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=Maurice Harold Bonney Jr.= Maurice Harold Bonney Jr. was an American orchestra conductor who led groups in Houston, Texas, Albuquerque, N.M., and Anchorage, Alaska. He was the first full-time conductor of the Mesa (Ariz.) Symphony 1981–87.

Early life and musical training
Bonney, the great-grandson of William Thomas Lilly, grew up in his maternal grandmother’s house after the death of his mother when he was four. Their home on the coast of Maryland made Bonney an excellent swimmer and boatman; he built his first sailboat at the age of 10. Bonney exhibited musical ability at an early age and participated in church and school music programs. His skill on the violin and viola earned him admission to several elite music schools, including the Peabody Conservatory in Baltimore, the U.S. Navy School of Music, and The Juilliard School in New York, where he became interested in conducting. He studied conducting at the University of Southern California and earned a Fulbright Fellowship in orchestral conducting in Rome.

Bonney joined the U.S. Navy during World War II. After completing basic training at Naval Training Station in Bainbridge, Md. (and appearing on "Major Bowes Amateur Hour"), he attended the U.S. Navy School of Music in Washington, D.C. Upon graduation, he served aboard the USS Vixen (PG-53)—a flagship to the Commanders of the Atlantic Fleet—patrolling the eastern seaboard. He reached the rank of Musician 2nd Class and was honorably discharged on 5 March 1946.

Professional life
While a student at Juilliard, Bonney organized the New Symphony of New York, which performed in the city and in the surrounding area. As a Fulbright fellow, he conducted the St. Cecilia Orchestra in Rome and toured Italy and Sicily in a series of 13 concerts. At the Houston Symphony, he worked as associate conductor under the baton of Leopold Stokowski 1954–58, and helped bring that orchestra back into the limelight, a feat he would repeat with the Albuquerque Civic Symphony (later the New Mexico Symphony Orchestra) 1958–68 and with the Anchorage Symphony Orchestra 1968–81. He met Stokowski at the New Hampshire Music Festival, which he founded, and Stokowski invited him to become an associate conductor in Houston. He conducted approximately 120 concerts in Houston, and played viola in the Music Guild String Quartet, composed of first-chair musicians from the symphony. He also organized the Houston Community Orchestra. In Albuquerque, the orchestra experienced tremendous growth in performance quality, community support increased, and more world-class soloists began to appear every season. In 1961, he was the guest conductor of the Tokyo Philharmonic in Japan, leading 17 performances by the orchestra.

During summer breaks, he continued his youth interests in swimming and mountain climbing, and enjoyed touring the U.S. and Europe on his motorcycle, dubbed, “The Silver Bullet.”

Late in life, he reverted to using his family’s historical last name of Dubonnet. He passed away after a long illness on Feb. 6, 2006, and is buried in the National Memorial Cemetery of Arizona in Phoenix. His gravestone reads, “The Maestro.”