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Skitch Henderson

Lyle Russell Cedric (Skitch) Henderson (born January 27, 1918) is an American pianist, conductor, and composer.

Born in Birmingham, England, with the name Lyle Russell Cedric Henderson, Skitch Henderson successfully transformed himself into an icon of American popular music.

Skitch started his career in the 1930s playing piano in the roadhouses of the Midwest, and then joined a touring Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. Later, as a member of MGM’s music department, he played on Bob Hope’s Pepsodent Show. At NBC Radio, Skitch was the musical director for Frank Sinatra’s Lucky Strike Show and The Philco Hour with Bing Crosby (from whom he acquired the name “Skitch”). Skitch received classical training under Fritz Reiner, Albert Coates, Arnold Schoenberg, Ernest Toch, and Arturo Toscanini, who invited him to conduct the NBC Symphony. In a career at NBC spanning 1951 to 1966, he served as music director for NBC Television and was the original conductor of the orchestras for the Tonight Show and Today Show. After leaving NBC, he forged a career as a conductor of numerous symphonic orchestras throughout the world. In 1983 he founded The New York Pops.

Among his hundreds of recordings spanning the era of 78’s to DVD’s are two recent releases as pianist for Arbors Records and as conductor of The New York Pops with Maureen McGovern on With a Song in My Heart: The Great Songs of Richard Rodgers for Reader’s Digest and Centaur Records. Skitch married Ruth Einsiedel in 1958 and since 1972, they have owned and operated The Silo, a renowned store, art gallery, and cooking school in New Milford, Connecticut. In 2003 Ruth and Skitch Henderson co-founded the Hunt Hill Farm Trust, an effort to preserve their farm’s land and buildings and to celebrate Americana in music, art and literature through the creation of a living museum. An affiliation with the Smithsonian Institution resulted in the Trust’s inaugural exhibit: Skitch Henderson: A Man and His Music. On January 29, 2005, the Smithsonian Institution awarded him the James Smithson Bicentennial Medal in recognition of his contributions to American culture. Skitch has been honored for the vital role he has played in the cultural life of New York, including receiving New York City’s prestigious Handel Medallion. He is also the recipient of three honorary degrees – from St. Thomas Aquinas College, the University of South Florida, and Western Connecticut State University.

He joined the Royal Air Force when World War Two began and served as a fighter pilot before joining the United States Army Air Corps as a bomber pilot.

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