Philomena Rukmavathy Thumboochetty (10 October 1913 – March 2000) was an Indian violinist. She was the first Indian musician admitted to the Conservatoire de Paris.
Philomena Thumboochetty was born in Bangalore and educated in Mysore, the daughter of Sir T. Thumboo Chetty, OBE and Selvavathy (Lady Gertitude Thumboo Chetty). Her father was the private secretary to the Maharaja of Mysore, her grandfather Sir T. R. A. Thumboo Chetty was the First Indian Chief Judge of the Chief Court of Mysore and the Offg. Dewan of Mysore. Her family was Roman Catholic. She attended the Calcutta School of Music, before gaining a fellowship to Trinity College London. At the age of 16, she was the youngest candidate, and the first candidate from India, admitted to the Conservatoire de Paris, After finishing her course at the Conservatoire de Paris, she became the pupil of Romanian violinist Georges Enesco.
Thumboochetty was “one of the first Indian women to achieve distinction as a violinist.”[5] She and her mother were presented to King George V and Queen Mary in 1934.[6] In 1935, she gave her a concert at London’s Aeolian Hall.[7] Returning to India in 1935,[8] she gave a concert at the Jaganmohan Palace, accompanied by the Palace Orchestra,[9] before an audience that included the Maharaja and his party. In 1937, she played with the Calcutta Symphony Orchestra. Also that year, a short biography appeared, The Indian Fiddler Queen: A Short Sketch of Philomena Thumboochetty.[10] In 1938, she was guest soloist at the Calcutta School of Music’s Fifth Symphony Concert, heard live on All India Radio.[11]
After marriage and children, Thumboochetty gave concerts in Bangalore, but did not tour; “she continued to practice three hours a day almost to the end of her life,” according to her son.[12] She played with the Max Mueller Bhavan Orchestra in the 1960s and 1970s. She also taught violin; one of her successful students was Grammy-winning violinist and composer Manoj George.[13] Thumboochetty was also a strong chess player.[12]
Thumboochetty married Francis Kantaraj Thumboochetty in 1937. Mirza Ismail gave a speech at their wedding.[14] They had five children, including her first daughter, Chitra, who was born with a hearing impairment.[15] Philomena Thumboochetty died in 2000. Her family’s Thumboochetty Foundation sponsors two concerts a year in her memory.[12][16]
The few grainy black-and-white photographs date from a century ago. Yet, together with a few short sketches, and a couple of newspaper articles, they tell a compelling tale, and conjure up vivid images of a musician with prodigious talent, of an artiste who wore her laurels lightly, with grace and humility.
The first photograph is of a seven-year-old, violin in hand, already looking at home with the instrument. Philomena was named by her religious father, the “Huzur” Secretary to the Maharaja of Mysore, after the saint to whom he was deeply devoted. A man of vision as well as brilliance, he and his wife, recognised their daughter’s unique gift early, and put her under the tutelage of a musician-nun at a convent in Mysore. Talking about those beginnings, Philomena Thumboochetty said, “I seemed to have taken to music like a fish to water.” So much so that, as a little girl, she was sent to study at the Calcutta School of Music, and took the fellowship examination offered by Trinity College London.
The FTCL, or Fellowship of the Trinity College London, is the highest diploma level, and remains a benchmark for a high level of musical understanding and virtuosity in technique. That a teenager could not only appear for such an assessment, but do so before the doughty examiner Dr Mistowsky was an astonishing achievement. To cap that, she was awarded 98%, with Dr Mistowsky admitting that he had some difficulty in refraining from giving her the full score. A Conservatoire training was inevitable, and in the year 1929, her parents decided to send her to Europe at age 16. After her audition at the Paris Conservatoire, Philomena was one of the ten candidates from around the world to be chosen for admission – the youngest and the first from India.
‘Perfectly in tune’
Paris, a city that symbolised culture, the celebration of the intellect and the human spirit, deepened her musical understanding, even as it honed her formidable technique. Speaking of her classes with the great violin maestro, George Enescu, she said, “He was really my great master. He, I can almost say, moulded me into what I have been for the rest of my life.” Enescu was also the teacher of another brilliant violinist, who later came to have a very special connection with India – Yehudi Menuhin. Decades later, when Menuhin visited her in Bangalore, he told her, “You still play perfectly in tune”. Philomena had perfect pitch. While she was a student, she said, “Menuhin had already become a great star…”, but Punch magazine was to remark later, in its Silver Jubilee issue, that “compared with her, Young Menuhin must yield…”. Light-hearted in vein, certainly, but an acknowledgement, nonetheless, of her standing among the stars of the day.
Given her long association with Trinity College London, it was in the fitness of things that her first public performance was in its College of Music in London. Her repertoire for that evening was an eclectic one, featuring Franck, Beethoven, Kreisler-Vivaldi and Bloch. She was billed as a “Hindu artiste”, probably because she performed (as she would always continue to do) in a sari, and named, in a jumble of initials “Miss P.T. F.T.C.L.”, in a combination of her initials and the fellowship acronym. A mention was also made, in glowing terms, of her royal patron, the Maharaja of Mysore, “a lover and patron of music who is one of the Vice-Presidents of this College”.
