Moscow Conservatory | American Conservatory Theater | Peabody Award | Saint Petersburg Conservatory | New England Conservatory | Royal Conservatory of Brussels | Peabody | Oberlin Conservatory of Music | Peabody, Massachusetts | Vienna Conservatory | Boston Conservatory | Peabody Institute | Peabody Hotel | Peabody Essex Museum | Berlin Conservatory | Peabody Museum of Natural History | Lviv Conservatory | National Conservatory of Music of America | American Conservatory of Music | Peabody Opera House | Kiev Conservatory | John Peabody Harrington | Richard Peabody | Peabody, Kansas | National Conservatory of Music | Nathaniel Peabody Rogers | Madrid Royal Conservatory | Endicott Peabody | Conservatory of Flowers | Arthur Peabody |
Graduate of the Baltimore City College and the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, musician in a nickelodeon, and chorus boy in one of the Milton Aborn's operettas, Al Goodman was first introduced to musical comedy by the late Earl Carroll who persuaded him to collaborate in producing his musical, So Long Letty.
She wrote during the summers and taught in various schools: the Hopkins evening school, then known as McCoy College; a University of Maryland branch in Paris; Goucher College; the Peabody Conservatory; Towson University; and what is now known as Hollins University in Roanoke, Virginia.
In the midst of his performance schedule, he taught at various facilities, first at the Institute of Musical Art (1922–1938), then at the Mannes College (1943), the Peabody Conservatory (1947–1965), Tanglewood (as of 1949), the Cleveland Institute of Music (1964–1967), and also at Queens College beginning in 1969.
After receiving a B.M. in Musicology in France, he completed a M.M. in orchestral conducting at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign with Donald Schleicher and a G.P.D. at the Peabody Conservatory with Gustav Meier and Markand Thakar.