[chessmind] Dennis Monokroussos: In lieu of a profile: Jacqueline Piatigorsky
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Sat Aug 18 18:26:19 EDT 2007
Posted by Dennis Monokroussos:
In lieu of a profile: Jacqueline Piatigorsky
http://chessmind.powerblogs.com/posts/1175061414.shtml
While most of you probably haven't heard of [1]Jacqueline Piatigorsky
(1911- ), American players especially should know who she is. While
she wasn't a world championship candidate in her prime, she was once
the second highest rated female player in the United States before
turning to tennis (she decided that chess was too tiring). And while
the cream of the current crop of American talent have surpassed her on
the chess board, Piatigorsky's contributions to the chess world
greatly exceed theirs (at least at this point).
How's that, you say? The answer is sponsorship. Because of her love of
the game she, together with husband, the world-famous cellist
[2]Gregor Piatigorsky (check out the examples [3]here), several major
events occured on American soil in the 1960s: two major invitational
tournaments and the (in)famous Reshevsky-Fischer match in 1961.
The first of the invitational events, the 1st Piatigorsky Cup (held in
or near Los Angeles in 1963), was intended in part to be a vehicle for
Bobby Fischer, but when his requested honorarium was declined he
refused to participate. In any event, the tournament was won by the
powerful Soviet pair of world champion Tigran Petrosian and Paul
Keres.
In 1966, the Piatigorskys did succeed in securing Fischer's
participation, and after a rocky start he caught fire, closing with
7.5/9, finishing second half a point behind Spassky and well ahead of
Petrosian. (You can read more about these events [4]here. One quibble
about the write-up on the 1966 event: the author of that page wrote
that Petrosian "had passed his peak." Given that just a few weeks
earlier he may have played the best chess of his life in defeating
Spassky, that comment is something less than plausible. The more
likely explanation is that he was simply fatigued.)
The most famous of the events sponsored by the Piatigorskys, however,
was the unfinished 1961 match between Sammy Reshevsky and Bobby
Fischer, two prickly personalities who regularly terrified organizers.
Add to the mix Reshevsky's unwillingness to play on the Sabbath and
Fischer's unwillingness to play before certain hours and both players'
general lack of flexibility, and the result was an explosion waiting
to happen. It did. With the 16-game match tied after 11 games, game 12
proved disastrous. The game was scheduled for Saturday at 7:30 p.m.,
which was still during the Sabbath, so the scheduling committee pushed
it to 9 p.m. - after sundown. No problem? Hardly. Realizing that a 5
hour session (the norm at the time) would go to 2 a.m., they needed to
push the next round to 1:30 Sunday afternoon.
That, however, would almost surely cut into the time of a concert
performance by Gregor Piatigorsky that Jacqueline wanted to attend, so
she requested that the Sunday time start at 11 a.m. Fischer protested
- not unreasonably, given not just his normal habits but the probably
ending time of the previous round - but unfortunately his request went
unheeded. Everyone stood their ground, and Fischer was forfeited,
first for the game and then the match. What a mess! It is to the
Piatigorskys' credit that they went on to sponsor to the invitational
events mentioned above, and invited both Fischer and Reshevsky to
those events.
Gregor passed away in 1976, and Jacqueline is no longer involved in
the chess scene. But she has continued to live an active and
interesting life, even as nears the century mark. You can find an
inspiring essay by her on aging [5]here, and a series of her
sculptures (an art she took up in her late 40s) [6]here. And when
you're done, maybe even send her a thank-you note.
References
1. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacqueline_Piatigorsky
2. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gregor_Piatigorsky
3. http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=piatigorsky&search=Search
4. http://www.endgame.nl/Piatigorsky.htm
5. http://www.armchair.com/aware/aging1.html
6. http://www.armchair.com/aware/aging1a.html
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