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Thursday, July 17, 2025
Polymath is defined as one who has mastered a minimum of three subjects
Stanford: Philosophy, Undergrad; Brown: Creative Writing and English Literature Masters; Columbia: MBA Finance; Penn: Masters in Positive Psychology; and MFA in Creative Writing at Columbia
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Tuesday, April 1, 2025
Friday, March 21, 2025
Mover and Shaker Picture of the Week: #MoverandShaker #GeorgiaShreve Awarded Esteemed 2025 Spirit of Wagner Award!
#NewYorkNotes #Nightlight #WhomYouKnow #MoverandShaker #GeorgiaShreve Awarded Esteemed 2025 Spirit of Wagner Award! Congratulations Georgia!!!! A Smashing Success, This Private VIP event took place at The University Club of New York on Wednesday, March 19, 2025 celebrating Shreve’s prolific career as a composer, writer, playwright, and producer
Award-Winning Composer Mover and Shaker, our friend Georgia Shreve
GRAMMY® award winning soprano and President of Boston Wagner Society, Jane Eaglen
Multi-GRAMMY®-nominated tenor Roy Hage (@roythetenor)
The Boston Wagner Society has announced Georgia Shreve as the recipient of its inaugural Spirit of Wagner Award, honoring her extraordinary contributions to the arts. This private VIP event took place at The University Club of New York on Wednesday, March 19, celebrating Shreve’s prolific career as a composer, writer, playwright, and producer. Whom You Know was honored to attend and we absolutely love and admire Georgia, who has earned accolades since her music was first featured on Whom You Know in 2011 and when she was featured as a Mover and Shaker in the same year. She is the quintessential definition of excellence, personified. She was featured in 2013 as an Admirable Artist, in 2019 with her fabulous Carnegie Hall concert and in 2022 with her Lincoln Center hit.
HONORING A VISIONARY ARTIST AND ADVOCATE FOR WOMEN IN THE ARTS
A pioneering interdisciplinary artist, Georgia Shreve’s career spans over four decades, with performances of her compositions at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, and other renowned venues. Her literary works have appeared in The New Yorker and beyond, and she has been a champion for women in the arts, creating opportunities and employing hundreds of artists through her production company, Ideation Productions.
Shreve’s work frequently centers on the lives and struggles of women, a rarity in classical music and opera. From ancient female figures to modern trailblazers, her operas and literary works explore themes of resilience, identity, and empowerment.
The Spirit of Wagner Award recognizes artists who embody Richard Wagner’s vision of Gesamtkunstwerk—the total work of art—seamlessly blending multiple disciplines into a singular artistic force. As a composer, playwright, poet, and novelist, Shreve epitomizes this ideal, making her a historic first honoree.
Gerard Meagher, President Old Town Bar and Restaurant Corporation, Peachy Deegan, Mover and Shaker Composer Georgia Shreve Esteemed 2025 Spirit of Wagner Award Winner and Mover and Shaker Mitzi Perdue
This exclusive evening will bring together luminaries from opera, literature, and the performing arts to celebrate a woman whose creative genius has shaped the artistic landscape and it was a huge smashing success.
ABOUT BOSTON WAGNER SOCIETY
The Boston Wagner Society is dedicated to preserving and celebrating the legacy of Richard Wagner, fostering appreciation for his works, and supporting artists who exemplify his artistic ideals. Under the leadership of Jane Eaglen, the society is expanding its mission with the launch of a biannual festival with orchestra, ensuring Wagner’s influence continues to inspire future generations.
ABOUT GEORGIA SHREVE, HONOREE
Georgia Shreve is a distinguished composer, writer, playwright, and poet whose multifaceted talents have earned acclaim across the arts. With degrees from Stanford, Brown, Columbia, and the University of Pennsylvania, she seamlessly blends literature, music, and theater.
Her works have been performed at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, and London’s Royal Over-Seas League, while her writing has appeared in The New Yorker, The New Republic, and The New Criterion. The New York Times praised her music as a “psychologically pointed setting” of Eliot’s "Prufrock". She is also the founder of Ideation Productions, developing talent in film, music, and theater.
