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HOME CHAT The World Of Noël Coward NOËL COWARD AT CARNFORTH AND THE UK BIRTHDAY EVENTS ALAN FARLEY DOMINIC VLASTO introduces the broadcasts of the renowned West Coast Radio Arts Host. PRIVATE LIVES and RELATIVE VALUES Reviews of the recent Coward revivals that still ‘raise the bar’ for audiences everywhere. MORE FROM THE ARCHIVES The best of the sepia-tinted media world of Noël Coward in the 1930s PHOTO: Ann Harding and Noël Coward making their way through the crowd at the Annual Theatrical Garden Party 1936 A MAGAZINE ABOUT THE LIFE AND WORK OF SIR NOËL COWARD • AUGUST 2013 Editorial Welcome and a huge thank you to everyone that has sent us material for our archive pages. We have not been able to include even a fraction of all the material we have received so please forgive us if you chosen item has not made the cut this time, as golfers I think say! There is always next time and the next... At the moment I am working through all that is required for the exhibition at Carnforth Station that starts in October with a planned day of talks and films about Noël Coward, Brief Encounter and its theatre forbear Still Life. This year’s UK Coward events include our AGM at The Noël Coward Theatre and the Annual Luncheon at the Grand Saloon at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane. The cabaret for the lunch will be perfvormed by Helen McDermot and Adrian Wright accompanied by Annette Jude. Their performance will consists of an extract from their concert show, Cowards in the Wings that includes rarely heard pieces from Waiting in the Wings and the almost unknown and unrecorded songs from Words and Music in ‘The Hall of Fame’ where we discover amongst other things ‘...the man who sailed across Lake Windermere in an India-rubber bath!’ You may by now have noticed that as well as receiving your membership fees by cheque and standing order we are now able to receive them via the web using credit/debit cards and PayPal. Financial changes are continuing to take place as our accounts are guided by Stephen Greenman into my temporary care whilst we explore the way forward with a new structure and a new treasurer. We are delighted that Ken Starrett is on his feet again and although not fully recovered is once again mobile. My thanks to everyone who has sent in kind thoughts and expressions of gratitude for Home Chat and our events. As volunteers we do our best so when things go well it makes our efforts all worthwhile. Latest on the CONTENTS Editorial 2 Smalhythe 4 Forthcoming Events Private Lives Relative Values Michael Law - Easy to Love Notes from New York The Other Coward Speaking of Noël Coward The Alan Farley Interviews A Choice of Coward Lance Salway introduces us to... An Earlier Essay Competition You and Yours... Items from Members Key People and Contacts 3 5 6 7 8 10 13 16 19 23 24 John Knowles Writing Competition Reminder ‘In His Own Write’ for £1,000 Brief Encounter Exhibition at Carnforth Station 1st October - 11 December 31st October Films and Talk by John Knowles As you will be aware the Society has arranged an exhibition about Noël Coward at the Carnforth Station Heritage Centre from 1st October to the 11 December 2013 entitled: A Brief Encounter with Noël Coward. In addition ... A day of film presentations and talks has been arranged by John Knowles and Peter Tod at the Heritage Centre echoing the title of the exhibition on Thursday 31st October. Tickets available from the Heritage Centre Manager (John Adams) on 01524 735165 or email: [email protected] The Exhibition will take place in the Bateman Gallery at the station’s Heritage Centre and will include a self-running video commentary on the film Brief Encounter by Barry Day, posters and artefacts from the collection of the Noël Coward Estate, some seen at the Star Quality exhibition in New York. A range of Coward CDs will also be available from the Heritage Centre Shop at discount prices during the run of the Exhibition. The venue can be viewed online at: carnforthstation.co.uk. Competition closes on October 30th, 2013 Please do remind or tell your friends and contacts about our celebration of the 40th anniversary of the death of Sir Noël Coward the Society with our first writing competition open to all. An application form and details are available on-line (noëlcoward.net). All the rules, and submission dates are provided there. Details of a celebratory event for the four selected finalists will be featured in a future edition of Home Chat. Remember that we are inviting anyone who wishes to take part to