Become a Member
Music

Happy birthday to the cello maestro, Steven Isserlis

Steven Isserlis's 60th is being marked by a concert at the Wigmore Hall

December 13, 2018 14:17
Steven Isserlis
3 min read

"That’s me wearing Harpo’s wig.” Steven Isserlis points at a photo above his kitchen table. The great British cellist is related to some extraordinary people, including Felix Mendelssohn, Helena Rubinstein and Karl Marx. Harpo Marx is not one of them, but is a hero of his nonetheless.

Like Harpo — about whom he once made a programme for Radio Four — Isserlis matches mesmeric music-making with irrepressible wit. On the one hand, he moves audiences to tears with the tenderness of his playing, and on the other hand reduces readers of all ages to tears of laughter with his children’s books, Why Handel Waggled his Wig and Why Beethoven Threw the Stew (both published by Faber and Faber) . They have now been favourites with a whole generation of musical kids — and their parents.

His Twitter account makes lively reading, full of hair-raising stories about his travels with his cello. “I was on a Japanese airline, business class — very nice — and I asked the stewardess if she could help make up the bed,” he recounts. “I thought she said: ‘Are you sexy?’ It took me a minute to work out that ‘Yes, I’m in 6C…’”

He is now about to turn 60. To mark his birthday later this month, he is taking over the Wigmore Hall on December 17 for a marathon of music and words, starting with the actor Gabriel Woolf reading some of Isserlis’s favourite passages from Charles Dickens, P G Wodehouse, and Noel Langley’s The Land of Green Ginger.