David Helfgott

David Helfgott
Born (1947-05-19) 19 May 1947
Melbourne, Australia
Occupation musician
Spouse(s) Clara Papp
Gillian Muray

David Helfgott (born 19 May 1947) is an Australian concert pianist. Helfgott's life inspired the Academy Award-winning film Shine, in which he was played by Geoffrey Rush.

Biography

Early life

Helfgott was born in Melbourne to Polish Jewish parents Rachel (née Granek) and Elias Peter Helfgott.[1] He became known as a child prodigy after his father started teaching him the piano when he was five. When he was ten years old he studied under Frank Arndt, a Perth piano teacher, and won several local competitions—sometimes alone and sometimes with his elder sister Margaret.

At the age of fourteen while studying at Mount Lawley Senior High School, people such as Perth composer James Penberthy and writer Katharine Susannah Prichard raised money to enable him to go to the United States to study music. However, his father denied him permission. From age 17 he studied with Alice Carrard, a former student of Béla Bartók and István Thomán. He won the state final of the ABC Instrumental and Vocal Competition six times.[2]

London studies and mental illness

At the age of nineteen, Helfgott won a scholarship to study at the Royal College of Music in London, where he studied under the pianist Cyril Smith for three years. The awards he won at the RCM included the Dannreuther Prize for Best Concerto Performance for his performance of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3, and the Marmaduke Barton Prize.[2]

During his time in London he began showing more definite manifestations of schizoaffective disorder. He returned to Perth in 1970. The following year he married Clare Papp, an older woman with four children.[3] He worked as a rehearsal pianist for the Western Australian Opera Company[3] and also took part in several ABC concerts. After his brief marriage broke down he was institutionalised in Graylands, a Perth mental hospital. Over the next ten years, he underwent psychiatric treatment which included psychotropic medication and electroconvulsive therapy.

In 1983 his brother Les Helfgott found him working at a Perth wine bar called Riccardo's.[3] In 1984, at Riccardo's, Helfgott met Gillian Murray, an astrologer. They married later that year.

Shine

Helfgott was the subject of the 1996 film Shine, which dealt with the pianist's formative years and struggle with mental illness. Helfgott was portrayed by actors Geoffrey Rush (adult), Noah Taylor (teenager) and Alex Rafalowicz (child).[4] The film has come in for strong criticism from Helfgott's sister Margaret for a range of alleged inaccuracies, particularly for the portrayal of his father Peter as a violent and tyrannical despot. His brother Les has described the portrayal of their father in both Shine and in Gillian Helfgott's biography as "... all outright lies". David Helfgott's first wife Clare Papp has also said that Peter Helfgott was "quite badly maligned" in the film.[5] In 1998, Margaret published the book Out of Tune: David Helfgott and the Myth of Shine.

In a letter to the editor of Limelight magazine, published in the September 2013 edition, Margaret and Les Helfgott refer to certain claims made in an article in the August 2013 edition,[6] and state that ... there was no estrangement from members of David's family following his return to Australia. On the contrary, ... he moved straight back into the family home, and was cared for by our family. ... Dad was not 'overbearing', and his main objection to David's going abroad was his concern for his son's welfare. In a letter to the Royal College of Music's director in London, David wrote that his father 'was a super human being'".

Current musical career

Helfgott generally prefers to perform Romantic music, mostly Mussorgsky, Rachmaninoff, Chopin, Liszt, Schumann and Rimsky-Korsakov. However, his recordings and performances, especially that of Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3, have been criticized as "pallid, erratic and incoherent."[7] Of the two commercial recordings released by RCA, the American journal Fanfare Magazine was critical not only of Helfgott himself, but also of his producers, who were "marketing Helfgott's pain."[8] The British magazine Gramophone was similarly scathing about the exploitative nature of their issue, which, the magazine said, falsely marketed Helfgott as an "unsung genius".[9][10]

On stage, Helfgott is known for his unusual platform manner. In 1997, critic Anthony Tommasini noted that Helfgott "stares into the hall and renders a nonstop commentary of grunts, groans and mutterings".[11] Of a 1997 Helfgott recital in New Zealand, critic Denis Dutton wrote, "If, as Goethe claimed, architecture is frozen music, David Helfgott is the musician who finally proves the converse: that music can also be melted architecture — a structureless rubble of notes."[12]

In December 1999, Helfgott was the opener for the "Geniuses, Savants and Prodigies" conference of Allan Snyder's Centre for the Mind.

Also in 1999, Helfgott appeared on the rock group Silverchair's album Neon Ballroom (on the opening track, Emotion Sickness). Ben Gillies, the drummer of Silverchair, described Helfgott's adding of the brilliant and difficult piano track to the song, as one of the greatest things he'd seen a musician do. The piano arrangement was made by Larry Muhoberac.

Helfgott tours Australia annually and plays a small number of recitals in other countries.[2]

Helfgott's 2015 European tour was the subject of a documentary, Hello I Am David![13]

Personal life

Helfgott and his second wife, Gillian, live in The Promised Land, a valley near Bellingen in New South Wales.[2] She has written a biography of David, Love You to Bits and Pieces, which sold very well but came in for considerable criticism from David's family, particularly its portrayal of Peter Helfgott.

Awards

References

  1. David Helfgott biography accessed 5/27/2015
  2. 1 2 3 4 David Helfgott Official Website
  3. 1 2 3 Who, 24 March 1997
  4. Richard Jinman, "Sound and Fury", Sydney Morning Herald, 10 May 1997, News Review, p. 37
  5. Illario Colli, Limelight, August 2013. Rise and shine with David Helfgott. Retrieved 14 October 2014
  6. For Audience at a Recital, the Shine Is Undiminished - New York Times
  7. Fanfare, Volume 23, No. 3 (1999), review by Peter J. Rabinowitz
  8. Gramophone, March 1997, review by Bruce Morrison
  9. Gramophone, September 1997, review by Philip Kennicott
  10. For Audience at a Recital, the Shine Is Undiminished - New York Times
  11. Denis Dutton on David Helfgott
  12. Tan, Becky. "Hello, I Am David - Eine Reise mit David Helfgott". KinoCritics. Retrieved September 4, 2016.

Sources

External links

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