Shreve’s compositions span opera, orchestral works, and multimedia art, often integrating visual elements by artists like Dalí and Hockney. Recent works include "Lavinia" and "Anna Komnene," performed at Alice Tully Hall, featuring some of opera’s top voices with the Czech National Symphony Orchestra.
Her latest projects include "Lives of a Woman", a song cycle for soprano and orchestra, and "Requiem for the 20th Century: Visions and Voices", a 10-part oratorio exploring history’s darkest moments. A true polymath, Shreve continues to push artistic boundaries, inspiring generations of creators.
ARTIST BIOS
JANE EAGLEN, SOPRANO
Jane Eaglen has earned worldwide recognition as one of the most formidable dramatic sopranos of her generation. Her extensive repertoire includes commanding performances with the New York Philharmonic under Zubin Mehta, Chicago Symphony under Daniel Barenboim, and Boston Symphony Orchestra under Bernard Haitink. Beyond her Grammy Award-winning recording of "Tannhäuser", her discography includes acclaimed solo albums for Sony Classical featuring works by Wagner, Bellini, Strauss, and Mozart and Bellini’s Norma with Ricardo Muti. A dedicated educator, Eaglen serves on the faculty of New England Conservatory and is the founder and artistic director of the Boston Wagner Institute, as well as serving as the President of the Boston Wagner Society.
ROY HAGE, TENOR
A multi-Grammy-nominated tenor, Roy Hage made his LA Opera debut this season in Mary Kouyoumdjian’s "Adoration". Born in war-torn Beirut, he moved alone to the U.S. at 16 to pursue opera, later earning recognition for his “uncommonly beautiful voice” (Musical America) and “haunting” performances (TheaterScene.net). A champion of new works, Roy has collaborated with numerous Pulitzer Prize and Grammy-winning contemporary composers while performing traditional principal roles in more than 40 operas, including "The Tales of Hoffmann", "Roméo et Juliette", "Pelléas et Mélisande", "Candide", "The Rake’s Progress", "La clemenza di Tito", "Manon", and many more.
KRISTIN YOUNG, SOPRANO
Praised as “fantastic” (The Toronto Star) and for her “masterful vocal control” (The Boston Musical Intelligencer), Kristin Young has performed at Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center’s Rose Theater, and The Metropolitan Opera. This season, she debuts at the Harris Theater in Chicago in "Treemonisha" and performed "Knoxville: Summer of 1915" with the Idaho State-Civic Symphony. She has also appeared as Micaëla in "La tragédie de Carmen" and Zenobia in "Radamisto".
MICHAEL SLATTERY, TENOR
Known for his interpretive originality and luminous voice, Michael Slattery has performed leading roles at the Théâtre du Châtelet in Paris, Staatsoper Berlin, Opéra de Lyon, and Festival d’Aix-en-Provence. His collaborations include performances with the New York Philharmonic, Philadelphia Orchestra, and National Symphony at the Kennedy Center. His recordings include Handel’s "Saul" with René Jacobs, "Acis and Galatea" with Nicholas McGegan, and his solo albums The Irish Heart and Secret and Divine Signs.
SAMANTHA NAHRA, ZWISCHENFACH
A dramatic Zwischenfach soprano, Samantha Nahra is known for her powerful, flexible voice and passionate performances. A strong advocate for new music and accessibility in the arts, she has premiered operatic works with Opera on Tap and was recently featured in Classical Singer Magazine for her work on dyslexia and music learning. Samantha has performed roles including Third Norn (Götterdämmerung), Donna Anna (Don Giovanni), and Micaëla (La tragédie de Carmen), and has been a finalist and award recipient in multiple vocal competitions. She is an active member of Opera America’s Education & Community Engagement Network.
Tuesday, May 3, 2022
#WhomYouKnowTopTen by @ManhattanPeachy #PeachyDeegan #May2022
Wednesday, April 27, 2022
#MoverandShakerPictureoftheWeek #GeorgiaShreve #CourageousWomenofAntiquity #MitziPerdue #PeachyDeegan
Mover and Shaker Georgia Shreve (center black dress)
Peachy Deegan with Mover and Shaker Georgia Shreve and Mover and Shaker Mitzi Perdue
Take a bow, Georgia!
