George Grossmith Jr.
George Grossmith, known until 1912 as George Grossmith Jr., was an English actor, theatre producer and manager, director, playwright and songwriter, remembered for his work in and with Edwardian musical comedies and 1920s musicals. He was also an important innovator in bringing cabaret and revue to the London stage. Born in London, he took his first role on the musical stage at the age of 18 in Haste to the Wedding, a West End collaboration between his songwriter and actor father and W. S. Gilbert.
Grossmith soon became an audience favourite playing "dude" roles – fashionable but unserious characters. Early appearances in musicals included George Edwardes's hit A Gaiety Girl in 1893, and Go-Bang and The Shop Girl in 1894. In 1895, Grossmith left the musical stage, instead appearing in straight comedies, but after a few years he returned to performing in musicals and Victorian burlesques. Early in the new century, he had a string of successes in musicals for Edwardes, including The Toreador, The School Girl, The Orchid, The Spring Chicken, The New Aladdin, The Girls of Gottenberg, Our Miss Gibbs, Peggy, The Sunshine Girl and The Girl on the Film. The lanky Grossmith was often paired with the diminutive Edmund Payne. At the same time, he developed a reputation as a co-writer of musicals and revues, often adding jokes into others' librettos.
Grossmith established himself as a major producer, together with Edward Laurillard, of such hits as To-Night's the Night, Theodore & Co and Yes, Uncle!. He wrote the long-running revue series that began with The Bing Boys Are Here, scheduling these projects around his naval service in the First World War. He produced, co-wrote, directed and sometimes starred in, Kissing Time, A Night Out, Sally, The Cabaret Girl, The Beauty Prize and Primrose. He also continued to appear in other producers' shows, including The Naughty Princess and No, No, Nanette.
Later he performed in such pieces as Princess Charming and began a film career in 1930, both as an actor and, from 1932, chairman of London Film Productions Ltd.
Life and career
Early years
George Grossmith was born in Chalk Farm, London, on 11 May 1874, the eldest child and elder son of the future Gilbert and Sullivan star George Grossmith and his wife, Emmeline Rosa, née Noyce. His brother Lawrence was an actor. Grossmith studied at University College School in London. His parents discouraged his interest in the theatre and he was intended for an army career. He twice failed the entry examination to the Royal Military College, Sandhurst because of his poor command of French; when he was seventeen his father took him to Paris, established him at the Hôtel Continental and left him to learn the language. He became so fluent that he was later able to perform in French to Parisian audiences.Despite his parents' misgivings, at the age of eighteen Grossmith accepted W. S. Gilbert's invitation to play a small part in Haste to the Wedding, an operatic adaptation by Gilbert of an old French comedy, The Italian Straw Hat, with new music by Grossmith's father. It had only a short run, in July and August 1892, but the young Grossmith was set on a stage career, and later in the year he appeared in comic operas at the Royalty and Comedy Theatres. At the Shaftesbury Theatre in April 1893 he played Lord Percy Pimpleton in Morocco Bound, described as "a musical farcical comedy". In this piece he gave his first performance in what has variously been termed a "silly ass", "dude", "masher" or "knut" role, with which he was much associated during his subsequent stage career. The show was a success, running for 295 performances; the biographer Kurt Gänzl records that Grossmith polished and augmented his small part during the run "with extra sight and word gags until his performance became one of the most prominent and popular features of the entertainment". Forty years later Grossmith recalled, "I introduced impromptu idiotic stories and conundrums every time I came on the stage an assurance that made me 'gag' and invent things on the stage I should never have the courage for to-day".
In 1895, at the fashionable church St George's, Hanover Square, Grossmith married Gertrude Elizabeth "Cissie" Rudge, a burlesque and musical comedy actress whose stage name was Adelaide Astor. She was one of the Rudge Sisters – five actresses of whom Letty Lind was the best-known. Grossmith and his wife had three children, the eldest of whom, Ena Sylvia Victoria, became a stage and film actress, George became a theatrical manager; and the youngest was Rosa Mary, whose son was John George.
