Friday 19 August 2016

More about 1911

Having published the previous post, I continued trying to fill in 1911 gaps and found an advertisement in several newspapers for May's edition of The Windsor Magazine promising a photographic feature about the Shakespeare Festival. The Windsor Magazine was "An Illustrated Monthly for Men and Women" featuring articles of interest, short stories, poems and illustrations and a number of well-known authors - for example, Arnold Bennet and E Nesbit - were regular contributors.  The monthly magazine was available as a  twice-yearly bound edition.
It didn't take too long to locate an available copy on ebay from a UK seller  and it had arrived by the time I returned from holiday.

The article itself contains little more than a run down of who will be playing what and with whom.  It laments in two separate paragraphs that the chronological cycle of English History plays is not making a reappearance and hints at the fact that this season is rather more 'popular' than previous years.

The photographs are excellent, showing the Festival of 1910 and portraits in role of many of the 'names' appearing with the company in Stratford.  Unfortunately, the paper is quite glossy and the weight of the book makes scanning impossible with the basic equipment I have here.  Light reflects off the curve of the page and so my reproductions here don't do the original pictures justice,  I've picked two interesting ones to begin with - the others will follow in due course.

The backdrop in the photograph of  husband and wife  Mattheson Lang and Hutin Briton as Macbeth and Lady Macbeth also appears  in the portrait of Violet Vanbrugh. Although Vanbrugh is wearing a dress and crown which seems to place her in one of the 'Wars of the Roses' plays, she actually played Beatrice at the Festival.   Both photographs are credited to 'Ellis & Walery' and it seems likely that the backdrop was a stock 'castle' used at their studios as it appears in at least one other photograph - of James Carew - in the National Portrait Gallery archives.  at  at 51 Baker Street between April 1899 and March 1913.  Benson's castle - as it appears in the film of Richard III was a little less 'polished'.

 

Wednesday 3 August 2016

Summer Time

This week sees the meeting of the 10th World Shakespeare Congress in Stratford upon Avon and London, and academics and aficionados of Shakespeare have travelled from the far corners of the globe to discuss, debate, challenge and celebrate his work and its on-going life in the theatre.  I'm not there.  I briefly toyed with the idea before I rejected it on the grounds that my academic inferiority complex is already far too well-developed and that being in a room with so many 'great ones' might just finish me off completely as a researcher!

However, that hasn't stopped me following the proceedings with extreme interest and I was delighted to hear that Gregory Doran (RSC Artistic Director) had named-checked Benson yet again in his address on Monday.  (I suspect that Mr Doran is a secret 'Merry Shrew' at heart!)

Today has been the first chance I've had for several weeks to investigate the Benson touring rep any further and I'm still trying to plug database holes from the Newspaper Archive. I've had a reasonably successful afternoon - although even small nuggets of information take a lot more digging up these days - and inevitably, my thoughts have been on Stratford in the summertime...

Usually the summer months were 'vacation' for the Benson companies, but in 1910 the decision was made to create a second 'summer' festival to encourage summer visitors to the town.  This ran for two weeks in 1910 and was then extended to four weeks in 1911, beginning on July 22nd with a performance of Midsummer Night's Dream. Thanks to the Leamington Spa Courier, I've been able to find the performances for all four weeks:

week beginning
Monday
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday m
Saturday e
24/07/1911
Henry V
Richard II
Merchant of Venice (mat)

Romeo & Juliet
As You Like It (mat)

Taming of the Shrew
Hamlet *
Henry V
Merchant of Venice
31/07/1911
Tempest
Hamlet *
As You Like It (mat)

Richard II
Midsummer Night’s Dream
Romeo & Juliet
Midsummer Night’s Dream
Taming of the Shrew
07/08/1911
As You Like It
Tempest
Romeo & Juliet (wed)

Henry V
As You Like It (Thurs)

Richard II
Hamlet*
x
Tempest
14/08/1911
Romeo & Juliet
Taming of the Shrew
Merchant of Venice
Tempest
(mat)

Hamlet *
Richard II
As You Like It
Midsummer Night’s Dream

The performances of Hamlet were 6pm starts - this was the so-called 'infinity' version now slimmed down to a running time of around four hours.  On matinee days it was possible to see two different plays and the schedule was designed so that anyone staying for a few days would be able to see a different play each evening.