The boundless creativity of Mover and Shaker Georgia Shreve was showcased last night in Lincoln Center at Alice Tully Hall with an elite level of talent including eight soloists and the Philharmonia of New York. Georgia has proved that her capability to weave a plot so succinctly in the Libretto art form adapted from Lavinia by Ursula K. Le Guin and The Aeneid by Virgil is as powerful as her widely acclaimed incredible musical prowess. Her unique vision to marry these is unparalleled in the arts today and complete with exciting crescendos and soothing decrescendos these inspirational stories of women were enjoyed by those with the finest taste in Manhattan last night.
Bravo Georgia!
Read more...
Tuesday, April 5, 2022
#NewYorkNotes #UpcomingNightlight #MoverandShaker #GeorgiaShreve #Composer Courageous Women of Antiquity World Premiere & Recording CONCERT - One Night Only Tuesday, April 26, 2022 7:30 PM Lincoln Center, Alice Tully Hall, NYC
Courageous Women of Antiquity
World Premiere & Recording
CONCERT - One Night Only
Tuesday, April 26, 2022
7:30 PM
Lincoln Center, Alice Tully Hall, NYC
CD to be released 2021-22 Season
Two semi-operatic oratorios pay tribute to wise and strong women of antiquity. In the case of Lavinia, conceived by Virgil but fleshed out by the novelist Ursula Le Guin, she stands up against kings and threats of war to marry Aeneus, the man she has chosen. In the case of Anna, she made of her life a testimony not just to her father, but to history, education, and the potential power of women.
Both texts are partially inspired by and styled after Homer’s Iliad, with the Aeneid and the Alexiad even using parallel names.
April 26, 2022 Concert
CAST
Lavinia/Anna Komnene - Wendy Bryn Harmer
Aeneas/Bryennius - Richard Troxell
Latinus/John - Matthew Anchel
Virgil/Alexios - Ben Edquist
Amata/Anna Delucina - Sofia Selowsky
Turnus/Constantine - Alexander McKissick
Irene - Jaqueline Bolier
Maria - Larisa Martinez
Conductor - Steven Mercurio

Top Row: Harmer; Troxell; Anchel; Edquist;
Bottom Row: Selowsky; McKissick; Bolier; Martinez
LINER NOTES
Anna Komnene
Anna Komnene was the author of the Alexiad , a ten volume history of her era of Byzantine history. She was born in 1083 in Constantinople, the first born child of Emperor Alexios, on whom her history is focused, and who reigned over the vast Byzantine empire from 1081-1118. Anna was a princess, scholar, physician, and a serious historian.
Almost a millennium since it was written, Anna Komnene’s Alexiad is still very much in print and stands as perhaps the most reliable history of her period and the only Greek source on the 1st crusade. Likely the first European female historian, she was a woman of extraordinary education, dedication, and intelligence. The Alexiad is considered a masterpiece of literary and historical writing and an exemplar of Thucydides. Anna was also accomplished in medicine and attended her father as he was dying. Anna portrays her family as supportive, loving and close. Alexios put great faith in the strength and wisdom of women, granting his mother and later his wife, power to reign in his frequent absences and designating Anna as his successor.
Anna is perhaps the earliest model of an intellectual woman balancing writing and family (Kolovou). She may stand as the most highly educated woman not only of her time, but of history before her. This story embodies a tribute to the power and value of education.
Anna was the emperor’s first-born child and at her birth he declared her the heir to his throne. But, as he lay dying, her younger brother John stole his imperial ring and, with a combination of trickery and violence, took over the royal palace and the imperial army. He then deprived Anna and her mother of all their assets and banished them to a convent.
For centuries male historians maintained that Anna had attempted to murder her brother to obtain the throne. But recently historians have proven her innocence—it took almost a millennium to clear her name. Shreve has distilled this fascinating history into a poetic libretto. A video montage of the rich and glorious artwork of the Byzantine period provides an inspiring canvas for imagining Anna’s colorful life.
