Winifred Atwell

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Winifred Atwell (February 27, 1914 - February 28, 1983) was a pianist who enjoyed great popularity in Britain in the 1950s with a series of boogie woogie and ragtime hits.

Atwell was born in Tunapuna in Trinidad and Tobago. Her family owned a pharmacy, and she trained as a druggist, and was expected to join the family business, Winifred, however, had played the piano since a young age, and achieved considerable popularity locally. She used to play for American servicemen at the air force base (which is now the main airport). It was whilst playing at the Servicemen's Club at Piarco that someone bet her she couldn't play something in the boogie woogie style that was popular back home in the USA. She went away and wrote "Piarco Boogie" which was later renamed "Five Finger Boogie".

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[edit] Biography

[edit] Leaving Trinidad

She left Trinidad in the early 1940s and travelled to the United States to study with Alexander Borovsky and in 1946 moved to London, where she had gained a place at the Royal Academy of Music. She became the first female pianist to be awarded the academy's highest grading for musicianship. To support her studies, she played rags at London clubs and theatres. These modest beginnings in variety would one day see her topping the bill at the London Palladium. She said later, "I starved in a garret to get onto concert stages".

[edit] Life in the UK

She attracted attention with an unscheduled appearance at the Casino Theatre, where she substituted for an ill star. She caught the eye of entrepreneur Bernard Delfont, who put her on a long-term contract. She released three discs which were well received. The third, "Jezebel," scurried to the top of the best seller lists. It was her forth disc that catapulted her to huge popularity in the UK. A fiendishly complex arrangement called "Cross Hands Boogie" was released to show her virtuoso rhythmic technique, but it was the "B" side, a 1920s tune written by George Botsford called "The Black and White Rag," that was to become a radio standard. Championed by popular disc jockey Jack Jackson, this recording started a craze for her honky-tonk style of playing. The rag was recorded in bizarre fashion after technicians had "de-tuned" a concert grand for the occasion. (Contrary to popular legend, it was not recorded on a honky tonk piano at all.) It was the exuberant bell-like sound that became her ticket to unrivalled success. In austere, post-war England, Una Winifred Atwell's joyous, brilliant playing made her the nation's favourite instrumentalist.

Winifred Atwell's husband, former stage comedien Lew Levisohn, was vital in shaping her career as a variety star.The two had met in 1946, and had married soon after. They had no children, but the two were inseparable up to Levisohn's death in Hong Kong in December 1977. He had cannily made the choice, for stage purposes, of the regal West Indian pianist playing first a concert grand, then a beaten up old upright piano. The latter was purchased from a Batterslea junk shop for fifty shillings. This became famous as Winifred Atwell's "other piano". It would later feature all over the world, from Las Vegas to the Sydney Opera House, travelling over half a million miles by air throughout Winifred Atwell's concert career.

When Winifred Atwell first came to Britain, she initially earned only a few pounds a week. By the mid-fifties, this had shot up to over $10,000. By 1952, her popularity had spread internationally. Her hands were insured with Lloyds of London for a quarter of a million dollars (the policy stipulating that she was never to wash dishes). She signed a record contract with Decca Records,and her sales were soon 30,000 discs a week. She was by far the biggest selling pianist of her time. She is the only holder of two gold and two silver discs for piano music in Britain, and was the first black artist in the UK to sell a million records. Millions of copies of her sheet music were sold, and she went on to record her best-known hits, such as Let's Have a Party, "Flirtation Waltz", Poor People of Paris (which reached number one in the charts in 1956), Britannia Rag and Jubilee Rag. Her signature "Black and White Rag" became famous again in the 1970s as the theme of the highly popular "Pot Black" snooker programme on BBC television and Australia's ABC.

