Daisy Kennedy | |
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Background information | |
Born | Burra-Burra, South Australia | 16 January 1893
Died | 30 July 1981 Hammersmith, London, England | (aged 88)
Instrument | Violin |
Daisy Fowler Kennedy (16 January 1893 – 30 July 1981) was an Australian-born concert violinist.
She was born in Burra-Burra, 160 km north of Adelaide, to parents of Scottish and Irish descent.[1] Her father, Joseph A. Kennedy, was headmaster of Glenelg Primary School and president of the South Australian Public School Teachers' Union.[2] For three years, she was Elder scholar at the Adelaide Conservatory[1] under Mrs. Alderman and Hermann Heinicke.[2] She was a private pupil of Otakar Ševčík in Vienna for a year, and then studied for two years in the Meister-Schule there.[1] She appeared in London in 1911 and toured widely in Europe and in the United States, Australia and New Zealand.
On 15 April 1914,[2] she married the Russian pianist Benno Moiseiwitsch; their daughter, the theatre designer Tanya Moiseiwitsch, was born in December the same year. They had a second daughter, Sandra. After divorcing Moiseiwitsch, she married the English playwright and poet John Drinkwater in December 1924.[3] They had a daughter, Penny Drinkwater, who went on to become a wine writer and member of the circle of wine writers.
On 24 August 1927 a Proms performance of Brahms' Violin Concerto ground to a halt in the first movement. Kennedy apparently blamed a lack of rehearsal time, but the Times said that she suffered "a lapse of memory...which had the effect of making her play all the better when she recovered her nerve".[4][5]
She was a cousin of cellist Lauri Kennedy,[6] and thus also related to Lauri's son John Kennedy, another cellist, and grandson, the violinist Nigel Kennedy.