write an original sketch, poem/verse, prose passage or scene for a play in the style of Noël Coward. They must be prepared to perform this piece at the celebratory event. More details on this on-line including copyright limitations and future use of the entries. Thanks to the generosity of our sponsors for this competition we are offering a prize of £1,000 for the winning piece that will be chosen from the four finalists at the celebratory event next year (2014). See Page 19 for an essay competition in Play Pictorial on Noël Coward, that took place in 1932! -2- Forthcoming Events UK COWARD BIRTHDAY CELEBRATIONS As promised this year mirrors the practice of the past - so many have asked it to be kept so... The Annual General Meeting will take place at The Noël Coward Theatre, timings as follow: The Noël Coward Theatre Friday 13th December Coffee AGM Followed by... Theatre Royal, Drury Lane Flower-Laying Ceremony Drinks in the Theatre’s Rotunda Lunch - Grand Salon (recently re-furbished!) Cabaret with Coffee 10.45am 11.15am Adrian Wright 12.15pm 12.30pm 1.00pm. 2.30pm Ticket price for drinks, 3-course lunch with wine, water & coffee PLUS cabaret is... £85 A reservation form for the event is included and will be available online and in the November edition of Home Chat. Helen McDermott Celebrity Guest As always it is impossible to tell you exactly who our celebrity guest will be for the flower-laying, as commitments for theatre artists can change rapidly. The person who has agreed to be there, barring other commitments, is an extremely well-known stage and TV actor. It could be... Such fun! Annual Lunch Cabaret The cabaret spot this year goes to: “Two of Norfolk’s brightest personalities who lift a glass to the genius of Noël Coward in this kaleidoscopically entertaining celebration of his songs, including many not heard since they were first performed. The best known face of Anglia TV, Helen McDermott has remained a favourite on stage and in cabaret. Adrian Wright has long been a darling of the critics: ‘Words fail me!’ (Fur and Feather). They are joined by pianist Annette Jude and are determined to disprove Noël’s famous dictum ‘Very flat, Norfolk’ ” As you can tell from this promotional text we are in for a fun-time at this year’s Annual Lunch. As well as being a consummate performer, Adrian Wright is an established author and a world authority on the British Musical Theatre of the 1950s and 60s. He has made countless appearances on stage, national TV and Radio and released several CDs of songs. He also owns and manages Must Close Saturday Records, an independent record company that has been responsible for ensuring that the legacy of British Musical Theatre continues to thrive and meet its public. Adrian is renowned for his humour - as dry as a well-olive-d Martini. Helen Mcdermott is considered a ‘regional treasure’ in East Anglia from her wonderful appearances as a TV presenter with the tested ability to apply her dry humour in a way that is understood by adults but flies over the heads of younger watchers! Her grandparents were renowned music hall artists and apart from her TV work she has worked on stages everywhere as a cabaret performer. They have chosen extracts from their latest regional concert tour that include rarely performed and unrecorded songs from Waiting in the Wings and Words and Music including ‘The Hall of Fame’ - not to be missed! Details of their regional concert tour can be seen on the NCS website: noëlcoward.net -3- Michael Law is appearing on: Friday 20th September The Pheasantry, Pizza Express, 152-154 Kings Road, London SW3 4UT (doors open at 7pm/performance from 8.30pm) Tickets £20: 08456 027 017 (opt. 8) NB NCS DISCOUNT £17.50 Sunday 29th September - 3pm to 4.15pm The Friends Meeting House, Ship Street, Brighton BN1 1AF Tickets £10 on the door or please telephone 0845 370 0178 NB NCS DISCOUNT £8 Sunday 20th October at 3pm Huntingdon Hall, Crowngate Worcester, WR1 3LD Tickets: 01905 611427 £14 (£12 Concessions) Smallhythe Our thanks to all those who came to the NCS event at Smallhythe - a great afternoon in the Kentish sun On a glorious afternoon some 55 members made their way to Smallhythe for the NCS event held in the wonderful Barn Theatre of Ellen Terry managed so well by the National Trust volunteers and their Events Organiser for the region Katie Shaw. Julian Clary agreed to be interviewed about his home, The Old Manor - half of Goldenhurst, Noël’s Kent farmhouse home, and all of the work he has done in restoring the house. Albert, one of Julian’s dogs was in attendance as we watched a