Joseph Horovitz
JH: Arrival stamp
Joseph Horovitz
Born: 1926
Place of Birth: Vienna
Arrived in Britain: 01/05/1938
Interview Number: 148 (S)
Interview Summary
Date of interview: 12/02/2007
Joseph Horovitz was born 1926 in Vienna. His father Bela Horovitz was the founder of the Phaidon Verlag. His father had gone into partnership with an English publisher (Allen and Unwin) and thus avoided Aryanisation. At the time of the Anschluss Joseph’s parents were not in Austria and it was arranged that he and his sisters travelled first to Italy and then to Belgium. On the 15 March 1938 they came to the UK.
Soon after arriving Joseph was sent to a school for refugee children, run by Mr. and Mrs. Schindler, Regent’s Park School. During the war the family moved to Oxford and Joseph first went to the evacuated UCS and then to the City of Oxford High School. He studied Music at New College Oxford and at the Royal College of Music. His first post was as Music Director of the Old Vic in Bristol. He later became a very well known composer (of ballets, concertos, and works for brass bands). One of his very popular works is ‘Captain Noah and his Floating Zoo’.
Place of Birth
It was the first time I saw television. The television was in the hall of that little hotel in Bloomsbury and all I could remember is it was a tiny screen, it must have been nine inches across, and it was standing in the hall and the pictures were blue and white. Not black and white but blue and white. I don’t know why. And it was flickering and I said to my father, I said, papa look, a film, a Kino, a cinema here in a room. And he said yes that’s a new invention and so on. This was 1938.
Seeing TV for the first time
You should find out who you are by asking yourself: ‘what are my antecedents? Where do I come from?’ Then you will understand who you are. And then you will have the strength to cope with the problems that we all have to cope with. Other people won’t understand you unless you tell them who you are.
say who you are
My father put me into a fantastic establishment called Regent's Park School, in Hampstead, Maresfield Gardens... We played cricket in summer, we played football in winter. Our Eton teacher was in fact a member of the British Olympic pole vaulting team. And in the in the school yard, in Maresfield Gardens, he showed us pole vaulting which was quite frightening, almost supernatural. He wasn’t a champion or anything but he was one of the team. There was this enormous bamboo pole and he vaulted over high goal posts and things. And we tried this of course and it was absolute murder. We just fell on the floor and couldn’t do anything. But we were taught English school songs.
Pole vaulting at Schindler's school