The summer of 1911 was a scorcher with recorded temperatures reaching an all-time high of 36 degrees C /98 degrees F - a record not beaten until 1990. By July 20th drought conditions had been declared - there had been no rain at all for twenty days  Newspapers ran columns listing 'Deaths by Heat' and traffic accidents were increased as the road surface melted. Without wide-spread refrigeration, fresh food went off very quickly.  In the Victoria and Albert Docks, 5000 workers came out on strike as a result of having to work in such extreme conditions. The thought of sitting in an unventilated theatre for four hours can't have been very appealing to many Stratford visitors and conditions on stage must have become unbearably hot.

On the final evening of the summer festival, the usual  'floral bouquets, chaplets of bays and boxes of chocolates' were handed across the footlights to the assembled company.  Archibald Flowers, chairman of the Memorial Theatre board reflected that 'owing to the heat there had not been such full houses as at the Spring Festival' and that 'looked at from the standpoint of an ordinary theatrical venture' - that of  £.s.d - 'the season was a failure.'  In fact, he admitted he was amazed that anyone had actually been persuaded to enter the building in such weather.

However, he concluded that the object had been 'to extend the study, love and influence of Shakespeare, and in this direction there was no doubt whatever that the summer season had been a great success.  Numerous valuable seeds had been sown, and many other links forged which were going to draw together people...from every part of the world.'

 It is a comment which applies to the whole of Benson's career, to be honest.  I hope those delegates heading from Stratford to London for the concluding three days of Congress at the Globe feel the same way about their summer stay in Stratford, even if they have experienced slightly less dramatic weather.  (quotes from Cheltenham Chronicle & Gloucestershire Graphic, Saturday 26th August 1911 accessed from the British Library Newspaper Archive)


Monday 30 May 2016

The Still Point of aTurning World

Having spent a frustrating day trying to get the British Library newspaper archive to do what it was told - there are clearly some compatibility issues with the browser(s) I'm currently using - I decided to take a break and google some things instead. And I uncovered something rather interesting...

On most of his ERA newspaper adverts after 1904, Benson's official office address is given as 15 Henrietta Street Covent Garden so I decided that might be worth following up.  Henrietta Street is one of the streets which leads off Covent Garden parallel to the Strand, running towards St Martin's Lane. At the turn of the century, it was something of a centre for theatrical and musical hall agents, at the heart of Victorian London's theatre land -only a couple of streets away from the Opera House, the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, the Lyceum, the Savoy and the Adelphi. Today it is a highly desirable residential address, with former offices converted into apartments which command six figure sums: the upper floors of 15 Henrietta Street are advertised to rent at the eye-watering sum of £6,950 per calendar week.  The ground floor currently houses a Japanese menswear company called 'The Real McCoy'.

The building was rebuilt in 1887, designed by H.E. Pollard The office was run by Benson's manager - initially Alfred Smith-Piggott - and formed a vital still point in the revolving world of the Benson companies - with three or four tours on the road, someone needed an overview of who was where doing what! I'm assuming that the huge ledgers which are now in the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust archive must have been kept here along with the details of actors' contracts and payments like those in William Savery's papers.  Henrietta Street would not have been a cheap option, but it kept Benson's name and personality in the city even when he was out on the road. Covent Garden wasn't the up-market and sophisticated shopping experience it is now, of course, but a very busy Fruit and Vegetable market.



On the opposite side of Henrietta Street is one of the side entrances to St Paul's Covent Garden, the famous 'actor's church' and one of my very regular haunts when in the city. Number 10 was the home of Jane Austen's brother Henry and she stayed here in 1813 and 1814 when visiting her publishers.  It is one of the few streets in London still lit by gaslight and if you are very lucky and in the right place at the right time, you might see the Lamplighter coming to light the street lights in a scene reminiscent of that famous Robert Louis Stevenson poem!
And like Robert Louis Stevenson's Jekyll and Hyde, where Henry Jekyll lives in a house with two very different sides, 15 Henrietta Street has second entrance - and indeed a second address!  The back of the building is actually in Maiden Lane - number 29 - now a bar and bistro - almost directly opposite the Stage Door of the Adelphi Theatre.  In fact, the Benson Company played the Adelphi for a two week season in Summer 1905 which, predictably, was a financial flop due partly to the scorching weather.