collection of home movie clips shot by Noël and Jeffery Holmesdale (Lord Amherst) of visitors to the house. The interview gave Julian an opportunity to talk about what he has done at the house, his research into Noël’s life and work and the background to his novel Briefs Encountered. A break for tea in the sunshine on the lawns outside the thatched Barn Theatre allowed members to talk to Julian informally and enjoy meeting our other guests: Richard Stirling of Evergreen Theatrical Productions, Adrian Slade and his wife (Adrian manages the Estate of his late brother the composer and writer of musicals, Julian Slade) and Suzanne Slater one of Noël’s orphan’s who attended the Actors Orphanage during his time as President. A huge thank you to all who attended! Julian Clary and ‘Valerie’ at The Old Manor NCS members, Julian Clary and ‘Albert’ at Smallhythe John Knowles NCS members at Smallhythe -4- Private Lives Chichester success at the Gielgud One sometimes wonders whether the thirst for Coward revivals will ever be quenched! For the man who, slightly tongue in cheek perhaps, claimed he did not expect to be remembered, his works seem destined to fill theatres across the world on stages both humble and grand. In the last decade and a half since his Centenary year, Noël’s immortal soul will have seen Private Lives: with Lindsay Duncan and Alan Rickman (West End - 2001/2002, Broadway - 2002); with Kim Cattrall and Matthew Macfadyen (West End - 2010) Paul Goss (Broadway - 2011); and now with Anna Chancellor and Toby Stephens (Chichester Festival Theatre - 2010, West End - 2013, Broadway - who knows!) In earlier times it has been the most perfect, powerful, theatrical vehicle for Noël and his childhood friend Gertrude Lawrence, and the ultimate setting for a final round in the emotional combat between Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton - who should have perfectly mirrored the on-stage lives of Amanda and Elyot but, if accounts are to be believed, allowed themselves to forget that and the audience as well. The classic revival that marked ‘Dad’s Renaissance,’ as Noël called it, in 1963 was hugely successful, as was John Gielgud’s production of the play with Robert Stephens and Maggie Smith in 1972. In Coward’s Centenary year, 1999, a revival at the National Theatre, starred Anton Lesser as Elyot and Juliet Stevenson as Amanda, directed by Philip Franks. In the past the play has been chastised by critics as light or of little substance but it continues to bite with audiences who regularly suspend disbelief at the possibility of two divorced people ending up on their honeymoons with their second spouses in neighbouring balconied rooms at the same hotel in France at the same time! What follows is both humorous and should be morally upsetting, as the two main characters play out their ‘surprise meeting’ on the balconies overlooking the sea and in a bohemian flat in Paris, exploring the love/hate turmoil of those who cannot bear to be together or apart. Their newly espoused partners act as the voice of the common man for most of the play but in the end succumb to what becomes the normal emotional tone of the comedy, unmindful that the main protagonists, the enzymes of their unhappiness, are creeping away in mock horror, suitcases in hand. There must be something, for those who have sat through so many performances of this classic play, that keeps us all returning to our seats. Apart from the setting, every version does seem to be so different and I always swear that there are lines spoken that I have never heard before. On this occasion the play was noticeably shorter, sharper and with a pace that felt better adapted for today’s West End stage. Its gestation period at the Minerva at The Chichester Festival Theatre was sold out before many of us realised it was on. It won many plaudits there from the press. How well would it translate from the ‘in the round’ setting of the Minerva to the classic proscenium stage at the Gielgud? Well translate it did and with the judicious joining of the first and second Acts, fuelled by a mouth-dropping scenery switch, rolled on from Deauville to Paris without a moment’s pause. The result was that the emotional rollercoaster kept going and added much more resonance to a second Act that in past productions I have found could become rather tedious, as the focus moves from sofa to drinks to piano to sofa to drinks to gramophone to drinks to breaking shellac and so on. The pace here was ideal, supporting the passion of the piece and in some way gave the thwarted second partners greater freedom