The Chronicle

I first told this story to my small daughter long ago... much to my amazement, here it still is 50 years later

As children’s classic The Tiger Who Came to Tea celebrates its 50th anniversar­y, author and illustrato­r Judith Kerr, 94, tells HANNAH STEPHENSON how work keeps her young

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JUDITH Kerr confesses she has a bit of a hangover, due to a little too much prosecco at a National Literacy Trust party the night before our interview.

Despite a groggy head, the author, who celebrates her 95th birthday in June, is sharp as a knife, with a quick wit that would rival someone at least half her age.

Not to be too morbid about it, she is acutely aware she may not have too many years left, however, and says she appreciate­s life more now – although she does have a ‘Do Not Resuscitat­e’ notice should the worst happen.

“The doctor gives you a large piece of paper which he signs, but I often worry whether they’d find it and where to put it,” she says. “I keep it in the hall. Somebody said that the only way is to have ‘Do Not Resuscitat­e’ tattooed on your chest. But I never know exactly how to spell ‘resuscitat­e’.”

This is the type of humour which peppers the conversati­on, as we discuss the 50th anniversar­y of The Tiger Who Came To Tea, her hit children’s book that’s sold more than five million copies since it was first published in 1968.

Judith has gone on to produce 32 other books, including the Mog series based on the selection of pet cats she’s had over the years, and When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, a semi-autobiogra­phical tale about a young Jewish girl forced to flee Germany in 1933.

For the few who aren’t familiar with The Tiger Who Came To Tea, it’s the story of a little girl called Sophie and her extraordin­ary teatime guest who scoffs all the food in the house. It was inspired by a bedtime story she created for her daughter Tacy, after they’d been to the zoo together and seen the tigers.

“I first told this story to my small daughter long ago. She was rather critical of my other stories but used to say, ‘Talk the tiger!’ So, when she and her brother were both at school and I had more time, I thought I would make it into a picture book – and much to my amazement, here it still is 50 years later.”

Judith is one of the few successful authors who also illustrate­s her books and has always loved drawing, creating her cats from her own pets over the years.

She had been working as a BBC scriptwrit­er when she met her husband – the late writer Thomas Nigel Kneale, who wrote the sci-fi series Quatermass – and once she’d had two children, Matthew and Tacy, she wanted to look after them rather than return to the BBC. They moved into a three-storey terraced house in Barnes, south-west London, in 1962 – where she still lives. There, in the top-floor study, she created the tiger, Mog, and her other characters in her books.

“I’m not a writer. I draw, I went to art school, and that’s what I really care about. The book didn’t change my life,” Judith continues, “only in the sense that it was my first book published and I was encouraged to do more.”

She was recently joined for a 50th anniversar­y celebratio­n at the Storystock Festival in south London by actor Benedict Cumberbatc­h, who narrated the story to visitors, and told her he reads The Tiger Who Came To Tea to his two sons.

“I think the request (to attend the event) must have come from him,” she muses. “You can’t really ask Benedict Cumberbatc­h, ‘Would you like to read The Tiger Who Came To Tea’? I mean, he’s got better things to do. He’s absolutely charming, clever and nice.

“As I told him, it’s the only time I’ve ever been able to impress my children.”

Humour aside, Judith’s fate could have been much bleaker had she not fled Nazi Germany in 1933. Born in Berlin, she came to England with her family after escaping the Nazis as a young girl.

Her father, Alfred, a Jewish theatre critic and satirical writer, had mocked and reviled Hitler and the rising Nazi Party and became a marked man. In 1933, he fled to Zurich, followed soon after by his wife Julia and two children, Michael and Judith.

“I was nearly 10 when we left. What I didn’t know at the time is just how hard it was for my parents. Once we came to England, I was a bit older, it became more visible. My father lost his language as a writer and could never keep the family as he would have wished to support us all.

“It was very hard on them both, but they were very positive. And both my brother and I have always agreed that the childhood we had in Switzerlan­d, France and here was infinitely better than it would have been if Hitler had never happened and we’d stayed in Berlin.”

Judith’s husband died in 2006, and she admits work has helped her cope on her own.

“You have to become a slightly different person. I still miss him. I miss his advice, because as a writer he always had very good ideas. We were married for 52 years and were together for 54.

“Of course, I do get lonely but I’m all right if I’m working because that occupies me.”

Judith is working on a book for eight-to-nine-year-olds, while another picture book is coming out in the autumn.

“Going for walks has always helped me to think,” says Judith.

“Walking is very good physically for the hip, it’s cheering, and I love looking at things because if you draw you look at things all the time. And I think about the next bit of work.” THE Tiger Who Came To Tea 50th Anniversar­y Edition by Judith Kerr is published by HarperColl­ins, priced £6.99.

 ??  ?? Judith Kerr wrote and illustrate­d The Tiger Who Came To Tea in 1968
Judith Kerr wrote and illustrate­d The Tiger Who Came To Tea in 1968

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