Lavinia
This oratorio is a feminist take on the Aeneid focused on the third woman in Aeneas’s life, Lavinia. As Virgil was dying when he was writing this final section of the book, her presence is somewhat limited. However, Ursula Le Guin, the prizewinning author of 14 brilliant books, has in her novel reconceived Lavinia in a more prominent and assertive role, distilled into a libretto by Ms. Shreve.
Lavinia is the only daughter of King Latinus of Latium and is pursued by many suitors who wish to take over their kingdom. Aeneas is urged by an omen to leave Dido and go to Latium to found Rome. This work brings to life the romance between Lavinia and Aeneas and their conflict with King Turnus, her aggressive suitor, who demands war to win her hand as a bride.
Shreve has merged Virgil’s original text with that of the novel to create a vivid musical vision of this story. The beautiful and extensive artwork of prominent artist Barnaby Fitzgerald (son of Robert Fitzgerald) the distinguished world-renowned translator of the Aeneid, features classical imagery re-conceived with a contemporary vision. A projected video montage of this work provides a vivid backdrop to the musical translation and embodiment of the story.

International conductor Steven Mercurio conducts both the concert and recording
Visit Lincoln Center’s website to purchase tickets for the April 26, 2022 concert.
More details on the recording will be shared here in the near future.
***
About Georgia
New York-based American composer Georgia Shreve is a respected contemporary artist. As a composer, Shreve's creative voice, passion for music, words and visual imagery, combined with her interest in poignant, timeless themes and exploring the nature of relationships, has resulted in a growing body of compelling, dynamic works for orchestra, voice and small ensemble. Her settings of her original texts and texts by renowned poets and writers have been presented and performed by the Manhattan Contemporary Chamber Ensemble, and singers and musicians who regularly perform on top orchestral, operatic, Off-Broadway and Broadway stages. Having had her music performed at Carnegie Hall's Weill and Zankel Halls, Cami Hall, Steinway Hall, and National Sawdust in New York City and at the UK's Royal Over-Seas League in London, Georgia Shreve's work makes its Lincoln Center debut with "Courageous Women of Antiquity." A versatile, triple threat, Shreve's interests are not only in music, but also span the written word and film. Several of her plays and musicals have been performed at New York's Daryl Roth 2, Heckscher Theater, and Theatre Row. Her Rock opera, Love Sick, and her musical, Dialogues of the Travelers, both debuted at National Sawdust to sold out runs. Shreve's talent has been acknowledged publicly: The New York Times praised her setting of TS Eliot's The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock as "expansive, psychologically pointed"; her Piano Quartet won First Prize in the Contemporary Recording Society's Competition; her short story, "The Countess of M-" won the Stanford Magazine Fiction Award; and her poetry and writing has been published in magazines including Poetry, New Yorker, New Republic, and New Criterion. Her screenplay "Homes" was a top ten finalist in Creative Screenwriting's AAA Screenplay Contest, a Quarter Finalist in the Writer's Network Screenplay Competition, American Zoetrope Screenplay Contest, and Fade In Magazine Screenplay Competition, and "Western Waters" was a Quarter Finalist in the Writer's Network Screenplay Competition. Georgia Shreve has studied composition with composer/conductor/pianist Dr. Howard Cass. She also earned degrees from Stanford, Brown, and Columbia and the University of Pennsylvania in in Creative Writing, Literature, Psychology and Philosophy.
Wednesday, May 15, 2019
#WhomYouKnowTopTen by @ManhattanPeachy #PeachyDeegan #May2019
Tuesday, April 23, 2019
#MoverandShaker Picture of the Week Mover and Shaker Poet and Composer Georgia Shreve with Peachy Deegan at @CarnegieHall
Mover and Shaker Georgia Shreve and Peachy Deegan at Carnegie Hall after the music of Georgia Shreve
HOSTED BY IDEATION PRODUCTIONS
The Little Prince, Don Quixote, Protopia II, and Four Songs
Tuesday, May 27, 2014
KEEPING AMERICA ON TOP: WHOM YOU KNOW CELEBRATES AMERICAN STYLE INTELLIGENCE and EXCELLENCE WITH SAMANTHA FAYE. Samantha Faye Hits the High Note with the Treble Music Necklace, Recommended by Whom You Know!