West End and Broadway
Grossmith quickly established himself as a favourite with audiences. He had little singing voice, but could put a song across nonetheless and he was known for his easy comic grace on stage. His colleague Seymour Hicks described him as "clever George Grossmith Jr, with a face hardly less extraordinary than his curious legs and a humour as unctuous as his father's at his best". Hicks added that Grossmith, by his example, improved men's standards of dress. Morocco Bound was followed by further West End appearances in Go-Bang and in George Edwardes's production of A Gaiety Girl, which ran for 413 performances. Edwardes then engaged Grossmith to create the part of Bertie Boyd in the even more successful musical The Shop Girl. Also in the cast was Edmund Payne, a diminutive comic actor with whom, for comedic effect, the tall, lanky Grossmith would be paired in many Edwardian musical comedies. The twenty-year-old Grossmith wrote the lyrics to his character's song "Beautiful, bountiful Bertie", which he popularised in both London and New York. It became so popular that Grossmith senior included in his solo show at St James's Hall a comic impersonation of Grossmith junior singing it. Grossmith eventually appeared in some 20 Edwardes productions, often interpolating his own songs into the shows.Away from musical comedy, Grossmith appeared at the Vaudeville Theatre in 1896, as a young philosophy student, Maxime, in A Night Out, an English adaptation of Georges Feydeau's farce L'Hôtel du libre échange. The Era commented, "Mr Geo Grossmith, jun added another admirable portrait to his gallery of brainless young men". He played in a range of shows between then and 1901, some musical and some not. He was co-author of two of them – Great Caesar, a burlesque with music by Paul Rubens; and The Gay Pretenders, a comic opera with music by Claude Nugent, which failed despite a starry cast headed by Grossmith senior. Playing a bibulous peer, Grossmith appeared with Lillie Langtry in Sydney Grundy's comedy The Degenerates in London in 1899 and in the US the following year.
Grossmith returned to Edwardes's company in 1901 as leading comedian, touring in Kitty Grey, and then starring in The Toreador, which ran for 676 performances at the Gaiety Theatre. He played what The Stage described as "a vivacious booby of the 'chappie' order... a very diverting figure, the best sketch by far of its kind he has given". In Edwardes's next show, The School Girl, he took over from G. P. Huntley as Sir Ormesby St Leger, and subsequently toured the US in the piece.
By this time Grossmith was establishing himself as a writer as well as an actor. He wrote the librettos for Gulliver's Travels, and The Love Birds, both of which had modest runs. The latter was produced by Edward Laurillard, who later became Grossmith's business partner. The Spring Chicken, for which Grossmith wrote the book, was the first of his many adaptations of French plays. Based on Coquin de Printemps by Adolphe Jaime and Georges Duval, it had music by Ivan Caryll and Monckton and lyrics by Adrian Ross and Percy Greenbank. Grossmith took the leading role of Gustave Barbori; the piece ran for 374 performances; Grossmith, as became his frequent practice, handed his role on to another player during the run.
Over the first dozen years of the 20th century, Grossmith starred in a succession of Edwardian musical comedy hits at the Gaiety, and became one of the biggest stars of the Edwardian era. As well as Gustave his roles included the Hon Guy Scrymgeour in The Orchid, Genie of the Lamp in The New Aladdin, Prince Otto in The Girls of Gottenberg, Hughie in Our Miss Gibbs, Auberon Blow in Peggy, for which he also wrote the book, and Lord Bicester in The Sunshine Girl. These seven shows ran for an average of 383 performances. He wrote the book to another Gaiety musical, Havana, and often added jokes to books in his collaborations with other writers.
Grossmith was a pioneer of revue in the West End. He wrote or co-wrote, and sometimes directed, more than a dozen between 1905 and 1914, from Rogues and Vagabonds at the Empire to Not Likely at the Alhambra. He also appeared in revue in Paris at the Folies Bergère in 1910 and at the Gabrielle Réjane in 1911. In the latter's Revue Sans-Gêne he starred alongside Réjane herself and Charles Lamy, gaining the praise of Les Annales du théâtre et de la musique and "all those – and they were more numerous than ever – who declared themselves fond of this kind of very Parisian show".
Grossmith's last visit to the US before the First World War was in December 1913, when he played Max Daly in The Girl on the Film at the Shubert Theatre, New York, having played the part in London earlier in the year. By this time Edwardes was ailing; Grossmith joined Laurillard to co-produce comedies and musical shows in the Edwardes tradition. Their first production was Potash and Perlmutter, which opened at the Queen's Theatre in London in April 1914 and ran for 665 performances.