Wednesday 8 January 2014

THE STELLER FAMILY – STORIES FROM 1930’s & 1940’s #smsac2014

CHAPTER 1: Maxine Iona Taylor Steller (Married to St. Mary's oldest Alumnus around, Fred Steller) #smsac2014


Maxine & Fred Steller in 1990's
With this post we start a series of blog posts on the Steller family. The Steller family has a long connection of over 112 years with St. Mary’s School. Mr. Charles Steller was admitted to St. Mary’s School sometime in 1900. During his schooling years he joined the school band and later was part of a popular band in Bombay called the ‘Karl Starr and his band’ which also performed at various school functions on the school grounds (There is a mention of the same in an article in the 1938 school magazine). All his four sons (Anthony (deceased), Frederick, John and Wilfrid also attended St. Mary’s School at Mazagaon, Mumbai. Fred, John & Wilfrid Steller and Fred’s classmate Rev. Fr. Richard Lane-Smith (you can read more about Father Lane-Smith from our previous Blog of October 1st, 2013 (Blog post link: http://bit.ly/1aFjEc9); all were part of St. Mary’s School’s famous band.

St. Mary's School Band Pic from 1946-47

John later migrated to Australia like his brothers and went on to become a world renowned performer in the music industry, but more on all that in our later chapters on the Steller Family.

Through this series, we not only try to bring alive the nostalgia of an era of Bombay life long gone by, but also of life at St. Mary’s during the 1930’s and 1940’s, a time that arguably formed the golden years of St. Mary’s School.

We start this series with Maxine Iona Taylor Steller, the person who not only, so kindly, has been a liaison between Fred and his brothers and us but who also put us in touch with their batch mate Rev. Father Lane-Smith who currently resides in Mumbai. Maxine is 83 and currently resides in Sydney, Australia with her husband Fred Steller (Fred, who is possibly our oldest Marian Alumnus out of India or within India for that matter. He is 88 years old and studied at St. Mary’s during 1933-44, which makes him the oldest Alumni around. Read more about his life at the school in the 1930’s and 1940’s in the next chapter of this blog post series).
What follows is an excerpt from ‘Maxine Steller’s Bombay’ a post from Naresh Fernandes’ brilliant, nostalgic, evocative and must read Blog ‘TajMahal Foxtrot’ http://www.tajmahalfoxtrot.com/?p=1672  which beautifully recaptures the magical era of Jazz Music in Bombay. The passage reproduced below are Maxine’s own words.



Maxine Iona Taylor Steller in 1946
 Maxine Steller’s Bombay

I was born in the Motlibhai Hospital in Bombay, India on the 23rd October 1930 and baptised Maxine Iona Taylor at St.Anne’s Catholic Church, Mazagaon (In whose compound resides the St. Mary’s School).
In 1938, I joined my brothers at Christ Church High School and was placed in Standard 2 with Miss Penner as my class teacher.  Previously, I had attended a private kindergarten and to have so many teachers and children milling around was very exciting.
The dining room attached to our school was huge and the tables very large.  There would be a table reserved for each family and the family ‘bearer’ would serve a hot meal every lunchtime, set out on a clean tablecloth with cutlery from home.  Chemun would carry the meal in a ‘tiffin carrier’ and lunchtimes would always be noisy and fun.  When one thinks back, we really used to eat far too much considering the heat and our sedentary lives.  Most people would have porridge, eggs and toast for breakfast, then morning tea (elevenses), then a hot lunch of curry, dhal and rice, then afternoon tea, then dinner at about 8.30pm which was an English meal of soup, main course and pudding.
Wages were paid once a month in India, and my Mother would go monthly to Crawford Market to buy sugar, flour, rice and all the other ingredients that didn’t need to be fresh.   She’d hire a coolie with a huge basket on his head to carry her purchases back to the gharry (horse and carriage). It was most important to bargain for everything as the shopkeepers added extra on to the price and expected it.  If you didn’t, you were considered ‘weak’ and lost face.  Crawford Market is in the centre of the city. There are beautiful carvings over the doors of the massive stone building which were done by Rudyard Kipling’s father, who was a famous architect.


Maxine & Fred Steller in 1970's
I remember when we were on the netball field at school one afternoon, there was a huge boom, and window panes were shattered.  It was April 14th 1944 and the SS Fort Stikine carrying tons of explosives, gold bars, bales of cotton, drums of oil, scrap iron, rice and resin blew up in Bombay Docks.  Her berth in Victoria Dock was ringed by 24 other vessels and when she blew up she devastated 300 acres of Bombay Docks and reduced twelve ships to scrap iron.  White-hot metal from the ship’s plates fell on Bombay a mile from the ship and a million pounds of gold disintegrated. 
During the war an English entertainment group called ENSA started visiting hospitals and giving concerts for the troops and they asked me to join them.  They’d seat me on a piano and tell me to sing. From 1938, I sang regularly for Aunty Hilda’s Children’s Hour on All India Radio, and I can remember singing Over The Rainbow at the Bombay Town Hall when the movie Wizard of Oz first came out.  I must have been about ten years old.


Maxine Steller singing with Fred and Larry Steller of the 
Broadway Boys band..................Picture from 1940's
In 1945 the campaign for Independence had been stepped up and Anglo-Indians (born of British or European parents in India) started thinking of where to go when they were asked to quit India.  A Catholic priest (Father Dalton of St Mary’s School, Mazagaon) lobbied for the Andaman Islands in the Bay of Bengal.  He started the Britasian Club and put on shows encouraging young people to attend.  He hired a band called the Broadway Boys, seven talented young musicians led by Fred Steller, who were very popular.  One day Father Dalton got in touch with my father and asked him if I would sing at the next show.  I said I would but needed a rehearsal with the pianist.  Shortly afterwards, Fred Steller and his pianist, Billy Cooper, turned up at our house and my association with the Broadway Boys and the Steller family began. 

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