Felice Lascelles
Felice Lascelles was a British musical comedy actress, singer and dancer who performed on stage in the UK and Ireland from the early 1920s to 1940, under the managements of George Grossmith Jr., Jack Buchanan, Charles Cochran, Leslie Henson, and Lee Ephraim.
She is best known for her leading roles in the national tours of Kid Boots, Sunny, Darling, I Love You, Stand Up and Sing, and Venus in Silk, among other shows. She took the lead in the pantomime adaptations of Goldilocks and the Three Bears, Goody Two-Shoes, and Aladdin and His Wonderful Lamp. She was the mother of stage actress Susan Neil and folk musician Andy Irvine.
Early life
Lascelles was born Felicia Madge Lessels on 19 July 1904, in Wallasey, Merseyside. Her father, William Lessels, was born in Leeds and her mother, Elizabeth Malvina Cunningham, in Salford. The couple settled in Merseyside, and Felicia was the fourth of their seven children, five of whom survived into adulthood. The eldest child, Leonie Margaret Isabel Lessels, who later adopted the stage name of Leonie Lascelles, became a pianist and singer, and left Wallasey to start her career in London. One of Leonie's first advertised performances was in June 1912, in a sextet called The Gollies.Felicia had performed at concerts from the age of five and, since she had always aspired to be an actress, also left Wallasey for London. In the early 1920s, after playing in silent films for three years from the age of 14, she decided to seek an engagement on the stage, even though she had no idea on how to obtain an audition. She simply turned up at the Winter Garden Theatre in London, and was offered a place in the chorus where she gained experience in her chosen profession, under the stage name of Felice Lascelles.
Career
1922–1926: Chorus girl and understudy
Lascelles began her stage career touring in two plays by George Grossmith Jr. & J. A. E. Malone. First, as a chorus girl in The Cabaret Girl, starring Margaret Campbell and Norman Griffin, which opened at the Grand Theatre, Blackpool, on Christmas Day, 25 December 1922, and closed at the King's Theatre, Hammersmith, on 8 December 1923. In the second play, The Beauty Prize, which opened at the Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh, on 24 December 1923 and closed at the Prince's Theatre, Manchester, on 3 May 1924 for a total of 130 performances, she played the small role of Shinny Fane alongside Joan Lockton, Claude Hulbert and Peter Haddon. The Stage praised her performance in two reviews, and the Liverpool Evening Express described her as "a young and promising Liverpool artiste."Lascelles toured with Jack Buchanan's company in both Toni and Boodle. She joined the chorus line in Toni, which had initially been rehearsed during a trial week starting on 6 August 1923 at the Theatre Royal, Hanley, followed immediately by a tour of 34 further venues that ended at the Prince of Wales Theatre, Birmingham, on 5 May 1924, right before its run of 248 performances at the Shaftesbury Theatre, London, from 12 May to 13 December 1924. Lascelles then played Phyllis in Boodle, starring Buchanan, June Tripp and Elsie Randolph, which opened at the Prince of Wales Theatre, Birmingham, on 26 December 1924, where it remained until 24 January 1925. It then toured through Liverpool, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Hull, and Manchester, closing there on 7 March, and opened at the Empire Theatre, London, on 10 March for 94 performances, closing on 30 May 1925.
Later that year, Lascelles joined the cast of Charles B. Cochran's On With the Dance, which starred Alice Delysia and Leonid Massine, and included songs by Noël Coward. In addition to playing a small, uncredited comedy part, Lascelles understudied Hermione Baddeley for a year. The show opened at the London Pavilion on 30 April and closed on 14 November, after 229 performances. Five days after its run ended, a new edition of this show—minus the Coward material—called Still Dancing, opened at the same venue on 19 November, with the same cast, including Lascelles in several scenes, and Florence Desmond, with whom she was sharing a dressing room. A preview, published in the Weekly Dispatch on 15 November, included her photo, captioned: "Felice Lascelles, to appear in Still Dancing, the new revue at the Pavilion." The show closed on 27 February 1926, after 114 performances.
1926–1930: ''Kid Boots'' and ''Sunny''
Lascelles was again part of a chorus in the 1926 run of Kid Boots at the Winter Garden, London, when Leslie Henson saw her rehearsing as understudy to the leading lady and made her an offer of her first leading part as Polly in that play's national tour, which opened at the Prince of Wales Theatre, Birmingham, on 16 August 1926, and in which she sang "The Two Of Us" with Claude Bailey. In addition to Henson in the principal role, the initial cast included Robert Nainby, Guy Fane, Fedora Roselli, and Viola Compton, as well as the brother-and-sister duo of dancers, Eric & Rene Le Fre. After the last show of Kid Boots at the Liverpool Empire Theatre, Lascelles switched to playing the part of Beth on 27 September at the King's Theatre, Glasgow and for the remainder of the tour, which closed at the Hippodrome, Golders Green, on 29 January 1927, for 157 performances.Lascelles starred in the title role of Sunny Peters in the national tour of Sunny, presented by Jack Buchanan and Lee Ephraim, in which she sang "Who?", "Do You Love Me?", "The Wedding Knell", and "When we get our Divorce". After a dress rehearsal on Sunday night, 3 July 1927, personally conducted by Buchanan, the tour opened at the Hippodrome Theatre in Margate on 4 July. The cast included Max Kirby, Rex Rodgers, Naylor Grimson, George Neil, Ethel Stewart, Kathleen Burgess, and Iris White as principal dancer. The whole company was deemed about the strongest on the road, with over 70 people: performers, bandsmen, stage carpenters, baggage men, flymen, wardrobe women and dressmakers. Nineteen tons of scenery and electrical effects were carried in seven railway carriages, including one for the horse and the dogs. This musical comedy was so popular that the partnership of Ephraim and Buchanan had two companies—identified as companies A and B in The Stage—touring it simultaneously in the provinces and some London boroughs. Lascelles' company B did so for nearly three years, closing at the Hippodrome in Ilford on 31 May 1930, with Lascelles performing throughout the whole run, except for an absence of ten weeks due to illness, from 26 December 1927 until 27 February 1928, during which Pearl Greene stood in for her.
