Violin virtuoso Yehudi Menuhin was born on this date in 1916. 10 things you might not know about him.
He was born in New York to Moshe and Marutha, who were immigrants who were both born in Russia and had both lived in Palestine as children. He had two sisters, Hephzibah and Yaltah. His sisters were both accomplished pianists.
At the age of four, he was given a tin Violin, which he smashed because it didn’t make a beautiful enough sound.
His first public appearance was at the age of six when he played Accolay’s violin concerto in A minor at the San Francisco Civic Auditorium. He gave his first full-length solo recital at the age of eight at the Scottish Rite Auditorium, San Francisco.
Soon after, the family moved to Europe because that was where the best violin teachers were. Yehudi studied with the Romanian George Enesco in Paris and the German Adolf Busch in Basel. In 1927 Enesco invited the family to visit Romania where Yehudi was introduced to Gypsy music.
As a youngster, he’d enjoy a post-concert treat of strawberry Ice cream with whipped cream on top. His fondness for strawberries got him in big trouble with his father during their stay in Romania – Yehudi exchanged a valuable silver-tipped violin bow for a month’s supply of wild Strawberries from the gypsies.
He was married twice. His first wife was Nola Nicholson, an Australian, with whom he had two sons. Their marriage broke down during the second world war. Nola’s father persuaded them to give it another go after the war ended, but it didn’t work out. In 1947 Yehudi Menuhin married Diana Gould, a former Ballet dancer. He had two more sons with her, and they remained together until he died.
During the war Menuhin played for US troops, including a series of concerts for wounded marines and for soldiers about to participate in the Battle of Guam. He flew to Britain twice to play for British and French troops and factory workers. As European cities were liberated, he visited to play concerts in them soon afterwards, and he also played a concert at the Belsen concentration camp for survivors there, with Benjamin Britten accompanying him on Piano.
He spoke out against apartheid in South Africa. When he visited there, he insisted on playing for black audiences as well as white ones. In 1996 he conducted Handel's Messiah with a black choir in a township outside Johannesburg.
In 1951 he developed an interest in yoga after reading about it in a newspaper in New Zealand. The following year he was in India raising money for famine relief and found himself a yoga teacher, Mr B.K.S. Iyengar, who became a good friend. While in India he dined with the prime minister Pandit Nehru and showed off his Yoga proficiency by standing on his head during the pre-dinner cocktail party. Mr Nehru did the same.
He became a UK citizen in his late 60s and was granted a knighthood and then a life peerage. He took the title Lord Menuhin of Stoke d’Abernon, the Surrey village where his international school for young musicians is based.






