Jacqueline du Pre
and William Pleeth
At ten years old Jacqueline du Pré studied under William Pleeth. She then studied with Casals, Tortelier and Rostropovich. In 1965 she recorded the Elgar Concerto with Sir John Barbirolli and the London Symphony Orchestra, a recording which established her stardom. Her unselfishness made her a brilliant chamber music player, collaborating with many of today's greatest names in music. Her friendship with Daniel Barenboim, Itzhak Perlman, Zubin Mehta and Pinchas Zuckerman, led to the famous film by Christopher Nupen of their Schubert "Trout" Quintet.
In 1967 she married pianist Daniel Barenboim. TIME magazine wrote, "Thus began one of the most remarkable relationships, personal as well as professional, that music has known since the days of Clara and Robert Schumann." Their marriage led to some fruitful collaboration, evidenced in many recordings with Barenboim as pianist or conductor.
She could not pinpoint the time when she started losing feeling in her fingers, and her arms, as she said, felt like lead. By the fall of 1973 she was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. She continued to teach on occasion, but the deterioration of her health gained momentum and finally, on October 19, 1987, she died at the age of forty-two.
William Pleeth
William Pleeth enjoyed an international reputation as a performer and teacher with advanced students and prefessional players comming from almost every continent to study with him. Perhaps it was his most famous pupil, Jacqueline du Pré, who remains the outstanding example of his uncanny ability to guide a musical talent. After his retirement from the concert platform in 1986, he was invited to give cello and chamber music masterclasses all over the world. His book, Cello, in the Menuhin Series, has been universally acclaimed an published in many languages. Among numerous honours conferrd upon him, William Pleeth was awarded the OBE in 1989.