The Adelphi Stage Door is probably most famous - or infamous - as the site of the fatal stabbing of William Terriss. Terriss was one of Irving's actors who branched out into management of the Adelphi and staged melodramas and Shakespeare there.  On the evening of December 16th 1897, he became part of an appalling off-stage drama when a deranged unemployed actor, Richard Archer Prince, attacked and stabbed him to death. Terriss was entering the stage door to prepare for the evening's performance:  Prince had allegedly waited in a doorway across the road (number 29 perhaps??) for Terriss to appear and had then attacked him.

Prince believed that Terriss had deliberately thwarted his career after being dismissed from the Adelphi company for 'unprofessional conduct' and heavy drinking. Ironically, Terriss had actually gone out of his way to recommend Prince be given help from the Actors' Benevolent Fund.  George Rowell's very readable book William Terriss and Richard Prince: Two characters in an Adelphi Melodrama is published by the Society for Theatre Research and contains the full story.




I've often used Maiden Lane as a quieter short cut between Bedford Street and Covent Garden and for years I've given a nod to 'Breezy Bill'as I passed the Stage Door.  Terriss's ghost, inevitably, is said to haunt the backstage area of the theatre and - rather more surprisingly - the Underground platforms of Covent Garden station. See Mysterious Britain.co.uk for more information.  Having read quite a bit about Terriss, however,  I think he'd be quite an affable ghost...

There was no sign of him on the last night of Andrew Lloyd Webber's musical 'Love Never Dies' when I was part of a huge crowd blocking Maiden Lane at the stage door: we turned back taxi cabs that night!  However, it is odd to think that I was actually standing outside the site of Benson's office as well.  A small world as well a turning one...

Tuesday 17 May 2016

'Towards York shall bend you with your dearest speed...'

Those words of Henry IV were never truer than last Friday afternoon as we set out to catch the train from Durham station.  Thankfully, everything went according to plan and three hours after I'd left work we were sitting in the foyer of the Theatre Royal York, enjoying a pre-show glass of wine...

Now normally, I wouldn't post the account of a ballet-going weekend on this blog, but in this case, the details of our trip have some bearing on the whole Benson project and so I crave your indulgence for this longer than usual bulletin!

York's Theatre Royal, one of my very favourite theatres, has just reopened after extensive refurbishment. Originally built in 1744, it is one of the oldest theatres to have been in continual use and the list of performers who have graced its stage is a veritable 'Who's who' of theatrical royalty - Phelps. Kean, Siddons, Kemble, Irving, Bernhardt...and, of course, Benson.



Because there has been a theatre on this site for 270 years, this closure provided the first opportunity to excavate under the stage where the medieval remains of the old St Leonard's hospital have been found.(Further information about the fascinating work done by the York Archaeological Trust can be found here and here) The renovations also allowed the archaeologists to see how the theatre had been changed and developed during its long history before allowing the next raft of changes to progress.

The foyer now boasts an enlarged box office and cafe. The auditorium has a second staircase entrance.The stage has been completely rebuilt to remove the rake and add an orchestra pit and the stage configuration can now be changed to make it into a very adaptable venue. Finally, the stalls seating has been radically changed so that it now rises to meet the curve of the dress circle improving sightlines enormously.  The auditorium is has been repainted a very restful light grey, perhaps in homage to the resident ghost, known as the Grey Lady...

Thankfully, they have not removed or 'modernised' the 1967 concrete and slate foyer and staircase, added to the side of the theatre, which is actually my very favourite part - the original external wall of the theatre becomes an internal wall concrete arches echo medieval vaulted roofs and the slender pillars always remind me of trees. ( I have to admit to actually hugging one on Friday evening...a possible side effect of the house red!)

Birmingham Royal Ballet are celebrating this special Shakespeare year by giving over almost all of their entire 2016 season to bard-related ballets. They visit York annually as part of their 'mid-scale' tour, taking the company to several smaller venues for  2 day stays and their programme this year included a world premiere of a ballet based on some of the Sonnets, pas de deux from Ashton'sThe Dream, Macmillan's Romeo and Juliet and Cranko's Taming of the Shrew and finally a performance of Jose Limon's wonderful Moor's Pavane, based on Othello.