Her stage persona was of a gently aristocratic woman who came alive at the piano. Her dazzling smile could literally light up a concert stage. It is often forgotten that it was she who first minted the concept of the "personality pianist", attired in dazzling clothes and playing directly to the audience with winks, grins and invitations to sing along. Not a jazz pianist in the strictest sense as she did not improvise, she is nevertheless still regarded as one of the world's finest popular pianists, with a technique that features a left hand maintaining remarkable bass lines while the right maintained an immediately distinctive lyricism. Her piano style was widely imitated by other keyboard players such as Russ Conway, Crazy Otto, Mrs. Mills and Joe Henderson. She herself believed that her finest work was her late - sixties albums, "Chartbusters", a tour-de-force of piano pops, and the exquisite self titled album of standards variously released as self-titled or under the name "The Plush Piano of WInifred Atwell".

Winifred Atwell's peak was the second half of the fifties, during which her concerts drew standing room only crowds everywhere in the world. She played three Royal Variety Performances, starred in every capital city in Europe,and played personally for over twenty million people. At a private party for the Queen, she was called back for an encore by the monarch herself, who requested "Roll Out the Barrel." She became a firm television favourite. She had her own series in Britain (1956-57) and on Australian television in 1960-1961. Her brilliant career earned her a fortune, and would have extended further to the US but for issues of race. Her breakthrough appearance was to have been on the Ed Sullivan Show in 1956, but on arrival in America was confronted with problems of selling the show in the south. The appearance was never recorded.

In 1955 Winifred Atwell arrived in Australia and was greeted as an international celebrity. Her tour broke box office records on the Tivoli circuit, and she brought in £600,000 pounds in box office receipts.She was paid $5,000 a week, today worth about ten times as much, making her the highest paid star from a commonwealth country to visit Australia up to that time.

Her enormous popularity in Australia led to her settling in Sydney in the 1970s. She would finally become an Australian citizen two years before her death.

[edit] Later life

Winifred Atwell purchased waterside properties in Bilgola and Seaforth in Sydney, as jumping-off bases for her world-wide performance commitments. Enjoying the deep affection of the public, she was nevertheless keenly aware of prejudice and injustice,and outspoken about racism in Australia. She always donated her services in a charity concert on Sundays, the proceeds going to orphanages and needy children. She spoke out against the third world conditions endured by Aborigines in Australia, which made headlines during an outback tour of the country in 1962. Dismissing racism as a factor in her own life, she said she felt she was "spoiled very much by the public." She left her estate to the Australian Guide Dogs for the Blind.

Winifred Atwell also created headlines in the 1960s with her spectacular dieting (slimming from sixteen to twelve stone on what would today be called a protein diet). One of her gifts to British showbusiness was discovering one of its best-ever singers. Terry Parsons, a diminutive bus driver, caught her ear with his ultra - smooth vocalizing. Winifred renamed him Monro, after her own chemist-father, and the first name, Matt, came from a well known show-business columnist at the time. Matt Monro would feature on Winifred Atwell radio shows, and go on to international stardom. Frank Sinatra would later proclaim him "the only British singer worth listening to"; George Martin of Beatles fame said he was the finest singer he ever worked with.

Though a dynamic stage personality, Atwell was, in person, a shy, retiring and soft-spoken woman of genuine modesty. Eloquent and intellectual, she was well read and, unlike many in the frenetic world of professional showbusiness, keenly interested in and remarkable informed about issues and current events. Voracious in her reading habits and an inveterate habitue of the crosswords, she confessed to an inordinate love of mangoes, a dislike of new shoes, and a keen interest in televised cricket (she backed England).

Winifred Atwell often returned to her native Trinidad, and on one occasion she bought a house in Saint Augustine, a home she adored and later renamed Winvilla and which was later turned into the Pan Pipers Music School by one of her students - Miss Louise McIntosh. She recorded "Ivory and Steel", an album of standards, with the Trinidad All-Stars, and supported musical scholarships in the West Indies. She was awarded the Gold Hummingbird, Caribbean music's highest award for achievement. In the early 1980s, Winifred Atwell's deep sense of loss following her husband's death made her consider returning to Trinidad to live, but she found the weather too hot.

Winifred Atwell suffered a stroke in 1980. She officially retired on the Mike Walsh Show, Australia's highest rating television variety programme, in 1981. In 1983 following a fire that destroyed her Narrabeen home, she suffered a heart attack and died while staying with friends in Seaforth. She is buried beside husband Lew Levisohn in northern New South Wales, just outside Lismore.

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