Leon Botstein (born December 14, 1946) is a Swiss-born American conductor, educator, historical musicologist, and scholar who has been the president of Bard College since 1975.
On May 1, 2026, Botstein announced that he would retire as president at the end of the 2025-26 academic year, months after the Epstein files revealed that he had a friendly relationship with financier and child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein between 2011 and 2018.
Early life and education
Botstein was born in Zürich, Switzerland, in 1946. The son of Charles and Anne, Polish-Jewish physicians who escaped Nazi persecution, Botstein moved to New York City at the age of two. His parents served on the faculty of the Einstein College of Medicine. He studied violin with Roman Totenberg and, during the summers, studied with faculty from the National Conservatory in Mexico City. His music teachers in college included composer Richard Wernick and the musicologists H. Colin Slim and Howard Mayer Brown. In 1967, after studying at Tanglewood, Botstein attended Harvard University, where he studied history under David Landes, writing on musical life of Vienna in the 19th and early 20th centuries, earning an MA in 1968. At Harvard, he was the assistant conductor of the Harvard Radcliffe Orchestra and conductor of the Doctors' Orchestra of Boston.
In 1969, while a graduate student, Botstein was awarded a Sloan Foundation fellowship and began work for New York City Mayor John V. Lindsay's administration as special assistant to the president of the Board of Education of the City of New York.
President of Franconia College (1970–1975)
In 1970, at age 23, Botstein became one of the youngest college presidents in history after being appointed president of the now-defunct Franconia College in New Hampshire. He was offered the position after meeting his future father-in-law, Oliver Lincoln Lundquist, who was on the board of trustees. At the time, he said a college presidency should not be a lifetime career. and began retraining as a conductor with Harold Farberman, eventually leading the Hudson Valley Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra. Richard B. Fisher Center for the Performing Arts, a multi-functional facility designed by Frank Gehry on the Bard campus. In 1992, in addition to being named editor of The Musical Quarterly, he was appointed director of the American Symphony Orchestra, a position he still holds. Under Botstein's directorship, the orchestra has developed a reputation for rescuing lesser-known works from obscurity. In 1999, Botstein helped establish the Bard Prison Initiative, which established college-in-prison programs across the country and is now active in nine states. Later that year, Botstein became the music director of the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra. His concerts with the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra were broadcast in regular series across the U.S. and Europe, and he led the orchestra on several tours, including twice across the U.S. and to Leipzig to open the 2009 Bach Festival with a performance of Felix Mendelssohn's Elijah in Bach's Thomaskirche. In 2011, he stepped down from that post and became the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra's Conductor Laureate and, as of 2022, also serves as its Principal Guest Conductor.
thumb|left|Botstein and the American Symphony Orchestra after a performance of [[Intolleranza by Luigi Nono at Carnegie Hall in 2018.]]Throughout this period, in collaboration with institutions abroad, Botstein helped launch liberal arts programs to countries in Eastern Europe, the former Soviet Union, South Africa, Central Asia, and the Middle East. He established programs with Al Quds University, American University of Central Asia, and Central European University, as well as helping found Bard College Berlin and Smolny College, Russia's first and foremost liberal arts institution.
Botstein also turned his attention to developing Bard's music program. In 2005, he oversaw the development of The Bard College Conservatory of Music and later became director of The Bard Conservatory Orchestra. In 2015, he founded The Orchestra Now, a pre-professional orchestra and master's degree program at Bard College; in addition to performing multiple concerts each season at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center, The Orchestra Now performs a regular concert series at Bard's Fisher Center and takes part in Bard Music Festival concerts.
In 2019, Botstein appeared in the documentary College Behind Bars, a four-part television series about the Bard Prison Initiative, a degree program offered to inmates in New York prisons. The series was produced by his daughter, Sarah Botstein, who works for Ken Burns's documentary production company.
Relationship with Jeffrey Epstein
Between 2011 and 2018, Botstein maintained a relationship with financier and child sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. This relationship included a two-day visit in 2012 to Epstein's private island, Little Saint James, He is on the list of people named in the Epstein files. Botstein has said he did not benefit personally from the relationship and that any money that exchanged hands was for Bard.