It's not who you know, it's Whom You Know and we are delighted to now know Samantha of Samantha Faye. We look high and low for the best and are especially excited to tell you this brand is Made in America! Samantha Faye’s Treble Music Necklace – one of the many from her Classic Collection- is classy and distinct. The treble is available in 14K Gold, 14K Rose Gold and Sterling Silver, and is shown in 14K gold. It's a great piece to wear at a concert as evidenced by the below, and we recommend Mover and Shaker Georgia Shreve's at Carnegie Hall. If you look closely, you see Peachy wearing it. (She also has on a cross in Connemara Marble.)
Peachy Deegan, Mover and Shaker Georgia Shreve, and Mover and Shaker Mitzi Perdue at Georgia's recent concert at Carnegie Hall in May 2014. Headpiece by Ellen Christine Couture.
The piece is understated and gorgeous, and it has the right amount of panache that stays classy. The clasp is well-made. Add it to your collection and wear it well, as Rod Stewart, one of our favorites would say! (Read Rod's music review from Whom You Know here.)
ABOUT SAMANTHA FAYE
Samantha Faye, a former NYC attorney, launched her brand in
2011, and has attracted the attention of celebrities, press and stores
worldwide. All jewelry is made in the
USA (in Rhode Island) and designed in Boston.
Samantha Faye has been featured
on the hit TV Show Girls and Carrie Dairies, and placed in countless magazines
including People Style Watch, US Weekly, InStyle, Star, Lucky & many more!
Monday, May 19, 2014
READ THIS: Innocence by Kathleen Tessaro Our Coverage Sponsored by Maine Woolens
Maine Woolens is a weaver of blanket and throws located in Brunswick, Maine. We work
primarily with natural fibers, like cottons and worsted wools and are committed
to using renewable natural fibers from American growers whenever possible. We
do piece dyeing and package dyeing in house and the combined experience of our
excellent employees exceeds 300 years. Our wool and cotton blankets and throws
are 100 percent machine washable, soft and luxurious to the touch, cozy warm
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Jo Miller is a Mover and Shaker:
Visit our website at www.mainewoolens.com
We have been highly recommended by Whom You Know:
Maine Woolens, affordable luxury and tradition.
"I have a soft spot for my second novel, 'Innocence'. Originally, I wanted to call it 'The Ingenue' but we all agreed that no one would know how to spell 'Ingenue' on Amazon. It's a modern ghost story of lost opportunities, complicated friendships, dangerous, addictive love, as well as a contemplation on the purpose of a creative life."
The Kathleen Tessaro Parade continues on Whom You Know! It's not everyday that an author of the caliber of Kathleen Tessaro comes along. After being totally enthralled with The Perfume Collector a year ago, we interviewed Kathleen (click on her name on the above quote to see it) and have gone back and reviewed the four previous books she wrote. This is the 4th of those 4. We were saving it because we did not want Tessaro withdrawl to last too long and we know she's working on something new now. So what makes Kathleen different?
Her breathtaking clarity in choice of verbiage and style overall combined with a killer plot will leave you turning page after page and skipping the phone, meals, emails, buzzers and other world distractions of nonsense compared to her artistry in English. She even starts off by referencing Seurat, one of our favorites. Pure class.
"There are no fanfares for the truly great memories of your life. Just dripping taps and the sound of your own footsteps, walking from one room into another."
She writes about real life much more skillfully than most, perhaps because she lives hers well. Kathleen paints portraits with her pen of characters you will care about and they also are human and highly entertaining. In Innocence, she celebrates a coming-of-age friendship that has ups and downs and ultimately dwells on the subject of people you'll miss.
And who hasn't dated the total disaster of a man (Thank goodness that's over!), and perhaps you have your own Jake in the rear view mirror.
Kathleen is down-to-earth and relatable, and her protagonists mirror this behavior. One has "growing hysteria [that] translates itself into a bad Maggie Smith impersonation. 'God is not an area where I require levity! I want certainty, security. The knowledge that there's some divine order involved in all of this chaos.'"