Theatres Trust :uncredited
All of these plays were performed at the Theatre by the Bensons during their visits:  they came to the Theatre Royal around fifteen times between 1886 and 1926.

When the theatre was 250 years old in 1994, the local newspaper produced a book about its history which is rather frustrating in its patchwork approach to the subject.  In it, it asserts that Lady Benson had once 'spent a night in one of the dressing rooms, praying for the repose of the soul of the beautiful nun' supposed to be the Grey Lady, but I've been unable to find the original source for this.  It is a nice thought, though!

Any Bensonian ghosts would have been well pleased with both the performances and the theatre this weekend.  And so lovely to see a regional theatre thriving.



Sunday 1 May 2016

A Knight of the Realm

Today marks the hundredth anniversary of the Shakespeare Tercentenary Matinee at the Theatre Royal Drury Lane.
On the afternoon of May 2nd 1916  a star-studded cast, the pick of the  London stage, assembled to perform Julius Caesar to an audience of over 3000, including the King and Queen.  Caesar had been chosen as the matinee play because of the crowd scenes which enabled huge numbers of actors to take part. It was to be followed by a series of tableaux depicting scenes from other Shakespeare plays.

Inevitably, the assembled company that day contained a very large number of old Bensonians  and Benson himself had been asked to play Caesar - a first for him.  However, the Bensons were rather on edge. At eleven o’clock that morning, three hours before the curtain was due to rise at Drury Lane, FRB had  received a letter offering him the honour of a knighthood.  There had been some hints of this in the preceeding weeks (and even some premature telegrams of congratulation!)  but when nothing 'official' had been heard, it had been dismissed as just a rumour. The letter had  arrived several weeks after it had been posted, having apparently followed the Company round the country from venue to venue, and Benson was anxious that not replying looked ungrateful and indifferent to the honour.

When the Royal Party arrived at the theatre, Arthur Collins, manager of Drury Lane, hastily explained the situation to one of the King’s aides and then, boldly, asked if it would be possible for FRB to be knighted there, at the theatre, after the performance.  

When the aide told him that His Majesty had no sword with him. Collins rushed out to buy one that would fit the occasion, and the King consented to knight Benson in an ante-room to the Royal Box. At the end of the performance FRB, still wearing the bloodstained robes, half-bald cap and ashen make-up of the ghostly Caesar, was dubbed ‘Sir Frank’.

As Constance Benson wrote  in her autobiography: ‘Could any knighthood, except on the field of battle, have been conferred in a more romantic setting? The day of Shakespeare’s tercentenary, among hosts of fellow actors, in historic Drury Lane, the house packed from Gallery to Pit, a day to remember, a scene never to forget!’

As Sir George Alexander, actor-manager and contemporary of Benson, announced the news from the stage the theatre audience erupted in enthusiastic roar: when Alexander led Benson down to the footlights at the end of the tableaux, they were greeted with a standing ovation and a volume of cheering which left FRB visibly moved and -  for once - entirely speechless.

Otho Stuart, Benson’s sometime partner, manager and Company member, had hurried off to Stratford upon Avon as soon as the matinee had started, to oversee the remainder of the Company’s Festival performances.  At dinner, he received Lady Benson’s wire telling him the news and rushed round to the Memorial Theatre where Company were just reaching the end of the second act of Midsummer Night’s Dream.  He went on stage and before he could finish speaking, the announcement  was drowned out by wild cheering and applause from the audience, the actors and the stage hands.


When Sir Frank and Lady Constance arrived at the station the following day, a flower-covered carriage awaited them, pulled by members of the Company. They were drawn through the streets of Stratford, streets lined with well-wishers who threw more flowers into the carriage as it passed, and then finally  taken to the Memorial Theatre where they were to perform All’s Well that Ends Well that evening.

