Q&A: Better than 'Cats' -
Life lessons from Imogen Lloyd Webber
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[June 24, 2016]
By Chris Taylor
NEW YORK (Reuters) - If you want to
start a debate at any party, here is an easy method: Ask people to
name their favorite Andrew Lloyd Webber song.
The task is like having to pick your favorite child. "Memory," from
Cats? "Music of the Night," from Phantom of the Opera? "You Must
Love Me," from Evita?
Imogen Lloyd Webber has a particular favorite: "The First Man You
Remember," from Aspects of Love. Sung from a father to his daughter,
it has special meaning for Imogen. She is the British composer's
firstborn with Sarah Hugill, whom he divorced back in 1983.
Now an author and commentator based in New York City, Imogen Lloyd
Webber has a new book out, "The Intelligent Conversationalist,"
about how to talk to anyone, anytime.
For the latest in Reuters' "Life Lessons" series, she sat down to
chat about what she has learned from her life as musical theater
royalty.
Q: Growing up in London with a unique set of parents, what life
lessons were you absorbing?
A: It was an amazing upbringing: On the one hand, I got to
experience the crazy side of the world with dad, doing things like
going to the Oscars. On the other hand, I was just a regular London
schoolkid living with my mom, taking the tube and having
beans-on-toast for dinner.
Q: Even though your father is very wealthy, did your parents keep
you grounded about money?
A: I was on a very strict allowance with my mom, so in that way it
was a pretty normal life without much pocket money at all. My first
proper job was as a data entry clerk in the summer, because at heart
I'm a boring nerd. I worked very hard, because I had seen my dad's
work ethic firsthand: Sometimes you succeed and sometimes you fail,
but you just keep on working.
Q: In building your own career, did you find your famous name helped
or hurt you?
A: It certainly opens doors, but once they open, you have to work
hard, or those same doors will slam in your face. What I appreciate
about America is that sometimes people have no idea who my dad is.
Once I worked alongside one journalist for six months, and she had
no clue. I loved that. In America, they don't care about what your
name is, they just care about whether or not you are good at your
job.
Q: Do you have any role models you look up to, regarding money and
life?
A: I love what J.K. Rowling has to say about success and failure.
After all, Harry Potter was originally rejected by nine different
publishers.
Q: Since your dad has had such massive success, have you thought
about how to handle wealth?
A: My dad, quite rightly, doesn't believe in inheritance. He thinks
it makes children feel entitled, that they won't ever have to do any
work. He did give me the gift of an amazing education, though, which
is the most important thing.
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Imogen Lloyd Webber poses with her father outside the Winter Garden
Theatre in New York. @illoydwebber/Instagram via REUTERS
As a result, I have my own career in modern media, writing books
while maintaining other broadcast jobs on top of that. There were a
couple of years where I almost didn't sleep. If you had told me 20
years ago media would be this challenging, I might have chosen
another line of work.
Q: Where do you want to have an impact in your giving?
A: I would one day like to help my alma maters - Queen's College in
London, and then Cambridge University. I would love to help people
get educated, because it opens so many doors. I'm not quite at that
financial level yet, but when I die, that is where I want my money
to go.
Q: What money lessons would you like to pass down to future
generations?
A: That being entitled is a very dangerous thing. The most important
thing is to work hard. And to be decent: My grandfather was an
extraordinary man, and one of the models for the character of James
Bond, who worked with Ian Fleming behind enemy lines in France
during the war. "Decent" is the best word to describe him, and I
would love to embody that as well.
Q: Did you tuck any life lessons into your new book?
A: All you can do is be prepared, and do your best. Once I had a
really disastrous TV segment with Sean Hannity on Fox News, and the
moment I left the building, I broke down in tears. Just a couple of
days later, I was made a contributor for MSNBC. So you never really
know where things are going to lead. Life can be funny that way.
(Editing by David Gregorio)
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