Though she keeps you smiling, she also keeps you thinking. Kathleen's powerful and profound words will move you:
"If only we could chose which memories we keep and which ones we discard forever. But instead, the mind clings to events that baffle; watching them, like a movie, over and over, but without the power to choose a different path."
Kathleen writes about people that follow their dreams and do their best to make them happen; you never know when Nigel Watts from the Royal Court could be calling.
And she's even able to write about death, a topic we try not to think about but must acknowledge:
"One of the other advantages to being dead - you have access to the truth, the whole truth."
Her books are the perfect pick-me-up for a Monday especially. They acknowledge that "this too shall pass" and you'll be inspired by how the characters overcome challenges in their lives.
We could not be more excited to see what Kathleen does next! Mario Lemieux and Sidney Crosby, inbetween your golf rounds you might want to pick up these great books by your neighbor...maybe she'll put hockey in her next book. We think Mover and Shaker Georgia Shreve would be delighted this concludes at Carnegie Hall; she's playing there tomorrow.
It's 1987 and Evie is leaving home for the first time, headed for London to study acting. Along with her fellow students and roommates, Imogene (a born again Laura Ashley poster child and frustrated virgin) and Robbie (native New Yorker, budding bohemian, and very much not a virgin), Evie's determined to make her mark both on stage and off.
But then life and love, in the shape of struggling rock musician Jake Albery, intervene. And everything changes.
Fourteen years later and Evie's stuck. She's now a single mother teaching drama classes, her dreams long since abandoned. Robbie's dead, killed in car accident and Imo's lost touch.
Then a friendship from the past comes to haunt Evie.
Literally.
And suddenly everything is about to change again.
A very modern, romantic ghost story about the things that really haunt us.
Friday, August 2, 2013
By Georgia Shreve, Composer
"Peachy is the connecting thread that puts great people in touch with great things!"
-Georgia Shreve, Composer
Read more...
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
Admirable Artists: Exclusive Interview with Mover and Shaker Georgia Shreve: Composer, Philosopher, Writer, Playwright and One of the First Female Investment Bankers Our Coverage Sponsored by Stribling and Associates
Georgia Shreve
For over 30 years, Stribling and Associates has represented high-end residential real estate, specializing in the sale and rental of townhouses, condos, co-ops, and lofts throughout Manhattan and Brooklyn, and around the globe. Stribling has more than 200 professional brokers who use their respected expertise to provide personalized service to buyers and sellers at all price levels. A separate division, Stribling Private Brokerage, discreetly markets properties over $5 million, and commands a significant market share in this rarified sector of residential real estate. Stribling is the exclusive New York City affiliate of Savills, a leading global real estate advisor with over 200 office in 48 countries.
Check out their listings:
& their most recent State of the Market:
Whom You Know Congratulates their new President, Elizabeth Ann Stribling-Kivlan:
***
In 2012, Mover and Shaker Georgia Shreve completed her Masters degree in Positive Psychology at the University of Pennsylvania. Her thesis, Creating Creativity, focused on enhancing creativity. She recently lectured at Penn on Creativity in the Arts.
Ms. Shreve’s setting of the T.S. Eliot poem, "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock," was performed at Symphony Space last January by the Manhattan Chamber Orchestra. The New York Times called it an "expansive, psychologically pointed setting of [the poem] in an artfully blended performance.”
The orchestrated version of this piece, along with her Piano Concerto, will be performed at Weill Hall at Carnegie Hall on May 3rd of this year.
She is already planning her next composition, hopefully a setting of a poem by Wallace Stevens. One smart cookie, Georgia is a multi-talented dynamo that is one of the most underrated individuals we have met and we are absolutely thrilled to inaugurate Admirable Artists with her. Peachy Deegan interviewed Georgia Shreve for Whom You Know.
Peachy Deegan: We are so impressed with your commitment to academics and constant interest in bettering your education. What motivates you in this arena and what do you love about learning?
Georgia Shreve:
Both my schools and my parents fostered the love of learning. Continual learning helps us grow and evolve.
How many degrees do you have now, and where are they from?
