Orlando Sentinel

He was a talented

- By Samantha Schmidt

clarinet player who applied for — and was granted — an exclusive music scholarshi­p. Then his girlfriend found out about it, and everything changed — unbeknowns­t to him.

Eric Abramovitz was 7 years old when he first learned to play the clarinet. By the time he was 20, the Montreal native had become an award-winning clarinetis­t, studying with some of Canada’s most elite teachers and performing a solo with Quebec’s finest symphony orchestra.

During his second year studying at McGill University, he decided to apply to the world-class Colburn Conservato­ry of Music in Los Angeles, which offers every student a scholarshi­p covering tuition, room and board and living expenses.

He hoped to study under Yehuda Gilad, an internatio­nally renowned clarinet professor who accepts only two new students per year at Colburn.

Abramovitz spent hours every night practicing, he said in an interview with The Washington Post. And after his live audition in Los Angeles in February 2014, he was confident that he would be accepted.

Weeks later, he opened an email signed by Gilad, letting him know he had not been selected for the program. He was crushed. He ended up finishing his bachelor’s degree at McGill, delaying his profession­al musical career.

“I just invested so much,” Abramovitz said. “I gave it all I had.”

But two years later, Abramovitz would find out that he was, in fact, accepted to the program.

The letter was sent not by Gilad but by Abramovitz’s girlfriend, a flute student at McGill who had spent night after night consoling him about the rejection, Abramovitz said.

The girlfriend had logged onto his email account and deleted his acceptance letter to Colburn, Abramovitz said. She impersonat­ed Abramovitz in an email to Gilad, declining the offer because he would be “elsewhere.”

Then she impersonat­ed Gilad through a fake email address, telling Abramovitz he had not been accepted, according to Abramovitz.

Abramovitz suspects it was a scheme to ensure that he wouldn’t move away. Or perhaps, he wonders, was the girlfriend jealous?

On June 14, a judge in Ontario Superior Court awarded Abramovitz $350,000 in damages in Canadian dollars (more than $260,000 U.S. dollars) caused by his girlfriend’s “reprehensi­ble betrayal of trust” and “despicable interferen­ce in Mr Abramovitz’s career,” the judge, D.L. Corbett, wrote.

In 2016, about two years after he thought he was rejected by Gilad, Abramovitz applied once more to study with the renowned professor.

Gilad remembered Abramovitz. And after his audition, Gilad asked him a perplexing question: “What are you doing here? You rejected me.”

“Clearly something must have gone wrong,” Abramovitz said he thought to himself. At first, Abramovitz thought he could have been deceived by a “computer-savvy clarinetis­t out there who wanted my demise.”

By this point, he and his girlfriend had already been broken up for more than a year. Even so, it did not occur to him that she could be responsibl­e for impersonat­ing him.

But then one of his friends suggested the possibilit­y that his ex-girlfriend could be responsibl­e. When they dated, Abramovitz lived with her, leaving his computer easily accessible to her. She knew his passwords and could have easily logged on to his email.

In May 2016, Abramovitz and his friend tried logging on to the email account that sent the fake rejection letter, giladyehud­a09@gmail.com. Abramovitz remembered an old password the exgirlfrie­nd used for Facebook, and “we got right in.” The ex-girlfriend’s contact informatio­n appeared clearly in the email account. The only exchange there was the rejection letter sent to Abramovitz.

“It was not only a stab in the back but in the heart,” Abramovitz said.

He hired a lawyer, filed a lawsuit against the former girlfriend. She never responded to the lawsuit he filed against her, and lost by default. The Washington Post could not locate her for comment.

 ?? ERIC ABRAMOVITZ ?? Eric Abramovitz has accepted a job as a clarinetis­t in the Toronto Symphony Orchestra.
ERIC ABRAMOVITZ Eric Abramovitz has accepted a job as a clarinetis­t in the Toronto Symphony Orchestra.

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