Another vivid image appears from 1934, when Philomena and her mother were presented at the court of King George V and Queen Mary. The young musician wore a gold embroidered red sari with a set of emeralds, while her mother was in purple and gold, set off by diamonds. What a glittering, exotic duo they must have been, bowing, not curtseying, to the monarch. It makes a pretty picture, but a superficial and cosmetic one compared to her 1935 recital at London’s Aeolian Hall. Her repertoire was a challenging one, including Philippe Gaubert’s Fantasie (making its London debut), and Bach’s Sonata for Violin in F major. Philomena’s second son, Ravi, told me that one of his most cherished memories is of his mother playing the Bach Sonatas “like a dream”. Critics reviewed the concert favourably: “There were moments of eloquence, and many of pure grace” (Sunday Times), “…Debussy was given with great poetical expression and charm” (Westminster Chronicle).
When she returned to India some months later, it was to a rapturous reception, with Bombay’s most eminent citizens and many from her own part of the country there to honour her. Besieged by the press, Philomena had this to say: “I am anxious to give my first recital in Mysore before His Highness the Maharaja, as a loyal subject of his…” The concert took place the following year at Mysore’s Jagan Mohan Palace, with the Maharaja and the Yuvraj, Jayachamaraja, in the audience. Playing with the Palace Orchestra under the baton of Otto Schmidt, Philomena presented her trademark eclectic repertoire, from the virtuosic Kreisler-Vivaldi Concerto, the spirited Saint-Saëns Havanaise, and the romantic Bruch Violin Concerto to shorter, appealing pieces like Brahms’ Hungarian Dance and Schubert’s Moment Musicale arranged by Kreisler. “One could not fail to note,” says the anonymous author of the The Indian Fiddler Queen: A short Sketch of Philomena Thumboochetty, “and appreciate, the absence of mannerisms and the complete simplicity and naturalness of the method.”
Was this the high point of her career? What came next? Marriage to a family connection, Francis Thumboochetty, in 1937, and a return to Europe to give more recitals. In 1940, the first of her five children was born. Ravi Thumboochetty fills in the blanks: “My sister Chitra was born aurally challenged, taught to lip-read, sent to a special school, and then had a nervous breakdown.” In that economical retelling lies the world of sorrow and strain that the young parents had to cope with. “She was planning to go back to Europe to continue her career,” said Ravi, “but her family commitments did not allow that.” A special-needs child and a growing family anchored her to Bangalore. “There must have been oceans of regret, but she never voiced it,” said Ravi. “She had no chip on her shoulder about her earlier fame, she did what she could to keep her music going. There were concerts in Bangalore, she continued to practise three hours a day almost to the end of her life, she performed when she could…”
Her son talks of her active life as a performer in Bangalore. She played the Kreuzer and Spring sonatas with a visiting pianist from Poland and was the leader of the Max Mueller Bhavan Orchestra in the 1960s and 1970s. She “did what she could” for her art, from the place where circumstances had put her. She taught Ravi the violin, and was “a very patient and very strong teacher, as much as she was a very caring mother. She emphasised the need to master playing techniques. There had to be at least an hour of scales every day. She would go through pieces phrase by phrase, examining every nuance.” In short, she taught the way she had learnt, and there were always surprises in store too. “I was very taken by Sibelius’ Violin Concerto. She asked me to get the score, and sight-read it to perfection. Until two years before she passed away [in 2000] she would play every day, not even neglecting scales, double stops, thirds, sixths…” It was a labour of love that neither time nor pressing domestic responsibilities could dim. She turned her keen intellect in other directions too, becoming an excellent chess player.
It is tempting to indulge in some “what ifs”: had she been born in a later age, would her blazing talent have had more outlets, and longer recognition? Today, when so many young Indian musicians in the field of Western classical music are finding it possible to find opportunities to perform across the country as well as Europe, to an increasingly aware audience, would she have been able to continue gathering the accolades that marked her early career? Ultimately, however, such speculations serve no more purpose than asking “If Mozart had lived longer, what greater riches would he have given the world?” Philomena Thumboochetty lived for her music, not for the fame it brought her. If her music held her audience in thrall, her life is a lesson for every musician.
Ravi Thumboochetty, who points out that his family sponsors two concerts annually in Philomena’s memory, has a vision: to carry forward the legacy she bequeathed him. He plans to open an academy of music in memory of “an extraordinary person and an extraordinary mother”.
Kabadi Waman P. (1937). Indian Whos Who 1937-38. pp. 242 in Mysore section – via Internet Archive.
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Chetti, Philomena TAMBU (1937). The Indian Fiddler Queen: A Short Sketch of Philomena Thumboochetty. Dr. K. N. Kesari at the Lodhra Press.
“To Be Heard from Calcutta”. The Indian Listener. 22 January 1938. p. 157. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
Chaturvedi, Priya (11 June 2019). “Philomena Thumboochetty: Portrait of an Artiste”. Serenade. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
“3 secrets to be a great musician”. Manoj George. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
Ismail, Sir Mirza M. (1930). Speeches. Printed at the Government Press. pp. 140–142.
Chaturvedi, Priya (16 July 2019). “The story of a female Indian violinist whose phenomenal career was cut short by fate”. Quartz. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
Joseph, Krupa (15 October 2019). “‘Classical music must be more accessible'”. Deccan Herald. Retrieved 26 November 2021.