I have 4 degrees and they are from Stanford, Brown, Columbia, and Penn.
What degrees would you like to pursue in the future?
I would like to finish my M.F.A. at Columbia.
Tell our readers about your upcoming concert please.
My music will be performed by Manhattan Contemporary Chamber Ensemble on May 3rd at Weill Hall at Carnegie Hall.
What inspires you when composing?
When I write vocal music I am inspired by the words, often those of great poets, sometimes of my own. For instrumental music, I am inspired by the words of Beethoven, Brahms, Bach, Debussy and others.
What processes do you go through when composing?
In composing I start with a rough sketch, then refine it, then finally orchestrate it.
What would surprise most people about your musical career?
I did not excel in music when I was young, preferring to compose rather than practice. I only gained confidence when studying classical singing.
What are your philosophies in general like today?
I believe in the basic tenets of Positive Psychology–such as the importance of values and character strengths in developing well-being–as developed by my professor Martin Seligman.
Do you miss investment banking at all and if you did it today what product would you like to create?
I gained a lot of poise and confidence from investment banking. My hope is to consult with business, schools, and individuals on creativity, which I have both studied and practiced.
How is our friend Mover and Shaker Mitzi Perdue have you seen her recently?
Mitzi, though I miss having her in NYC, is doing great, generous and brilliant as ever, and we are in constant touch.
What are you proudest of and why?
I am proudest of the pieces that will be featured in my concert.
What would you like to do professionally that you have not yet had the opportunity to do?
My dream is to have one of the musicals I have written (book, lyrics and music) produced.
What honors and awards have you received in your profession?
I won the Stanford Magazine fiction competition and other honors in screenwriting and music.
What one word best describes you and why?
The best word for me is creativity.
What is the funniest thing that has ever happened to you at a cocktail party?
I was unknowingly talking to Bette Midler and started to talk about Bette Midler!
Who would you like to be for a day and why?
I think I would like to be Stephen Sondheim for a day.
If you could have dinner with any person living or passed, who would it be and why?
I would love to have dinner with Virginia Woolf.
What do you personally do or what have you done to give back to the world?
I have contributed to a number of cultural institutions, mainly in the area of music studies.
Other than Movers and Shakers of course, what is your favorite Whom You Know column and what do you like about it?
I love finding out anything about fashion or new restaurants.
What else should Whom You Know readers know about you?
I am single and eligible.
How would you like to be contacted by Whom You Know readers?
Please contact me at gshreve@ideationmedia.com
Monday, June 20, 2011
MOVERS AND SHAKERS: Georgia Shreve, Composer, Philosopher, Writer, Playwright and One of the First Female Investment Bankers
From an early age, Georgia Shreve was blessed with an extraordinary education, full of great teachers in great schools. She studied Philosophy at Stanford and then went on to Brown to receive her master’s in Literature and Creative Writing. She moved on to Columbia to get an M.F.A. in Creative Writing, but, after a year, inspired by the realities of life, switched to the Business School and finished an M.B.A. While at Columbia, she returned to her musical roots, studying classical singing. The M.B.A. led her to Wall Street to be an Investment Banker. Later, searching for more creative work, she moved into advertising to be both an Account Executive and Copywriter.
Soon she was fortunate enough to have three incredible sons, all now living in New York–one, following in her footsteps to pursue an M.B.A. at Columbia, one a mathematician running his own hedge fund, and one an aspiring Disc Jockey. While raising them, she studied poetry writing and music composition with two brilliant professors. Before too long, she was publishing poetry in prominent publications and having her music performed in various concerts. Later she published fiction in the New Yorker and won the Stanford Fiction Prize. She is perpetually “in the process of finishing” five novels, none as yet completed. Meanwhile she has written numerous plays–both straight plays and musicals–which have had readings, but have not yet been produced, in addition to a couple of screenplays.
Her work in music composition culminated in a concert of her Oratorio and Chamber Music at Carnegie last spring (in Zankel Hall) and a concert of her songs and Piano Concerto at Steinway Hall this year. Another three concerts are in the works for the next year.
