Mary Tilton: Sister and Sponsor
Our thoughts and prayers are with Peggy Noll and family at the passing of her sister Mary Tilton. Mary was a sponsor in the Scholars and Friends Program, and at Peggy's request we have established a memorial fund in her honor.
All donations to the Mary Tilton Memorial Fund will go towards the Scholars and Friends Program.
Mary Tilton, 641>
Aug. 28, 1942—Dec. 20, 2006
BLOOMINGTON—Mary Coffman Tilton, president of the board of the
Bloomington Early Music Festival, accomplished harpsichordist, scholar, active
church member and community volunteer, died December 20 in Bloomington, her home
for 36 years. She was 64.
Mary Hartwell Coffman was born in Little Rock, Arkansas, on Aug. 28, 1942.
She grew up in Arlington, Virginia, where her father worked as a lawyer for the
Department of Agriculture. She earned a bachelor's degree in music performance
at Wooster College in Ohio in 1964 and a master's degree at the Yale School of
Music in 1966.
She moved to Bloomington in August 1970 with her then-husband Timothy Tilton
(who still resides locally). Bloomington turned out to be an ideal place for Ms.
Tilton to pursue her passion of music. Some years after her children entered
school, she began to study harpsichord at the Indiana University School of Music
under Anthony Newman and Elisabeth Wright. She won the audience prize in the
1987 Magnum Opus harpsichord competition in Grand Rapids, Michigan, and her
performance was aired on National Public Radio. In 1995, she was granted a
Doctor of Musical Arts degree in literature and performance of early music from
Indiana University. "She was at the top of her class all the way through her
graduate courses, even while maintaining a job and caring for her two children,"
said Ms. Wright.
Ms. Tilton was a teacher as well as a scholar of early music. She was a
harpsichord instructor in the pre-college program of the Early Music Institute
at Indiana University, and also taught piano to many budding young musicians in
the living room of her house in Park Ridge East. In recent years, she translated
and adapted the work of Jean Nicolas Geoffroy, one of the most important
composers in France during the Baroque period. The fascination of deciphering
the notations of a long-ago composer delighted her, and years later she could
describe with excitement the first time she saw—in the reading room of a
library in Paris—the original manuscript she had been studying for so many
years via photocopy and reprint. Her work, "Geoffroy: The Collected Works" is to
be published in 2007 by the Broude Trust of Williamstown, Massachusetts.
Ms. Tilton promoted the performance and appreciation of early Baroque music
in the Bloomington community and beyond. She was president of the board of Early
Music Associates, the nonprofit organization that produces the annual
Bloomington Early Music Festival. She played an instrumental role in the growth
and prestige of the festival both regionally and nationally, and encouraged
talented young performers in the field of early music, said fellow board member
George Van Arsdale.
Church and community service were extremely important to Ms. Tilton. She was
a regular congregant and choir member at the Trinity Episcopal Church, served on
the vestry for three years, and took pleasure in designing floral arrangements
for the church. December 15 marked the last in a series of weekly music recitals
she had organized at Trinity for Advent this year. Ms. Tilton also gave
generously of her time and money to local community organizations, including
Habitat for Humanity and the Bloomington Community Foundation.
Ms. Tilton also was Executive Director of the Patten Foundation program at
Indiana University, which brought distinguished speakers from around the world
to the campus. She enjoyed playing host to such luminaries as Costa Rican
President Oscar Arias, former Mexican foreign minister Jorge Castaneda, Indian
development economist Amartya Sen and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and
best-selling author Anna Quindlan.
Ms. Tilton adored and took great pride in her two children, Andrew and Anna,
following their travels, professional progress, and most recently their
respective weddings. They and their spouses, along with Ms. Tilton's sister and
her family, took part in annual summer outings to Emerald Isle, a beach
community in North Carolina's Outer Banks—an event Ms. Tilton anticipated
and treasured year round. At home, Ms. Tilton doted on Allegro and Arioso, two
cats she had rescued from the Bloomington landfill.
Ms. Tilton is survived by her son Andrew Robert Tilton of Brooklyn, New York,
her daughter Anna Tilton Daniel of Arlington, Virginia, and her sister Margaret
Noll of Mukono, Uganda.
A ceremony and reception in her honor will be held Saturday, Dec. 30,
beginning at 2 p.m. at Trinity Episcopal Church in Bloomington. The family
requests that in lieu of flowers and other remembrances, memorial contributions
be directed to the "Mary Tilton Memorial Fund" at BLEMF (Bloomington Early Music
Festival), P.O. Box 734, Bloomington, IN 47402-0734, or to Trinity Episcopal
Church in memory of Mary Tilton, 400 E. Kirkwood Ave., Bloomington, IN
47408.
All donations to the Uganda Partners Mary Tilton Memorial Fund will go towards the Scholars and Friends Program, of which Mary was a sponsor.
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