Grace Ellrodt, left, and conductor David Zinman sit with Zinman's puppy, Carlito, outside his home on Monday, Aug. 7, 2017, in Lenox, Mass. Ellrodt found the missing dog Sunday evening after hearing about a plea cellist Yo-Yo Ma made for help following the BSO's matinee concert at Tanglewood. 
Grace Ellrodt, left, and conductor David Zinman sit with Zinman's puppy, Carlito, outside his home on Monday, Aug. 7, 2017, in Lenox, Mass. Ellrodt found the missing dog Sunday evening after hearing about a plea cellist Yo-Yo Ma made for help following the BSO's matinee concert at Tanglewood.  Credit: Boston Symphony Orchestra via AP/Hilary Scott

LENOX, Mass. (AP) — With Yo-Yo Ma’s help, a friend was able to bring his lost puppy home.

On Sunday, the cellist made an impassioned plea to nearly 14,000 concert-goers after a matinee at Tanglewood, asking them to help find conductor David Zinman’s lost puppy.

The 4-month-old Havanese named Carlito had vanished that morning and Zinman was afraid the puppy would get run over by a car or snatched by a coyote.

Ma considers Zinman one of his greatest mentors.

Grace Ellrodt didn’t attend the show but heard about the lost dog from concert-goers and family.

She and her boyfriend were driving in Lenox that night when they spotted the lost puppy in the road. She says she knew right way it was Carlito.