Andreas Grassl

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The "Piano Man".
The "Piano Man".
The man stayed silent for several months.
The man stayed silent for several months.

The Piano Man is the media nickname for a man found in England in April 2005, who remained unidentified for a long time due to his refusal to speak, communicating instead through drawing and playing the piano. He has since been revealed to be a German man named Andreas Grassl (born October 25, 1984). During the more than four months that passed until he revealed his identity, the mysterious story spawned media attention, and speculation, across the world.

When Grassl was picked up by police as he was wandering the streets in Sheerness, Kent, in England, in a soaking wet suit and tie on April 7, 2005, he did not answer any questions. Remaining silent, he was presented a pen and paper by Medway Maritime Hospital staff in the hope he would write his name. Instead, he drew a detailed sketch of a grand piano. When they first brought him to a piano, he reportedly played music from various genres (ranging from classical music by Tchaikovsky to pop by The Beatles) non-stop for four hours, and then was taken away by the hospital staff.

Contents

Tracing the 'Piano Man'

For several months, Grassl was interned in a secure mental health unit in north Kent while he was being treated and evaluated. Interpreters were brought in, to find out if he was from Eastern Europe, but to no avail. Orchestras around Europe were contacted in a bid to trace his identity.

His sketch of a grand piano
Enlarge
His sketch of a grand piano

The West Kent NHS and Social Care Trust, and the local police received what they described as an "overwhelming" public response, receiving over 800 calls on a dedicated helpline.

May

Grassl's picture was posted on the National Missing Persons Helpline (NMPH) website [1]. On May 18, 2005, a Polish man working as a mime artist in Rome, Italy approached Italian police officers, believing the Piano Man to be a French street musician called Steven Villa Masson. However, the British newspaper The Independent tracked down Masson to his home in France, thus ruling out this lead.

Italian television stations showed footage of a concert pianist with a resemblance to the Piano Man — the pictures were filmed at an instrument fair in Rimini five years earlier. Observers found his hair different, but his nose and facial structure very similar. He also stayed silent. British tabloids also suggested a link to a man last seen in Canada two years ago.

BBC News reported on 29 May 2005 that a Czech musician called Klaudius Kryšpín, the drummer of a famous Czech rock band Pražský výběr ("Prague Selection"), had rung the helpline, offering information that Piano Man may be a pianist called Tomáš Strnad, who along with Mr Kryšpín was a member of the tribute band Ropotamo in the 1980s. Despite not having seen him for nine years, Mr Kryšpín was quoted as saying "When I saw the picture in the newspapers, I knew it was Tomáš". Also, Klaudius Kryšpín's twin brother Richard who lives in Columbus, Ohio confirmed that Piano Man has a striking resemblance to Mr Strnad. Another person who argued that Strnad may have been Piano Man was Michael Kocáb, the singer of Pražský výběr and a former adviser of Václav Havel. A problem with this theory was that Kocáb argued that he met Strnad on 10 April, 2005 near Prague (three days after Piano Man was found in England). Even though the West Kent NHS Trust described this as a "promising lead" and reportedly planned to bring in a Czech interpreter, this theory (like the theory that it was Steven Villa Masson, above) was dashed when Tomáš Strnad was found and interviewed on Czech TV.

June

On June 3, 2005, Dateline NBC, the American NBC network's investigative news magazine, featured the story of the Piano Man as its top story.

On June 24, 2005, Susanne Schlippe Steffensen, a far-right Dansk Folkeparti member of the local council in the Danish municipality of Karlebo, near Copenhagen, made a claim on Danish TV 2/Lorry, that the Piano Man was in fact her Algerian-born husband. Steffensen had not seen her husband since February, when he had travelled to Algeria to visit his sick mother. "He has lost 20 kilos and bleached his hair, but I can see in his eyes that it is him. I will never be wrong when I see those eyes", she said to TV 2/Lorry. Steffensen's theory was that her husband had travelled to England due to a conflict with his family. According to Steffensen the family was unhappy with the fact that he was married to a western woman. "I think he has fled for his life. He has previously received death threats," said Steffensen. She went to England to meet her claimed husband, but according to Steffensen, the hospital did not allow her to meet him.

