Maria Luisa Tipo was born in Naples on Dec. 23, 1931. Her mother, Ersilia Cavallo, was a concert pianist; her father, she told The Baltimore Sun in 1993, was a mathematics professor who loved music.
When she was a teenager, at the end of World War II, her mother brought her to Rome to study with the great Italian modernist composer Alfredo Casella (1883-1947), who was already ailing. “I saw him between operations,” she told La Repubblica. “He was very sweet. And he praised my legato so much.”
Her big break came in 1949, when, at age 17, she won first prize at the Geneva International Music Competition. Three years later, she placed third at the Queen Elisabeth Competition in Brussels, attracting the attention of Rubinstein, who was a juror. She made her New York debut in 1955 at Town Hall, drawing praise from Mr. Schonberg, who wrote that she “carried the audience with the verve of her playing and her natural affinity to the keyboard.”
She would go on to play with the world’s leading orchestras, including the Berlin Philharmonic and the Boston Symphony. She retired from the concert stage in 1995, explaining to Il Corriere: “I’ve never liked playing for myself. I’ve always done it only for the listeners.”
Ms. Tipo is survived by her daughter, the violinist Alina Company. Ms. Tipo’s marriages to the guitarist and composer Alvaro Company and the pianist Alessandro Specchi ended in divorce.
Mr. Schonberg, writing in 1991, drew a picture of Ms. Tipo that is amply projected in her extensive legacy of recordings:
“Those who have had anything to do with Miss Tipo know how decisive she is. She is tall, imposing, genial, prone to laughter, but she can also be stubborn. When she makes up her mind, her chin juts forward, steel comes into her eyes, and she is immovable.”