On May 5th it was Stratford's turn to celebrate with a –by now traditional – ‘Old Bensonian’ matinee of speeches and scenes presented by some of the London ‘names’ who had started their careers with FRB and who never forgot their debt to him.  As Henry Ainley said at a banquet in Benson’s honour a week later: “We have barnacled our souls to his doormat. He can never get rid of us and we can never get rid of him. He is our blessed ‘Pa’ and we love him.’
 from the Souvenir Brochure

This was the high point for Benson's career: things would never be as good again. He and Constance were about to head to the Western Front to do Voluntary work: by September, news would reach them that their son, Eric, had been killed in action.  There would be only one more Bensonian season at Stratford in 1919 before a new broom would sweep in to stir up tradition and Benson would find himself, rootless and anchorless, treading the familiar provincial paths without the financial security which Stratford had provided over the years.

However, for one brief magical moment, Benson stood firmly centre stage, in the capital city which had sometimes seemed indifferent - even hostile - to him, sharing the limelight with the playwright he'd worked tirelessly to serve. Recognised by the establishment, hailed by his peers, revered by those he'd supported and nurtured, loved by an audience which extended the length and breadth of the nation: what other actor of his generation could claim as much?  

Friday 22 April 2016

Today's the day...


...the world goes a bit Shakespeare mad - the commemorations of the 400th anniversary of his death.  The attention will be centred on Stratford, obviously, and although I'd hate the crowds, I'd love to be there.
On Friday, the Royal Shakespeare Theatre unveiled their new sculpture, hanging over the staircase of the former Library and Picture Gallery of the old Memorial Theatre.  It is made up of 2000 metal stars and creates a deliberately androgynous and non-race specific human face, inspired by the famous quote from the Balcony scene in Romeo and Juliet.   See it here . I'd rather like to think that each of those stars is waiting to be endowed with the memory of an actor or actress who helped to make that theatre what it has become.  Benson and the Bensonians, of course, would be the chief amongst them.

One hundred years ago, Benson was in the midst of what would prove to be his last real Stratford season, running for three weeks even though country was in the midst of war.  It was thirty years since his first appearance at the SMT and change was in the air.  Festivities in Stratford were somewhat muted as this blog entry from the Birthplace Trust relates and the big London celebrations would not occur until May 2nd - but that's next week's post!

Don't miss the celebrations on the BBC!  And Happy Shakespeare Day!


Monday 28 March 2016

A Profitable weekend...

Easter Bank Holiday weekend in the UK.  Pleased to have typed up and started to analyse the weekly accounts for the Benson Company from August 1908 to September 1910.  Sadly, the figures show that the touring was not very profitable at all... Watch this space for further thoughts after my upcoming trip to Stratford!

Saturday 26 March 2016

All is Mended...

The Royal Shakespeare Company are marking the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare's death with a production of A Midsummer Night's Dream, featuring various different amateur companies playing the Mechanicals and local school children as the fairies.  I went to see the first leg of their ten venue tour in Newcastle on Monday and thoroughly enjoyed it, particularly Lucy Ellinson's performance as Puck.  There's something  liberating about hearing Shakespeare in a regional accent - especially one's own! - and it helps to break down the 'elitist' barrier a little more.  See the trailer for this production on the RSC's website.
Lucy Ellinson and Chu Omabala as Puck and Oberon

Although the RSC used Northern Stage's theatre (formerly the Newcastle Playhouse) rather than the Theatre Royal, there were a few Bensonian links.  The Bensons used to stay at the Grand Hotel in Newcastle's Haymarket - now Blackwell's University bookshop - which is virtually next door to the playhouse and their 'fairy band' was also populated by local children, drilled by the actor playing Puck - who was usually a woman.

This week in 1912, the Company were appearing at the New Theatre Royal Portsmouth, the first of a two week season of Rep which included Dream.  The theatre has recently reopened after a major rebuild which has taken three years. A mixture of Phipps and Matcham architecture, this is how it looked in Benson's day:


Closed for many years as a theatre, it was used by Ken Russell for the film 'The Boyfriend' before fire, theft and vandalism brought it to the brink of demolition.
Filming 'The Boyfriend' in 1972
 Purchased by the New Theatre Royal Trust in the 1980s it came back into use as a theatre in 1984 and now has Grade II* listing.  So lovely to see a theatre come back from the brink!  It's on my bucket list...