Botstein's relationship with Epstein began in 2011, years after Epstein was publicly known to be a sex offender, after Epstein made an unsolicited $75,000 donation to Bard High School Early College. Botstein said he engaged with Epstein in his capacity as the institution's chief fundraiser. Epstein hosted Botstein on Little Saint James from December 20-22, 2012. Botstein traveled to Little Saint James with Leon Black and his family. After the trip, Black made a one-time donation to Bard; Botstein later claimed that he had fallen sick during the trip. Later that year, Botstein also offered to meet Epstein at Bard High School Early College, although the meeting apparently did not materialize. Botstein donated the money to Bard College as part of $1 million he gave that year; the rest of his donation came from his personal savings and earnings. Epstein also put Botstein in contact with a daughter of Woody Allen and Soon-Yi Previn so that she could attend Bard College. In early 2017, according to The New York Times, Botstein and Epstein worked together to buy a $50,000 wristwatch. Botstein continued a friendly correspondence with Epstein until December 2018, less than a year before Epstein's death.
Epstein's contact with Botstein and Bard College was known as early as April 2023, but the release of further documents related to Epstein in 2025 and 2026 indicated that their contact had been closer than previously known. A week later, Bard indefinitely postponed a planned March 2026 gala at Cipriani in Manhattan meant to celebrate Botstein's 50 years as president of Bard College. In March 2026, more than 160 Bard alumni, including Fergie Chambers, the son of Bard College Board of Trustees chair James Cox Chambers, called on Botstein to resign as president.
End of presidency
On April 30, 2026, the findings of WilmerHale's review were published. The review stated that, while Botstein had done nothing illegal, his relationship with Epstein "reflected on his leadership of Bard." It also found that Botstein's maintenance of his relationship with Epstein was challenged by a senior faculty member to no avail, and that Botstein "minimized and was not fully accurate in describing his relationship with Epstein." On May 1, Botstein announced that he would retire at the end of the 2025-26 academic year.
Botstein intends to continue to live in a house built for his retirement on campus and remain as the Leon Levy Professor in the Arts and Humanities. It is expected that he will occasionally teach in the music and history departments and remain principal conductor of the Bard College Conservatory of Music orchestra, The Orchestra Now, and the American Symphony Orchestra, all of which regularly perform at the Fisher Center.
Musicianship
Botstein is renowned for reviving and promoting neglected repertoire and composers. In addition, as director of the American Symphony Orchestra and the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra, he emerged as a significant proponent of "thematic programming", which assembles concert programs around common themes grounded in literature, music history, or art. He is also known for the series "Classics Declassified", in which he lectures, conducts, and takes questions from the audience. Both the Bard Music Festival and Bard SummerScape continue his method of reviving neglected works and synthesizing performance and scholarship. The Wall Street Journal Barrymore Laurence Scherer wrote, "the Bard Music Festival…no longer needs an introduction. Under the provocative guidance of the conductor-scholar Leon Botstein, it has long been one of the most intellectually stimulating of all American summer festivals and frequently is one of the most musically satisfying. Each year, through discussions by major scholars and illustrative concerts often programmed to overflowing, Bard audiences have investigated the oeuvre of a major composer in the context of the society, politics, literature, art and music of his times." He has been editor of The Musical Quarterly since 1993 and a frequent contributor to periodicals focusing on music and history.
Personal life
Botstein is the brother of biologist David Botstein and pediatric cardiologist Eva Griepp.
He is the husband of art historian Barbara Haskell. They have two children.
Botstein and his first wife, Jill Lundquist, had two children. Their first daughter is producer Sarah Botstein. She is buried in the Bard Cemetery.
Awards
{| class="wikitable"
!Year
!Title
|-
|2018
| Honorary Doctor of Science, Watson School of Biological Sciences, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
|-
|2017
| Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters, Goucher College
|-
|2016
| Honorary Doctor of Music, Sewanee: The University of the South
|-
| rowspan="2" |2015
|Lifetime Achievement Award - YIVO Institute for Jewish Research
|-
| The Deborah W. Meier Hero in Education Award - Fairtest
|-
|2014
| Caroline P. and Charles W. Ireland Distinguished Visiting Scholar Prize - University of Alabama at Birmingham
|-
| rowspan="2" |2013
|Jewish Cultural Achievement Award - The Foundation for Jewish Culture
|-
|Kilenyi Medal of Honor - The Bruckner Society of America
|-
|2012
|The University of Chicago Alumni Medal
|-
|2010
|Elected to the American Philosophical Society
|-
|2009
|Carnegie Academic Leadership Award - The Carnegie Corporation, for outstanding leadership in curricular innovation, reform of K-12 education and promotion of strong links between their institution and their local community.