She is now enrolled to do a master’s degree in Psychology next year at the University of Pennsylvania. The pervasive spirit in her life is that of continuous change and growth. According to her, while this process can be painful, it is vital to staying young and thriving as we age.
She has a number of cultural pursuits, including the Madison Council of the Library of Congress, and has served on the boards of several arts organizations. Her interests include film, theater, and literature. She exercises almost every day and is especially devoted to Pilates.
She is a long-term New Yorker and, though she has a home in Greenwich, Connecticut, determined to stay in Manhattan. Her travel is mainly focused on her love of Europe and its rich cultural heritage, which she has studied all through her life.
We are so pleased to present her as our latest Mover and Shaker.
Peachy Deegan interviewed Georgia Shreve for Whom You Know.
Peachy Deegan: Of all of the schools you graduated from, how did they each impact you and what did you like the most about each of them?
Georgia Shreve: Stanford fueled my great love of learning and taught me how to reason; Brown fired my imagination and honed my writing; Columbia Business School trained me to make wise decisions.
What philosophers do you agree with the most and why?
I love the existentialists for their sense of the absurd; I love the Chinese philosophers for their sense of serenity and restraint;
I love the Philosophy of Art for its grasp of aesthetics.
What impacts you musically and what inspires you?
I write a lot of vocal and choral music because background in writing has sensitized me to all the fine nuances of language.
Please tell us about your career in investment banking and how you feel the industry has evolved, also in regards to women as investment bankers.
I was something of a pioneer as a woman in investment banking and hopefully helped pave the way for other women in the field.
Would you like to tell us anything about your five novels in progress?
Each has a different basis of conflict: loyalty vs. ambition; free spirit vs. repressed; joyful vs. joyless; passionate vs. devoid of passion; tradition-bound vs. spontaneous.
What was your favorite part of the famed book "I Didn't Bargain for This" by Mitzi Perdue?
The wonderful story about the little boy (a Rockefeller?) who had spent his allowance and had to walk home.
What do you enjoy the most about being on a board, and for anyone who has not been on a board, what would surprise them the most about being on one?
I enjoy the commitment to cultural endeavors and the exchange of ideas; someone might be surprised by the central importance of fundraising.
What is your favorite part of Europe and what do you love about it?
I feel most at home in the culture of England, but I love the French sense of beauty and creativity and the Italian passion for art and tradition.
What or who has had the most influence on your pursuit of excellence?
My extraordinary and gifted teachers have continually inspired my pursuit of excellence.
What are you proudest of and why?
I am most proud of my Piano Concerto, the most challenging thing I have ever done.
What would you like to do professionally that you have not yet had the opportunity to do?
I would like to have a musical produced.
What honors and awards have you received in your profession?
My music, my fiction, and my screenplays have all received recognition.
What is your favorite place to be in Manhattan?
The reservoir, whether I am walking around it or viewing it from my window.
What is your favorite shop in Manhattan?
I love Michael Kors and Giorgio Armani.
What is your favorite drink?
Vodka Tonic.
What is the funniest thing that has ever happened to you at a cocktail party?
Mistaking Bette Midler for a Westchester housewife.
What is your favorite restaurant in Manhattan?
Right now it is The Mark.
What is your favorite Manhattan book?
Zagat.
If you could have anything in Manhattan named after you what would it be and why?
The Conservancy garden—my favorite in New York.
What has been your best Manhattan athletic experience?
My incredible Pilates teacher at Integrative Care.
What is your favorite thing to do in Manhattan that you can do nowhere else?
BAM
What has been your best Manhattan art or music experience?
Having my music performed in Zankel at Carnegie Hall.
What do you personally do or what have you done to give back to the world?
I have supported the arts.
What do you think is most underrated and overrated here?
Underrated: natural beauty. Overrated: Times Square.
Other than Movers and Shakers of course, what is your favorite Whom You Know column and what do you like about it?
Can’t help saying that your column about Mitzi Perdue was my favorite, though she is a Mover and Shaker.
Have you drank The Peachy Deegan yet and if not, why not? (please send us your picture drinking it!)
I have—at home—but no picture.
What else should Whom You Know readers know about you?
I am working on a masters in Psychology at Penn.
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