Background
Maximilan Somerset was born in 1974 to the Contessa Pia Dei Tolomei and his father Editor Somerset who was a cousin of the Duke of Beaufort and a director of the Fired Earth tile company.
Maximilan Somerset was born in 1974 to the Contessa Pia Dei Tolomei and his father Editor Somerset who was a cousin of the Duke of Beaufort and a director of the Fired Earth tile company.
Max became interested in sleight of hand from the age of 5 when he saw a television magician push 4 coins through a table. He believes it was partly an important focus for him during the fractured childhood and partly a legitimate escape route. In his teenage years he set to turn negatives into positives.
Studying the piano and Digital Orchestral multi-keyboard alongside a keen involvement in musical theatre he was offered a scholarship to study at Trinity College of Music in London where he undertook a Bachelors and Masters in Performance and related studies.
Gaining a distinction in his performance he went on to explore theatrical and spatial aspects in Digital Music and wrote the Digital Keyboard internal and external syllabi occasionally giving lectures in the Queen Elizabeth Hall and in the Music Masters association. Whilst at Trinity College he also wrote the syllabus for Digital Keyboard, grades 6-8.
After leaving university Max embarked on a career teaching music whilst also pursuing his magical interests. He has performed twice at the Royal Albert Hall with the Kensington Temple Gospel Choir on the Digital Orchestral Multi-Keyboard.
He plays the Hammond Organ and is Musical Director of the 500 member Emmanuel Baptist Fellowship in North London.
His studies in aesthetics and musical theatre affected his relationship with sleight of hand and illusion resulting in a unique quirky theatrical performance style. He believes that magic must have an internal logic that supersedes both magician and spectator. In 2003 his talents were spotted by a young producer named Ray Addison who produced a four-part series starring Max titled Max Somerset which was broadcast on Game In television His unusual style of musical mind reading and shoe licking experiments featured in this first series gained him interest with Carlton television who alongside Sky commissioned him a six-part prime time series for Sky One entitled Max Magic.
The show soon became a hit and still repeats regularly today.
lieutenant resulted in commissions from Objective Productions and most recently for Twenty Twenty television starring as the Sorcerer in his most recent BBC1 21-part series The Sorcerers Apprentice. Three seasons have been filmed so far as of January 2010.
He appeared in the Darlington pantomime Aladdin in 2009–2010.
This was an Alice in Wonderland style magic show where Max played various hidden camera comedy characters performing magic on unsuspecting members of the public.