Rebecca Helferich Clarke was a British-American classical composer and violist. She became one of the first female professional orchestral players. She was romantically involved with British baritone John Gossorie, who was married to her sister-in-law. Clarke died at her home in New York at the age of 93.
About Rebecca Clarke (composer) in brief

Her sonata Morpheus, composed under the pseudonym of \”Anthony Trent\”, was premiered at her 1918 joint recital with cellist May Mukle in NewYork City. A 1923 rhapsody for cello and piano sponsored by Coolidge, made Clarke the only female recipient of Coolidge’s patronage. In 1924, Clarke embarked on a career as a solo and ensemble performer in London, after first completing a world tour in 1922–23. In 1927, she helped form the English Ensemble, a quartet that included herself, Kathleen Long and Kathleen Long, Kathleen Hayward, Marjorie Hayward, and may Mukle. However, she continued to perform, participating in the Paris Colonial Exhibition in 1927 and 1931 as part of the British Ensemble. In the same year, she was involved with the British Baritone Quartet, which included herself and Kathleen Hayward. In 1932, she performed in the London Colonial Exhibition with the quartet, and in the following year in Paris, she participated in the British Ensemble in the London Exhibition of the Royal Institute of Music. In 1936, she sang under the direction of Ralph Vaughan Williams in a student ensemble organized by Clarke to study and perform Palestrina’s music. In 1938, she appeared in a BBC music broadcast with the BBC Ensemble in London and the BBC Orchestra in Paris.
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