and presence. The third Act following the sole intermission and although it felt shorter and had some real punch in it. The play was certainly not rushed and felt comfortably contemporary. Those of us who went on the NCS outing to the show had the benefit of meeting the cast in the bar - they all came and stayed, despite other commitments and were very relaxed and involved with us. -5- Anna Chancellor and Toby Stephens Our thanks to Denys Robinson for organising the NCS event and to a cast who deserve our applause at every level! A truly great production! John Knowles Relative Values Theatre Royal Bath Productions Directed by Trevor Nunn A Review from the performance at the Richmond Theatre From Geoffrey Johnson One might assume that just another revival of a Noël Coward light comedy to appear on the current theatre scene would not really be a matter for the usual rejoicing. To my great pleasure, Sir Noël’s seldom produced Relative Values is an outstanding rediscovered treasure and a real winner in the hands of brilliant director Trevor Nunn. Never professionally produced on Broadway but premiered in 1951 at London’s Savoy Theatre with Gladys Cooper, Judy Campbell, and Angela Badderley in leading roles, it is rather a mystery why it has not been revived very often long before now. Granted that the play deals with the Countess of Marshwood’s discovery that her maid’s common sister, an American film star, is on the verge of marrying her son, Sir John, and is a sly thrust at the English class system - it was, of course, shortly before the angry young men brought their plays to the attention of audiences who were use to more complacent and traditional fare. Still it was a success (477 performances) and admired for the usual Coward unique style, wit, and range of character. Right now, both in England and the U.S., it seems we are very fascinated by the English class structure. This, perhaps is encouraged today by the overwhelming success of television’s Downton Abbey of another British period. Who cannot help being engrossed with life above and below the stairs in a stately English home? This rare and special revival of Relative Values is of very high calibre. Patricia Hodge as Felicity, Countess of Marshwood, gives a perfect performance. Her comedy style and timing are wonderful as she sets exactly the right aristocratic tone throughout the evening’s hilarity. She has a outstanding sense of Coward comedy. Other excellent performances include Caroline Quentin as the anxious but still very humorous maid, Moxie, Rory Bremner as the perfect but un-clichéd butler, Crestwell, and Katherine Kingsley as Moxie’s sister, Miranda, who has ‘gone Hollywood’ in a terrible and unreal way. The rest of the supporting cast is excellent and right on target throughout the play. Geoffrey Johnson The Master at his best A Review from Paddy Briggs The best compliment I can pay the Theatre Royal Bath’s new production of Noël Coward’s Relative Values is that it made me realise for the first time what a very good play it is. It has not been frequently produced - certainly compared with the great plays from the 1930s. But in fact I think that there is a case to be made for Relative Values to be Coward’s masterpiece. The reason is the brilliance of the plot and the dialogue and the strength of the characters. Coward wrote “Upstairs Downstairs” type drama long before that TV series and he had a gift for the characterisation of the Toffs as well as the Servants which was exemplary. In Relative Values we have all the nuances of class handled in a subtle and hilarious way. We also have the addition of cross Atlantic culture clash with the appearance of the Errol Flynn like “Don Lucas” and his past lover “Miranda Frayle” – a Hollywood star. The spectrum of class runs from the vacuous “Earl of Marshwood” and his mother Felicity the Dowager Countess at one end through to Mrs Moxton (Moxie) who is Felicity’s Lady’s maid. There is also Crestwell the Butler who in Rory Bremner’s excellent portrayal has a foot in both camps. When he is talking to the Family, Crestwell is all carefully modulated Received Pronunciation English. When he talks with Moxie or Alice the Maid he reverts to his natural voice with its East End vowels. For Bremner this comes naturally of course and his performance in his first straight play is very good. Crestwell is rather Jeeves-like and the other characters in the Play are distinctly Wodehousian as well. As indeed is the plot. The vacuous Earl wants to marry the cunning and ebullient film star. The family – especially Felicity (a magnificent