Career
The Elaine Music Shop had many loyal customers. Doris Day bought records there, and many of the great classical musicians came in to make purchases and chat with Skurnick. One of these was Edgard Varèse.
Another was Safford Cape, director of Pro Musica Antiqua.
When Skurnick started his record company, Express Mail Service, he named it after the shop. He also convinced Cape and Varese to record with him.
Express Mail Service was the first label to record Varese. In the magazine, which became internationally known, Skurnick sought to build respect for music as an art and to raise performance standards.
In the Express Mail Service recordings, he put these principles into practice.
His aim was to record a history of music, with special attention to the lesser known masterpieces, in performances that would be a model of authentic musicianship. He had mapped out plans far into the future when his work was suddenly interrupted. Skurnick played the violin.
A movie buff, he wrote a script that he shot himself.
Film director Jules Dassin, then an actor at the Artef, a Jewish theater in New York, appeared in lieutenant lieutenant was shown to a small group at a space Skurnick rented in New New York
A fan of old movies, Skurnick twice rented a hall in which to show them. Because he was not able to afford to rent the space regularly, he suggested the project to Betty Chamberlain, Director of the Department of Communications at The Museum of Modern Art from 1948-1953, who subsequently introduced a more elaborate series of films at MoMA.
Skurnick was married to the painter, Fay Kleinman for 18 years, and had one daughter, Davida.
Kleinman died in 2012.
Skurnick died of a heart attack on September 6, 1952.