation of the
Florida Symphony Youth Orchestras. The FSO likewise played a critical role in the creation of the Orlando Opera. Starting in 1958, the FSO sponsored opera gala benefit concerts in Orlando that over time evolved into the full opera productions presented by
Orlando Opera.
Expansion and Growing Pains Over the decades, the FSO continued to expand. In 1971, the FSO performed 73 concerts and its budget had grown to $370,000.
The Ford Foundation Symphony Program Grant - 1966-1976 The FSO was among the 61 American symphony orchestras that participated in the unprecedented ten-year Ford Foundation Symphony Program. To encourage the growth and stability of symphony orchestras across the USA and Puerto Rico, the Ford Foundation invested $80.2 million to: (1) improve orchestra artistic quality, (2) strengthen orchestra finances, and (3) raise the income and prestige of the music profession in the U.S. The Ford grant, part of the "Big Bang" of music philanthropy, represented the single largest gift program ever devised for the arts. The Symphony Program infused cash into orchestra budgets throughout the nation resulting in increased orchestra seasons and musician wages. By the late 1970s, to meet its increased operating costs, the FSO - like many orchestras - had depleted its endowment. The FSO reached a financial crisis during the 1979-1980 season. The FSO was unable to make payroll and most musicians were released from their positions due to the FSO's inability to pay them. The collective bargaining agreement at that time permitted the FSO to "... let musicians go in case of a financial squeeze." To support a full-time professional orchestra going forward, however, the FSO would need stronger corporate support and a quality performing arts facility to replace the outdated Carr Performing Arts Centre, known for its poor acoustics and inconvenient physical location.
Music Directors Source: •
Yves Chardon 1950-1954 •
Henry Mazer • Hermann Hertz •
Pavle Dešpalj 1970- 1981 (
see reference in
Orlando Sentinel article to Dešpalj's resignation from the FSO in 1981) •
Sidney Rothstein 1981-1985 • Kenneth Jean 1986-1993 In 1986, the FSO auditioned four conductors to succeed Sidney Rothstein as FSO Music Director: Kenneth Jean,
Jahja Ling,
Andrew Litton and
George Manahan Associate and Resident Conductors • Carter Nice • Yuri Krasnopolski 1966-1967 • Joseph Kreines • Maria Tunicka 1973-1975 • Alfred Savia 1978-1985 • Michael Krajewski 1986- • Andrews Sill
FSO Musicians FSO Board of Directors and Administration Executive Directors • Robert Sanders • Robert Gross • Robert Sandla • George Alexsovich • Benjamin Greene == Concerts ==