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Susan Davenny Wyner : ウィキペディア英語版
Susan Davenny-Wyner

Susan Davenny-Wyner (born Susan Davenny, October 17, 1943) is a nationally-acclaimed American conductor based in Massachusetts. Davenny-Wyner had promising career as a soprano, which was ended by an automobile/bicycling accident that damaged her vocal cords.
==Early life and education==
Davenny-Wyner was born October 17, 1943 in New Haven, Connecticut where her father, pianist Ward Davenny, was professor of music at Yale University.
She was originally trained as a violinist and violist. Following early studies at the Cleveland Institute of Music and the Hartford School of Music, she graduated ''summa cum laude'' from Cornell University in 1965 with degrees in both comparative English literature and in music. She entered into vocal studies with Herta Glaz from 1969-1975. She received a Fulbright scholarship and a grant from the Ford Foundation, and also won the Waiter W. Naumberg Prize.〔〔

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