performance by Patricia Hodge) wants to stop this. As does Moxie not least because she has discovered that Ms Frayle is her long-lost sister. This set up has the potential for farce but in fact whilst it is light and frothy comedy it never quite leaves the realms of believability in Coward’s sure hands. Caroline Quentin’s Moxie is a fine observation of someone comfortable in her sphere but also quite capable of becoming genteel in a slightly Eliza Doolittle sort of way when the plot requires it. I enjoyed Katherine Kingsley’s Miranda as well – this is the one part which borders on caricature and Kingsley brings it off well. I suppose if you take Noël Coward, add Trevor Nunn to direct, include professional actors of the quality of Hodge and Quentin and sprinkle in a touch of Rory Bremner you should be en route to a success. This production is certainly that. But more than that it feels like a new Coward discovery and one that is as assured in construction and style as it is possible to be. In this very modern production there is also a deliciously camp Steven Pacey to enjoy as Felicity’s nephew Peter. Whether it was intended by Coward that this role should be Gay (in the modern sense) rather than just Gay (in the sense that Coward’s era used the word) I’m not sure. But it works – as does everything in this well-paced, witty and eye-opening production. The Master would have approved. Paddy Briggs -6- Michael Law - Easy to Love A review by Dominic Vlasto Ruth Leon writes at the start of the sleeve notes to this CD that “Michael Law is a sort of miracle – a musician and historian with the energy not only to identify what has been lacking in our cultural life but to fill it. His performances reproduce nearly a century of music which would otherwise be lost.” This is perhaps bordering on excessive hyperbole, but there is no hyperbole in what follows: “His own playing and singing displays his impeccable taste and infallible sense of what an audience is hungry for – fine music, brilliantly but not aggressively performed. It is though he is inviting us to enjoy what he loves, no pressure, no insistence, and along the way he is surreptitiously teaching us about a world that we might have forgotten.” Michael Law’s new CD is a recording of a live performance at London’s The Pheasantry early in 2013, and is a mix of songs by Kern, Berlin, Porter, Gershwin and Coward. Coward material is only six tracks out of 20; but for my Desert Island Disc I’d sooner have anything of this general genre performed so exquisitely by Michael than an entire CD of Coward, however rare, in the hands of a less painstaking musician. It’s not the first time that Michael Law has recorded Coward – some readers will remember the 1999 Piccadilly Dance Orchestra release of ‘A Marvellous Party’ (TER CDVIR 8333) which featured Coward numbers ‘Nina’ and ‘I’ll Follow My Secret Heart’. Both numbers are reprised here, in slightly different clothes. I was particularly impressed with Michael’s rendition of ‘Nina’, which I remember thinking a trifle lacking in energy on the earlier recording. Michael has picked up the tempo here, and reverted to rather more staccato Hackforth-type accompaniment figurations, which work particularly well in the coda, and because the words have energy and clarity throughout, it works very, very well – as a recording, that is. I can’t say anything about the impact and characterization of the live performance because I haven’t seen it, but judging from the applause his audience certainly enjoyed it, though you would not know from their lack of response/laughter during the performance that they were there at all. Perhaps that evening’s audience were asked to be unresponsive on account of the fact that it was being recorded. If so, it was a very clever thing to have set up, because it makes for so much better recorded enjoyment for the long-term. From the opening notes of the opening track (an arrangement inspired by Carroll Gibbons of Kern’s ‘I Won’t Dance’) we are so convincingly back in the musical sound-world of between-the-wars light music accompaniment you could almost be listening to an extremely wellpreserved recording from the HMV archives. The most “archival” of the Coward tracks is his 1925 ‘We Must All Be Very Kind to Auntie Jessie’, which has been a favourite trouvaille of Michael’s for some years now. I’ve seen Michael perform this one, and know that the comparatively bland, singing-rather-than-over-speaking approach works well here. Michael’s capturing of the essential style of both the vocal melody and the accompaniment works so well that this instantly becomes a sort of archival yardstick, easily trumping the three or four other recordings of this song that have been made and by which all others will be measured. The specific Coward tracks on this CD are: ‘A Room With a View’ (very pleasant, but perhaps slightly disconcertingly in-and-out of rhythm, though with a delicious keychange into the final phrase and a nod to Elsie April’s original accompaniment at the end), ‘There Are Bad Times Just Around the Corner’ (a slightly lame-sounding “Hooray, hooray, hooray!” bothers me slightly – he didn’t sound excited at all!), ‘I Wonder What Happened to Him?’ (nicely-paced and clear, but perhaps he tries to sing it a bit too much? I think this should mostly be just words spoken/acted to the simplest chordal accompaniment), ‘We Must All Be Very Kind…’, ‘Nina’ and ‘I’ll Follow My Secret Heart’. -7- Maybe not a lot of Coward for the £12 you’ll have to spend on the CD; but, as I said before, whatever the limitations this is, stylistically speaking, definitely a CD for selection for the Desert Island. Or anywhere else. Go order a copy of it at www.pdo.org.uk. Dominic Vlasto Michael Law Easy to Love Music Tracks: 1) I Won’t Dance (Jerome Kern/Oscar Hammerstein, Dorothy Fields, Otto Harbach, Jimmy McHugh) 2) A Room with a View (Noël Coward) 3) There Are Bad Times Just Around The Corner (Noël Coward) 4) Change Partners (Irving Berlin) 5) Easy To Love (Cole Porter) 6) I’m Putting All My Eggs in One Basket (Irving Berlin) 7) Experiment / How Could We Be Wrong? (Cole Porter) 8 I Love Paris/C’est Magnifique (Cole Porter) 9) I Wonder What Happened To Him (Noël Coward) 10) It’s De-Lovely (Cole Porter) 11) Just One of Those Things (Cole Porter) 12) Lady Be Good (George and Ira Gershwin) 13) After You – Who? / Night And Day (Cole Porter) 14) Swanee (George Gershwin / Irving Caesar) 15) Symphony (Allstone / André Tabet / Roger Bernstein. English lyrics by Jack Lawrence) 16 They All Laughed (George and Ira Gershwin) 17) We Must All Be Very Kind To Aunty Jessie (Noël Coward) 18) What’ll I Do? (Irving Berlin) 19) Nina (from Argentina) (Noël Coward) 20) I’ll Follow My Secret Heart (Noël Coward) NOTES FROM NEW YORK Ken Starrett provides the latest news from the USA Fallen Angels In 1923 while Noël Coward was appearing eight times a week in the revue, London Calling! he managed to dash off two play - Fallen Angels and The Vortex. For the next two years, both of these plays made the rounds of London managers’ offices and generated little interest. Before Fallen Angels was eventually produced in London in 1925, both Hay Fever and Easy Virtue had been written and The Vortex produced, followed by his first revue, On With The Dance. Busy man !! In spite of a lackluster critical reception to the original production of Fallen Angels starring Tallulah Bankhead and Edna Best, it managed 158 performances. The Broadway production in 1927 starring Fay Bainter and Estelle Winwood fared no better critically and closed after 36 performances. The last revival on Broadway was in 1956 starring Nancy Walker and Margaret Phillips. Fallen Angels has never quite achieved the popularity of his later plays and consequently it is rarely produced. Hopefully the production at the Shakespeare Company in Madison, New Jersey will change that. One of the most highly regarded classical companies in the country, their production of Fallen Angels is absolutely first rate. The New York Times said … “it is a singular treat to see this tale of two naughty wives, which is rarely revived. It may not be the playwright’s supreme accomplishment, but his nascent genius is obvious.” The roles of Julia Sterroll and Jane Banbury are, without question, star vehicles and carry practically the full weight of the play. As they are both anticipating the visit of a man they were both intimate with in the years before their marriages, the tension and nerves build to an absolutely hysterical drunk scene in the second act. This is all happening while their husbands are away for a golfing weekend. The roles of Julia and Jane are played, respectively, by Julie Jesneck and Melissa Miller. Both actresses have stunning comic timing and the necessary energy to sustain these large roles. Julie Jesnek, Melissa Miller and Allison Mackie PHOTO: Gerry Goodstein/Shakespeare Theatre of New Jersey The staunch dignified husbands, played by Jeffrey M. Bender and Ned Noyes, have the right sharpness and extract laughs from many small bits of business, as they face the problem with their wives. Keeping things moving and somewhat on an even keel is