Phyllis Sellick

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Phyllis Sellick
Birth name Phyllis Doreen Sellick
Born (1911-06-16)16 June 1911
England Ilford, Essex, England, United Kingdom
Died 26 May 2007(2007-05-26) (aged 95)
England Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, England
Genres Romantic, 20th century
Occupations Virtuoso pianist, pedagogue
Instruments Piano
Years active 1929–2002

Phyllis Sellick, OBE (16 June 1911  26 May 2007)[1][2][3][4] was a British pianist and teacher, best known for her partnership with her pianist husband Cyril Smith.

Biography

Born at Ilford, Essex, Phyllis Sellick started to play the piano by ear at the age of three and had her first music lesson on her fifth birthday. Four years later she won the Daily Mirror's "Pip, Squeak and Wilfred" contest for young musicians and was awarded two years' private tuition with Cuthbert Whitemore, subsequently winning an open scholarship to continue her study with him at the Royal Academy of Music. She later studied with Isidor Philipp in Paris. She specialised in French and English music.[5]

She first met Cyril Smith at a concert in the Queen's Hall, London. They married in 1937 and had two children, a son, Graham, who predeceased his mother, and a daughter, Claire.

She and her husband performed together at The Proms[5] in 1941,[6] making many international tours and recordings as a duo. Composers such as Ralph Vaughan Williams (Introduction and Fugue 'For Phyllis and Cyril') and Lennox Berkeley (Concerto for Two Pianos, premiered at the Albert Hall in December 1948) wrote music specially for them.[5]

Their career continued even after Smith lost the use of his left hand following two strokes, when the couple would play specially devised material for three hands, including a concerto written for them in 1969 by Malcolm Arnold (Concerto for Piano 3 Hands and Orchestra, Op. 104, sometimes known as Concerto for Phyllis and Cyril).

She and Smith were awarded OBEs in 1971. After Smith's death in 1974, Sellick continued a long and successful career as a teacher at the Royal College of Music, where her husband had taught. She continued to work into her 90s, despite her failing eyesight and loss of her playing ability in her left hand following an accident.

In 2002 she appeared on the BBC radio programme Desert Island Discs. One of her choices was Sergei Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini to which she added "I would like Cyril to play it".

Phyllis Sellick continued to work into her 10th decade. She died at age 95 in 2007 and was survived by her daughter, Claire Sellick, a photographer.

References

  1. Biographies and Autobiographies
  2. John Amis, Obituaries: Phyllis Sellick, Guardian Unlimited
  3. Obituaries: Phyllis Sellick, The Daily Telegraph
  4. Obituaries: Phyllis Sellick, The Independent
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 5th edition, 1954
  6. Duopianists, Women at the Piano
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