Nicole Henriot-Schweitzer

[2] She studied music at the Conservatoire de Paris in Marguerite Long's class.

In 1939, she won third prize in the Gabriel Fauré competition at Luxembourg city (after Georges Farago and Ginette Doyen,[3]) and began her career after the Second World War.

In the biography of Charles Munch written by D. Kern Holoman is told that she was tortured by the Gestapo.

[5] She died in Louveciennes and lies in the cemetery (ancient part), in the same tomb as Charles Munch.

The Boston Symphony Orchestra, directed by her uncle Charles Munch, very often chose her as interpreter.