Donna
Grescoe: ‘Little
Magic Fiddler’ Inspiration to Many
By Rob Williams
Winnipeg
Free Press,
August 23, 2012
A musical prodigy whose moves were
chronicled on the front pages of the Winnipeg Free Press in the 1930s
and ‘40s has died.
Donna Grescoe died
August 17 in Richmond, BC, at 84 following a six-month battle with cancer, said
her sister, Lorraine Grescoe, who had lived next door to her sister since 1998.
“Donna came here for a holiday, and she loved it so much when the house next
door to me went up for sale, I asked if she wanted to buy it and she said ‘Yes,
immediately,’ “ said Lorraine, 76.
Donna Grescoe was
born in Winnipeg in 1927 and began playing the violin when she was five. By the
time she was eight, she had appeared in a vaudeville show at Winnipeg’s Beach
Theatre, according to her biography in The Canadian Encyclopedia and
confirmed by her sister.
In 1938, Grescoe
received a $5,000 scholarship from the American Conservatory of Music in
Chicago and moved there to study music. Much of the trip was funded by a trust
established following a fundraising concert in Winnipeg. She continued her
studies in New York and made the news for recitals at The Town Hall on Feb. 3,
1947, and Carnegie Hall a year later. “Not only is she already a mistress of
her instrument, but she had a sure sense of style and her interpretations gave
promise of still deeper insight into the future,” wrote New York Times
critic Ross Parmenter of The Town Hall performance.
Grescoe spent more
than 10 years in New York, where she studied and used it as a home base for
national tours. During a job in a resort, she met her future husband, Bjorn
Gullichsen. In 1951, Canadian children’s author Lyn Cook wrote a book about
Grescoe’s life called The Little Magic Fiddler. She performed on the Ed
Sullivan Show in September 1955, after the television host discovered her
at the Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto.
Grescoe was a soloist
for most of her career but also played with the Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra
following her move back to Winnipeg in the 1960s with her husband and son. She
became a music teacher and was a founding member of the Manitoba Conservatory
of Music & Arts in 1984, where she taught until moving to Richmond. The
Conservatory awards an annual scholarship in her name for junior string
students in Grades 1-4.