Isadore ‘Izzy’ Tadiello

NORTH CANAAN — Isadore “Izzy” Tadiello, 97, our friend and hero and a Pearl Harbor attack survivor, passed away peacefully at his home on April 23, 2019. 

He was born Oct. 3, 1921, to Otavia and Joseph Tadiello in Winsted. He was the oldest Pearl Harbor survivor in Connecticut. He was aboard the USS Curtiss, anchored off of Ford Island, on Dec. 7, 1941. He survived the attack and continued to serve until returning to Connecticut to begin his electrical career, and established I.A. Tadiello Electric in 1960. 

Izzy was a communicant of St. Mary of Tours and loved the Sunday Masses and Rosary in the evenings. 

He was married to Irma (Baldesseri) Tadiello from 1946 to 1976, and Elizabeth Van Dyk Tadiello from 1978 to 2008. 

He leaves two sons, William Tadiello and his wife, Barbara, of East Canaan and David Tadiello and his wife, Nancy, of Charles Town, W. Va.; his stepsons, Ben Van Dyk and his wife, Pam, of Marstons Mills, Mass., and Andre Van Dyk and his wife, Sis, of Little Rock, Ark.; his adoring grandchildren, Jennifer Felcher, Angela Seiferd, Victoria Whitehorn and Grant Tadiello; and nine great-grandchildren. 

He was predeceased by his brother, Tony; his sisters, Rose and Madeline; and his grandson, Jeremy Tadiello.

Funeral services will be held on Friday, May 10, at the Newkirk-Palmer Funeral Home in North Canaan. Calling hours are from 6 to 8 p.m. A Mass of Christian Burial will be at St. Joseph Church in North Canaan, on Saturday, May 11, at 10 a.m. A military burial will follow at St. Joseph Cemetery in North Canaan.

Memorial donations in Izzy’s name may be made to the North Canaan Volunteer Ambulance Corps or the VFW Couch Pipa Post 6851 in North Canaan.

The family would like to thank Salisbury VNA and Hospice for the outstanding and compassionate care shown to Izzy and the family.                 

Latest News

2025 Jubilee Luncheon
   We look forward to seeing you!

Ruth Franklin discusses ‘The Many Lives of Anne Frank’ at Beth David

Ruth Franklin and Ileene Smith in conversation at Congregation Beth David in Amenia.

Natalia Zukerman

Congregation Beth David in Amenia hosted a conversation on the enduring legacy of Anne Frank, one of the 20th century’s most iconic figures. Ruth Franklin, award-winning biographer and critic, shared insights from her highly acclaimed book “The Many Lives of Anne Frank” with thought-provoking questions from Ileene Smith, Editorial Director of the Jewish Lives series. This event, held on July 23 — the date Anne Frank would have turned 96 — invited the large audience to reconsider Anne Frank not just as the young writer of a world-famous diary, but as a cultural symbol shaped by decades of representation and misrepresentation.

Franklin and Smith dove right in; Franklin reading a passage from the book that exemplified her approach to Anne’s life. She described her work as both a biography of Anne Frank and a cultural history of the diary itself, a document that has resonated across the world.

Keep ReadingShow less
Prokofiev, piano and perfection: Yuja Wang at Tanglewood

Yuja Wang performs with the TMCO and Andris Nelsons.

Hilary Scott

Sunday, July 20 was sunny and warm. Nic Mayorga, son of American concert pianist, the late Lincoln Mayorga, joined me at Tanglewood to hear Yuja Wang play Prokofiev’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in G minor, Op. 16. I first saw Wang on July 8, 2022, when she filled in for Jean-Yves Thibaudet on the opening night of Tanglewood’s summer season. She virtually blew the shed down with her powerful and dynamic playing of Liszt’s Piano Concerto No. 1.

Nic was my guest last season on July 13, when Wang wowed us with her delicate interpretation of Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 4. We made plans on the spot to return for her next date in Lenox.

Keep ReadingShow less