Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Former composer and wife star in ‘Stump the Maestro’

- By Freida Frisaro and Cody Jackson

AVENTURA, Fla. — Name a show tune, jazz standard or movie score, and chances are 91-yearold Peter Fuchs can not only hum it, but play it from memory on his keyboard.

His wife, Veronica, takes requests on their daily Facebook Live show “Stump the Maestro,” which began last March when the coronaviru­s locked them down in their one-bedroom apartment near Miami.

Every now and then, the former composer, conductor and Holocaust survivor is confounded by a request. He fumbles through a stack of books beside the keyboard, furiously searching for the music while his wife continues talking to the audience they’ve grown over months of isolation.

“Stump the Maestro” has become their happy hour, to be shared with old friends and others who’ve just stumbled across a show that began as a daily distractio­n for neighbors at their senior community.

“We decided let’s just try and see where it’s going to go,” Veronica Fuchs, 87, a former Broadway singer, tells viewers. “But at the same time, we just had fun doing it and all of you just hopped on.”

Each episode begins with Fuchs playing a few show tunes, and his wife asks the viewers to guess the titles. Most are classics, like “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.”

After a few minutes, she starts reading requests that viewers have typed into the chat feature: “Oklahoma.” “On the Street Where You Live.” “My Way.”

Over the course of an hour, music fills their onebedroom apartment.

On this afternoon, a request for Frank Sinatra’s “All or Nothing at All” gives Peter Fuchs pause. He can’t quickly recall the song, and his wife isn’t able to hum a few bars.

He looks into the camera. “You stumped me,” he says. “I’ll do it tomorrow. I’ll find it.”

He typically plays Broadway show tunes, 1950s classics, movie soundtrack­s and jazz. After some of the younger viewers started requesting Beatles songs, someone sent him a songbook of the group’s hits, and he mixes those tunes in.

Toddi Jacobson, who heard about the show from family and has become a regular, says she’s inspired by the Fuchses.

“Their show has provided so many of us with beautiful music, laughter, friendship and a feeling that we are connected,” she says.

The Fuchs look forward to the daily interactio­n with the audience.

“It breaks up the day,” Peter Fuchs says. “We think we are very busy at our age. It’s nice to be able to make people happy. And at the same time it doesn’t strain us at all because we’re happy doing our thing.”

They’ve both received their COVID-19 shots, but they’re still being very careful. Peter even wrote a song, “Wear a Mask,” urging others to take care.

It’s also how they end their show each afternoon.

“I don’t think this little song is going to make such a great impact,” he says. “It’s just a little song.

“But it does tell message, doesn’t it?” the

 ?? MARTA LAVANDIER/AP ?? Peter and Veronica Fuchs sing at the end of their Facebook Live show.
MARTA LAVANDIER/AP Peter and Veronica Fuchs sing at the end of their Facebook Live show.

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