July

On July 2, 2005, BBC News reported that the Piano Man, when shown a map, pointed to Oslo, the capital of Norway. A Norwegian speaking person was brought in to open communications. According to the report the Piano Man seemed more responsive when Norwegian was spoken even though he remained unable or unwilling to speak. The theory was further strengthened by claims that a Norwegian vessel was in the area at the time the man was discovered.

According to media reports, the Piano Man also made a drawing of the Swedish flag after coming to the hospital. This led to speculation that he had lived in one of the Scandinavian countries.

Between July 4 and July 6, students from Norway said they knew the man (after he was reported to have pointed to Oslo on a map) in question as an exchange student from Ireland. These beliefs and possible leads were dashed when Norwegian papers were able to contact the man who the Piano Man was thought to be.

August

On August 8 The Independent quoted a source at the West Kent trust expressing scepticism that the origins of the Piano Man would ever be found. Diagnoses of his condition initially focused on post-traumatic stress disorder but it was at the time thought he might be an autistic savant. Sufferers of the condition can display extraordinary but highly specific talents, while at the same time remaining withdrawn or uncommunicative to the point of constant silence. The trust refused to officially comment on the young man's treatment beyond saying that his physical health remained good, but it was understood he was showing increasing signs of a rapport with a small number of trusted carers.

Return to Germany

On August 22, the British tabloid newspaper The Mirror reported that the Piano Man had finally broken his silence after more than four months, and that he had been exposed as a hoax. Additionally, the Mirror's source claimed that he did not play the piano properly, but "just kept tapping one key continuously". Hospital staff have maintained that his abilities were not exaggerated.

The Mirror article claimed that the Piano Man had told the medical staff that he was a German homosexual, who had come to Britain on a Eurostar train after losing his job in Paris. According to the newspaper's source, the man claimed that he had been planning to commit suicide when he was discovered on the beach in Sheerness, that he did not talk to the police due to his distressed state, and that he then continued to act mute. The unnamed source also suggested that the Piano Man used to work with the mentally ill, and thus was able to mimic their behaviour, thereby fooling the hospital staff. According to the tabloids, he has been flown back to Germany where his father (a farmer) and his two sisters live.[2]

Later the same day the BBC reported that the German foreign ministry had confirmed that the man was a 20-year-old Bavarian that had flown home on August 20. The German embassy in London confirmed that they had been contacted by the Little Brook Hospital, confirmed the man's identity and provided him with replacement travel documents. [3]

Following the media reports, the West Kent NHS and Social Care Trust issued a statement stating that the man was no longer in the care of the trust, that he had been "discharged from [their] care following a marked improvement in his condition", and that their "involvement with this man has now ceased and will not be resuming at any stage". The statement also expressed that no further information was to be released. [4]

In a follow-up to the story on August 24, The Mirror named the man as Andreas Grassl and published an interview[5] with his parents, farmers in Prosdorf, a village close to Waldmünchen in the Cham district of the Upper Palatinate in eastern Bavaria. According to the interview, their son had upon his return told them that he had "no idea what happened to me. I just suddenly woke up and realised who I was." Grassl's father expressed anger with some allegations made in the original Mirror article, in particular the suggestions that his son's behavior during treatment was not genuine. "I know he would never make something like this up," the father said. He denied that his son is homosexual, and told the newspaper that his son in fact is an accomplished piano player, albeit not of a professional degree. Grassl's lawyer said he may have experienced a psychotic episode. [6]

After working with disabled people in Saarbrücken, Grassl apparently told his parents that he intended to leave to study in France. After that, his parents had not been able to reach him. They had reported him missing, but they did not see or recognise the pictures of their son that were distributed around the world.

Friends of Andreas Grassl told The Times that he spent hours in internet chat rooms, where he was known as "Scatman", and that he was a columnist for a local newspaper, writing about pop music. [7]

Parallels

Parallels have been drawn between the case of Piano Man and the Australian pianist David Helfgott, who suffered a nervous breakdown brought on by mental illness. Helfgott's story was depicted in the 1996 film Shine.

In the past there have been other people who have pretended to be mentally ill to avoid being treated as a (potential) criminal or refugee in the short term. At least one pretender was actually a criminal.

External links

News reports prior to identification

News reports following identification

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