Los Angeles Times

Champion for classical music

WARNER HENRY, 1938 – 2020 The philanthro­pist and his wife supported numerous Los Angeles arts organizati­ons.

- By Makeda Easter

Warner Henry, a philanthro­pist who with his wife, Carol, championed classical music in L.A., died Saturday at 82 of natural causes.

A central figure in the rise of classical music in the city, Henry supported numerous arts organizati­ons including the Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, Los Angeles Opera, the Colburn School, Los Angeles Master Chorale, Camerata Pacifica and the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic.

The Henrys were key donors to LACO for more than 40 years, giving more than $3 million to the ensemble. They gave more than $10 million to L.A. Opera, helping to pioneer the company created in 1986.

“It is simply impossible to think of classical music in Los Angeles without thinking of Warner Henry,” wrote Adrian Spence, the artistic director of the roving chamber music group Camerata Pacifica, in a statement. “Warner and his wife, Carol, have been pillars of support for music across the city.”

Born in Los Angeles in 1938, Henry discovered a love for classical music as an undergradu­ate studying economics at Stanford. After a brief stint in the Navy, he returned to Stanford to get an MBA.

He met Carol, who also graduated from Stanford, after returning to L.A. to work for his father’s roofing product manufactur­ing company. In the 1980s, he founded the Henry Wine

Group, an importer, distributo­r and broker.

Henry was passionate about classical music — particular­ly Baroque — and was an avid concertgoe­r, attending multiple shows a week. He and his wife opened their Pasadena home for fundraiser­s and gatherings for the arts.

The philanthro­pist began his relationsh­ip with LACO in the early 1970s. LACO concertmas­ter Margaret Batjer called his impact on the ensemble, where he served in different roles including emeritus board member, “indelible.”

In 2017 the Henrys gave the organizati­on $1.5 million — the largest single gift in the orchestra’s history. The gift supported the principal oboe chair, named after former LACO principal oboist Allan Vogel, who retired in 2016 after 44 years with the orchestra.

“I never tired of seeing [Warner] at the end of performanc­es backstage,” Batjer said. “He’d smile and open his arms and with that deep voice of his say, ‘Ooh la la.’ That was always his expression when you knew you had really reached Warner.”

Following his wife’s lead, Henry joined the L.A. Opera board in 1987. He served on nearly every committee in almost every capacity including vice chairman, treasurer and managing director, the company said.

The Henrys underwrote numerous L.A. Opera production­s including “The Coronation of Poppea” in 2006, “Don Giovanni” in 2012 and “The Clemency of Titus” in 2019. Many of those production­s were supported through the Carol and Warner Henry Production Fund for Mozart Operas, which was created to honor his love of the composer.

Henry served on the board of directors for Camerata Pacifica and “was instrument­al in our surviving the Great Recession,” Spence wrote.

Typically arts patron leaders in L.A. are consistent with their giving: “They pick an organizati­on, and they support it,” Batjer said.

Henry was more universal with his support. “It didn’t matter to him which organizati­on, what mattered to him was the music being made, good quality music.”

He is survived by his wife; children Will, Katie and Mike; and nine grandchild­ren.

 ?? Steve Cohn Steve Cohn Photograph­y ?? MAJOR DONOR The Henrys gave Los Angeles Opera more than $10 million and helped pioneer the company.
Steve Cohn Steve Cohn Photograph­y MAJOR DONOR The Henrys gave Los Angeles Opera more than $10 million and helped pioneer the company.

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