Wednesday 24 February 2016

Stratford Great Escape 2016


Time is such a relative thing. I find it hard to believe that it is already a week since we were a day into our Stratford 'Great Escape' - four nights in a lovely cottage in the heart of the town, less than three minutes from the Shakespeare Centre, paid for by the Louis Marder Scholarship I was awarded last year.

Having this amount of time to research is a real luxury - normally I'm squeezing time out of the day job and fitting it in where I can. I'd planned three days of research in the Birthplace Library and Archives during which time I was able to access some of the company's accounts and prompt books from three specific productions.

Having the cottage meant a relaxing start to the day, a leisurely saunter to the Archives around 10am and a return to a warm, cosy and very comfortable house, with plenty of work space, two very comfortable sofas and lovely beds! We decided to self-cater - although the tea shops of Stratford did provide some welcome late lunches - and thanks to Marks and Spencer, dined like Queens!  Rachel, who owns the cottage, had left us a welcome gift: how could she have known I was such a fan of ginger?  The discovery of a DVD of The Great Escape in one of the cupboards was another unexpected bonus...

Stratford in February can be incredibly cold and we'd gone prepared with woolly socks and hot water bottles.  Sitting all day in the Library was a chilly business and we were glad of the central heating!

As I'd taken my research assistant with me (she's also my mum!) we were able to get about thirty hours worth of work done between us over the three days: lots of data to add to my database, extra information about the financial state of the company, and the wonderful prompt books.

I'm very much an amateur at this, but I've developed a method for using the prompt books - I buy cheap copies of the plays and then deface them in accordance with the script! Some prompt books are more detailed than others but they all give a flavour of what the productions must have been like on stage to watch.  It's an incredible feeling, handling a book which must have been used in the wings of countless theatres on hundreds of occasions.

The account books, too, have a papery charm - heavy pages designed for pen and ink, meticulously handwritten, each page telling the stark truth about Benson's dreadful financial situation!  In between the pages sometimes are still some 'daily returns' from the theatre managers on the touring circuit or the occasional bill from a printer - the daily ephemera of running a a theatre company,
































So busy were we with archival stuff that Stratford itself sort of faded into the background, although on Thursday - which had been a beautiful day - we went and took some photos as the sun set spectacularly over our favourite monument.  My photos don't do it justice!

After such a wonderful week, coming back to reality has been something of a challenge!  Although much of the material we discovered is still to be typed up, I've already used some of the details from the account books to update the database, add some dates and repertoire details, and correct a few gaps and errors.

I now have approximately 60% of the main (principal or A) company mapped, which is really exciting.

It was such a successful visit that I'm already working out when it might be possible to repeat the experience.  We're back in Stratford, as luck would have it, in just over four weeks time but we'll be theatre tourists rather than researchers.  Hopefully, the first signs of spring we saw last week will have fully blossomed by then!

(When I finally arrived home, I could barely get the front door open: six complementary copies of the edition of Theatre Notebook with my essay in were blocking the door!)

In Shakespeare's Garden

Magnolia blossom by the canal

Sunday 7 February 2016

A quick catch up...

Not quite sure where 2015 went to, nor where January 2016 has gone.  2016 is a highly significant year for Shakespeare aficionados, of course, and FRB has already had an honourable mention in an article Gregory Doran, artistic director of the RSC, wrote for the Sunday Telegraph on January 1st
Read it here.

FRB as Othello, date unknown
The very last day of 2015 also saw the publication of my Midsummer Night's Dream article in Theatre Notebook - my own  small attempt at putting FRB back on the British Shakespeare Map.  Of course, I'm hyper-critical of it and can see lots of things which I could have done better... but it is lovely to see it properly in print!

After a very time-pressured start to the year, work has again resumed on the data base and in a little over a week's time I'm heading back to the archives in Stratford, having used some of the Louis Marder Scholarship money to rent a cottage for the week. I've set myself (and my willing research assistant!) a mountain of material to get through, including the prompt books for three tragedies - Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet and Othello.  I'm interested to see how Benson edited them and whether they were as rearranged as some of the other plays were. I'm also hoping to fill in some of the gaps in the database, particularly in relation to the smaller companies, where the itineraries still look rather colander-like...

Looking forward to lots of cake and good company, and just being in my absolute favourite place on earth!