I am so very sad Irene has passed away. Somehow it just doesn't seem possible that such a spark of energy is stilled.
I met Irene when I was a brand new piano teacher just starting out and was invited to join Shore Music Educators Association. I was a new mother at the time and did not have a babysitter for my little girl. I had no choice but to take her to the meeting. I was nervous about doing so, afraid of a baby outburst, afraid I would be asked to leave. Irene was the first person to approach me. Smiling. She was welcoming and I let go my held breath. She introduced me to Diane Dollak and several other teachers. That was the start of our long affiliation.
Irene held many positions in Shore Music Educators. She was a stickler for rules and incredibly well-organized. She was a calm voice of reason and negotiation when board meetings got heated, always cutting to the chase, no nonsense for her!
Those board meetings were held at her house in Holmdel many times, in the lovely lower-level piano studio. How I envied that great teaching space! Frequently I had to attend with one child then later a second. Irene never minded.
I especially enjoyed the SMEA lunch get-togethers when Irene contributed yummy steam buns.
During her term as president of SMEA, Irene kept the many moving parts of our music organization running smoothly. Then for a number of years she was in charge of Student Evaluation and that event ran with nearly military precision.
In later years, when I was in charge of a large event for a state music teachers association, and overwhelmed trying to oversee the practical aspects of the spring auditions then getting results for 1,000+ students collated and mailed to teachers, followed by organizing and overseeing the multitude of awards recitals after, Irene was one of the very few teachers who offered to help.
She, along with our good friend Lyndall Soden, came to my house, sorted audition results and stuffed envelopes, saving me much time and labor. Her humor made and sense of calm made it a far more tolerable job. And she even did the post office run where each envelope had to be individually weighed for postage. The dirty looks from the assisting postal clerk, I am sure, did not phase Irene in the least.
.She was a lovely person who I am fortunate to have known. My condolences to Irene's entire family.