Mercury Studios Announces New Feature Documentary ‘Fanny: The Other Mendelssohn’

8 March 2023

 

MERCURY STUDIOS ANNOUNCES NEW FEATURE DOCUMENTARY

FANNY: THE OTHER MENDELSSOHN

DIRECTED BY THE GREAT UNHERALDED COMPOSER’S DESCENDANT SHEILA HAYMAN

 

Film Features Decca Star Isata Kanneh-Mason Playing Fanny Mendelssohn on Queen Victoria’s Piano at Buckingham Palace

 

WATCH THE TRAILER HERE

BOOK TICKETS HERE

 

LONDON, 8 March 2023 – On International Women’s Day, Universal Music Group’s Mercury Studios announced a new feature documentary, FANNY:  THE OTHER MENDELSSOHN, directed by the unheralded composer’s great great great granddaughter, BAFTA-winning filmmaker Sheila Hayman. Take a celebrated musical genius, some sibling rivalry, an unknown manuscript, a dash of sass and one sensational revelation and what have you got? Fanny: The Other Mendelssohn – revelatory new feature documentary starring global Decca star, Isata Kanneh-Mason.

 

Anyone who has been to a wedding has enjoyed the soaring musical genius of Felix Mendelssohn. His Wedding March may be the best-known classical composition of all time. But Felix was not the only genius in the family. His sister, Fanny was also a brilliant composer. Yet most people have never heard of her, and even now only a few of her 450 works are published or performed. Fanny was equal to any of her contemporaries, male or female; technically brilliant and boldly ground-breaking. Yet not until she was 40 did she dare to defy Felix’s disapproval and publish her music under her own name. Tragically, the resulting joy and recognition were short-lived. Less than a year later, Fanny died, and shortly afterwards Felix too – his already poor health exacerbated by grief.

 

Over a century later, in 1971, the famous pianist Eric Heidsieck was contacted by a record company and asked to produce the first recording of Mendelssohn’s Easter Sonata. It was presumed to be the work of Felix. But in an amazing plot twist, captured as it happened in this extraordinary film, it is once and for all proven definitively to be Fanny’s own piano masterpiece, written when she was only 22. Fanny’s music is brought to life by the gifted virtuoso pianist, Isata Kanneh-Mason, recipient of the 2021 Leonard Bernstein Award and 2021 best classical artist at the Global Awards. And as she discovers the Easter Sonata, the parallels between her life and Fanny’s – including the challenge of being a pioneer with few role models in classical music – become clear.

 

As moving as it is joyous, this is the story of a very modern woman – who just happened to live 200 years ago.

 

Alice Webb, CEO and Co-President of Mercury Studios, comments, “Although Fanny Mendelssohn is a woman of the 19th century, her story is unbelievably modern and more relevant today than ever. Mercury is proud to shine a light on her, especially through the lens of Fanny’s great great great granddaughter, Sheila Hayman. And witnessing Isata Kanneh-Mason, one of today’s brightest new artists, interpret Fanny’s work for the screen is thrilling. I suspect FANNY: THE OTHER MENDELSSOHN will inspire whole new generations of music lovers.”

 

“In telling the story of an enormously gifted woman whose talents were suppressed and marginalised by a male establishment, it seemed obvious that we should work, as far as we could, with female crew,” director Sheila Hayman adds. “This decision turned out to deliver some of the most joyous, productive and harmonious shoot days of my career. As we left Buckingham Palace, exactly on schedule and having accomplished everything we set out to do in the short time we had there, the PR woman said to me: ‘We’ve never had an all female crew here before. They’re very good, aren’t they?’ To which the only answer was, ‘But of course!'”

 

Hayman directs FANNY: THE OTHER MENDELSSOHN, with Mercury’s Alice Webb, Marc Robinson and Steve Condie, and Annabel Hobley and Maureen Murray serving as executive producers. Sheila Hayman is the producer; Evie Franks the editor. The film was shot in locations including Berlin, New York, London, Oxford and Buckingham Palace.