|-
|2006
|Popov's Symphony No. 1 and Shostakovich's Theme and Variations with the London Symphony Orchestra - nominated for a Grammy Award in the category of Best Orchestral Performance.
|-
|2003
|Award for Distinguished Service to the Arts from the American Academy of Arts and Letters
|-
|2001
|Austrian Cross of Honor for Science and Art
|-
|1996
|Harvard Centennial Medal by the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences to recipients of graduate degrees from the School for their "contributions to society".
|-
|1995
|National Arts Club Gold Medal
- (2022) George Frederick Bristow and William Henry Fry. Classics of American Romanticism. The Orchestra Now, Bridge Records
- (2021) Arthur Honnegger, Dimitri Mitropoulos, and Othmar Schoeck. Buried Alive. The Orchestra Now, Bridge Records.
- (2020) Arthur Honegger, Dimitri Mitropoulos, and Othmar Schoeck. The Orchestra Now. Bridge.
- (2020) Erich Wolfgang Korngold, Frederic Chopin, and Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov. The Orchestra Now with Orion Weiss. Bridge.
- (2019) Arthur Bliss, Edmund Rubbra, and Arnold Bax. The Orchestra Now with Piers Lane. Hyperion.
- (2018) Ferdinand Ries. Piano Concertos No. 8 & 9. The Orchestra Now with Piers Lane. Hyperion.
- (2016) George Gershwin. Gershwin: Rhapsody in Blue, Piano Concerto in F, Variations on "I Got Rhythm," Eight Preludes for Solo Piano. Royal Philharmonic Orchestra with Mark Bebbington. SOMM Recordings.
- (2015) Paul Hindemith. The Long Christmas Dinner. American Symphony Orchestra. Bridge Records.
- (2012) Luigi Dallapiccola. Volo Di Notte. American Symphony Orchestra.
- (2009) Bruno Walter. Symphony No. 1. NDR Symphony Orchestra, Hamburg. CPO
- (2008) Béla Bartók. Concerto for Orchestra, Four Orchestral Pieces, Hungarian Peasant Songs. London Philharmonic Orchestra. Telarc.
- (2008) John Foulds. A World Requiem. BBC Symphony Orchestra. Chandos.
- (2007) Paul Dukas. Ariane et Barbe-Bleue. BBC Symphony Orchestra. Telarc.
- (2005) Ernest Chausson. Le roi Arthus. BBC Symphony Orchestra. Telarc.
- (2004) Gavril Popov: Symphony No. 1, Op. 7, Dimitri Shostakovich: Theme & Variations, Op. 3. London Symphonic Orchestra. Terlarc. Nominated for a Grammy Award in Best Orchestral Performance.
- (2005) Aaron Copland, Roger Sessions, George Perle, and Bernard Rands. Works by Copland, Sessions, Perle, and Rands. American Symphony Orchestra. New World Records.
- (2003) Richard Strauss. Die Ägyptische Helena. American Symphony Orchestra with Deborah Voigt. Telarc.
- (2003) Franz Liszt. Dante Symphony. London Symphony Orchestra. Telarc.
- (2000) Richard Strauss. Die Liebe der Danae. American Symphony Orchestra. Telarc.
- (1999) Karl Amadeus Hartmann. Symphonies No. 1 & No. 6. London Philharmonic Orchestra with Jard Van Nes. Telarc.
- (1998) Anton Bruckner. Symphony No. 5. (Schalk Edition). London Philharmonic Orchestra. Telarc.
- (1998) Ernst von Dohnányi. Symphony No. 1. London Philharmonic Orchestra. Telarc.
- (1995) Franz Schubert. Franz Schubert Orchestrated. American Symphony Orchestra. Telarc.
- (1993) Johannes Brahms. Serenade No. 1 In D. American Symphony Orchestra and Chelsea Chamber Ensemble. Vanguard.
- (1991) Joseph Joachim. Overture To Hamlet, Overture To Henry IV, Violin Concerto In D Minor In The Hungarian Manner. London Philharmonic Orchestra with Elmar Oliveira. IMP.
References
External links
- American Symphony Orchestra
- Leon Botstein's Discography