1930–1932: ''Goldilocks'' to ''Goody Two-Shoes''
Lascelles' first leading appearance in pantomime was as Goldilocks in Goldilocks and the Three Bears, in which she sang "Tip-Toes", and Elsie Prince was Principal boy. This show opened at the Theatre Royal, Birmingham, on 21 December 1929 and closed there on 1 February 1930, after eight weeks. One week into the run, the reviewer for the Sunday Mercury—"Astra"—commented on Lascelles' performance: "Goldilocks and the Three Bears is her first experience in pantomime, and she has made good. It would be difficult to find a more graceful principal girl."For most of 1931, Lascelles joined the national tour of Darling, I Love You, a musical comedy starring Gus McNaughton, in which she played Peggy Sylvester, the show's heroine, after taking over from Elsie Arnold for her first performance in that role at the Theatre Royal, Huddersfield, on 19 January. When the show was at the Royal Court Theatre, Liverpool, for the second week after Lascelles joined the tour, the reviewer for the Liverpool Echo reported that: "Miss Felice Lascelles, a pretty and graceful heroine in voice and presence, learned in a tribute of flowers how Merseyside rejoices in the success of its local talent." By the time the company reached the Empress Theatre, Brixton, on 23 November 1931, Lascelles had passed the role of Peggy on to Lillian Newman.
For that year's winter season, she had been pre-announced for the role of principal girl in the pantomime adaptation of Robinson Crusoe. However, she joined another pantomime instead, Goody Two-Shoes, which opened at the Theatre Royal, Exeter, on 26 December 1931. She played the lead role of Goody, and Irene Lister was the Principal boy. In that role, she sang solo: "Tie a little string about your finger", "Prince Charming", and "All Change for Happiness", as well as duets with Lister: "For You" and "Close Your Eyes". The show closed on 13 February 1932, after 69 performances.
1932–1933: ''Stand Up and Sing'' to ''Follow the Girl''
After taking a long break around the birth of her daughter in June 1932, Lascelles returned to the stage in October of that year, playing the role of Ena in the national tour of Stand Up and Sing, in which she sang "Mercantile Marine" and "Take It or Leave It". This run opened at the Grand Theatre, Wolverhampton, on 31 October 1932, and was suspended after the 10 December show at the Empire Theatre, Leeds, to be merged into the Christmas season organised by Lee Ephraim at the Empire Theatre in Newcastle. On Saturday, 3 December 1932, Lascelles and Eric Fawcett—among other members of the cast of Stand Up and Sing and other theatrical companies—volunteered to appear in a charity special matinee performance at the Empire Theatre, Sheffield, in aid of Sheffield Council of Social Service, in which they sang the amusing duet "It's Not You".During Lee Ephraim's Musical Comedy Season, which took place from 24 December 1932 to 21 January 1933 at the Empire Theatre in Newcastle, Lascelles was part of a company of 80 artists assembled to perform in three of Jack Buchanan's musical comedy shows in succession over four weeks: Sunny, That's a Good Girl, and Stand Up and Sing. At the end of the first performance of Sunny on 24 December, after Lascelles had reprised her leading role of Sunny for the first time in nearly two years, the delighted audience called for repeated curtains and Eric Fawcett—who played Jack Buchanan's original part of Jim Demming—addressed the audience in appreciation. For the second of these three shows, opening on 2 January 1933, Lascelles debuted her role of Moya Malone in That's a Good Girl, in which she sang "Fancy Our Meeting" with Eric Hodges as Francis Moray, and the principals were Fawcett as Bill Barrow and Ethel Stewart as Joy Dean. For the third show, opening on 9 January 1933, Lascelles played the role of Mary Clyde-Burkin in Stand Up and Sing, departing from her usual role of Ena which was, on this run, performed instead by Ethel Stewart, who had originally played it opposite Jack Buchanan. The fourth and final week, opening on 16 January 1933, was divided between re-runs of Sunny and That's a Good Girl, with three consecutive days allocated to each play. Later in 1933, Lascelles was "the girl" in Follow the Girl, a show that was well received but ran for only three weeks, one each at the Palace Theatre in Halifax on 30 October, at the Opera House in Blackpool on 20 November, and at the Theatre Royal in Brighton on 27 November.