the maid Saunders, a sterling comic creation played with clipped ease and confidence by Allison Mackie. When Maurice the former lover of the wives finally shows up he is amazingly slick and clever. The actor Michael Sharon got every laugh from the small role at the end of the play that ties up the plot. There is a strong chemistry among this company of actors. The close rapport between them creates a really tight ensemble On meeting the company back stage it was interesting to find out that none of them knew each other or had ever worked together before the first day of rehearsal. Of all of them, only Ms. Mackie had ever done a Coward play. Most are relatively new to this repertory company, with the exception of Jeffery M. Bender who is enjoying his fourteenth season here. Melissa Michael Jeffery M. Allison Ned Ken Miller Sharon Bender Mackie Noyes Starrett PHOTO: David K. Manion This production was directed by Matthew Arbour whose credits include such plays as The Little Foxes and The Rivals. He clearly understands Coward and invests the smooth fast pace, with many inventive small touches such as Julia’s horrified reaction to the light tinkling of the servants bell when she is suffering from a hangover, or the maid offhandedly playing classical music on the piano while the doorbell is ringing. The designer Charles Corcoran has come up with a striking set that is certainly appropriate for the flavor and period of this Coward play. Many subtle accents such as picture frames and mirrors are carefully done in the Art Deco style. Martha Bromelmeier’s costumes are stylishly 1920s – the ladies in their cloche hats and the gentlemen in knickers for their golfing weekend – without being comic clichés.This production certainly proved to be a delightful comic gem, especially for those in the audience discovering it for the first time. -8- Tonight At 8:30 The nine one-act plays Noël Coward wrote in 1935 under the umbrella title, Tonight At 8:30 continue to be very popular with today’s audiences. Usually the plays are presented in groups of three in a single evening. A production which commenced on July 17th at the historic John Drew Theater in East Hampton, New York starred Blythe Danner and Simon Jones in Hands Across The Sea, the infrequently performed, Family Album, and the popular, Red Peppers. The evening was deftly directed by Tony Walton who has been honored with an Oscar, Tony and an Emmy and many other awards for his distinguished work in the theatre and films. A Tony- Award winning actress Ms. Danner is no stranger to Coward’s plays having played Elvira on Broadway in a revival of Blithe Spirit in 1987, and several Coward plays at Williamstown, Massachusetts. Mr. Jones has many Coward credits including having starred on Broadway in Private Lives, Waiting In The Wings, and Blithe Spirit with Angela Lansbury. The other actors in the company were Delphi Harrington, James Lawson, Tuck Milligan Gerard Doyle, Kate Mueth and Tina Jones. All of them have solid credits, especially Ms. Harrington,who has done a great many Coward plays. Hands Across The Sea deals with two bewildered travellers, Mr. and Mrs. Wadhurst, who are thrown into the midst of a very social household and are victims of mistaken identity. Ms. Danner with much energy is the social butterfly, Lady Maureen Gilpin, who aided by her friend Clare (Ms. Harrington) keeps things spinning. Mr. Jones plays her husband, a Commander in the Royal Navy, and with proper military decorum manages to keep up with the frustrations of the plot. The audience was delighted. The next play followed with no intermission. At the final fade out the stage crew swiftly evolved the Gilpin living room into a Victorian parlour, for the play Family Album. This play is a small musical that tells the story of the members of the Featherways family dealing with the death of their father. Mr. Jones is Jasper who is the stabilizing brother of the family and Ms. Danner is Lavinia, the spinster daughter who cared for the father. The old family retainer, Burrows (Mr. Milligan) who is quite deaf, manages to deal with the family’s wishes. At one point a trunk containing family mementos is opened. An old music box provides us with one of the loveliest songs Coward ever wrote called ‘Hearts and Flowers.’ Other things from the trunk bring back fond childhood memories. After the matter of the will is settled and everyone is enjoying their special moments, director Tony Walton added a nice touch by ending the play with the beautiful Coward song ‘Where Are The Song We Sung?’ Following intermission the audience was treated to the popular Red Peppers. Ms. Danner and Mr. Jones open the play as George and Lily Pepper performing the hilarious ‘Has Anybody Seen Our Ship?’ The play involves the squabbles between the Peppers and the musical director (Mr. Miligan), the producer (Mr. Doyle), another performer on the bill, Mabel Grace (Ms. Harrington), and with each other. The actors had great fun with this play and the audience enjoyed it immensely. At the end of the play following the disastrous finish to the final song ‘Two Men About Town’ the entire cast joins George and Lily for curtain calls, accompanied by a wonderful rendition of ‘London Pride’ – nice finish to a lovely evening. In the plays presented this evening, it was wonderful to see actors playing such a range of roles. Coward always enjoyed giving actors a chance to show their versatility. The scenery for the evening was, for the most part, functional pieces of furniture moved about to suit the action of the play. Some flats in the background would reverse to change a room. Hans Christian Anderson used to cut out paper figures he would use to tell us stories. Coward loved this fact and used refer to the characters and these plays as “my little cutouts.” In deference to Coward’s feeling, the proscenium framing the stage was many black and white cut out figures. In the center of the frame at the top was a caricature of Coward with wings (done by Tony Walton) looking down on the whole proceedings. Best Play On June 9th when the annual Tony Awards were presented, the award for Best Play of the Year went to Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike by Christopher Durang. One of the producers of this play is NCS member, M. Kilburg Reedy. We are happy to congratulate her on this award and wish her much continued success with the play. Personal Note Last March I had an accident slipping on the ice, which was follow by four very long months in recovery. During that time I received phone calls, e-mails and get-well cards from many of you. I am deeply touched and sincerely thank all of you for your kind thoughts and good wishes. Happily, I am nearly fully recovered. I hope that you are enjoying a pleasant summer. All my best wishes, Ken Starrett -9- The Other Coward Part two of our look at Coward’s work for the Actors’ Orphanage In the last edition of Home Chat we gave members an in-depth view of one of Noël’s regular commitments to raising funds for his much loved Actors’ Orphanage where he presided for so many years. Martin Phillips of Samuel French has provided these press photographs, some showing Noël in the days when Sir Gerald du Maurier was President. The notes attached to them are quoted from the accompanying press clippings and notes. “One of theatrelands biggest social events of the year is the Theatrical Garden Party at Roehampton in aid of the Actors’ Orphanage, when all the stars of stage and screen lend their aid to this good cause. This year’s event (29th June 1948) sees Noël Coward and Margaret Lockwood, looking very smart in her black and white taffeta suit, the jacket of which featured three collars and a three-tiered basque, try their hands at the coconut shy today.” The Programme for the Theatrical Garden Party in 1938 Provided by Lance Salway Ed. A photograph of the members of the cast of The Grand Giggle a regular dramatic feature at the Garden Parties. Here we see Edmund Gwen, Sir Gerald du Maurier (leaning on the ladder), Binnie Hale (on the ladder) and Noël Coward, in mock-dramatic pose. - 10 - “Noël Coward, who succeeded the late Gerald du Maurier as President of the Actors’ Orphanage organised a special attraction called “An Informal Concert” for the Theatrical Garden Party, which is being held today (Monday) in the Queen Mary Gardens, Regents Park. The photograph shows Mr. Noël Coward (right) with Mr. Robert Montgomery, the film star from Hollywood, between rehearsals for their show this morning.” (Ed. Photograph taken in 1935). “Leading actors and actresses in unexpected roles helped to make yesterday’s Theatrical Garden Party (12th June 1929) in the grounds of the Royal Hospital, Chelsea, a rollicking success. The murder scene in a thrilling drama produced by Sir Gerald du Maurier. Left to Right: Mr. A. Gattey, Noël Coward, Mr. F. Volpi, Miss Norah Swinburne and the producer.” “Theatrical Garden Party in Regent’s Park (9th June 1936) ‘Fishing for Champagne’ The Theatrical Garden Party took place today at Regent’s Park. The picture shows Mr.. Noël Coward, (the organiser), and Miss Miriam Hopkins, the famous actress, fishing for champagne.” FUNDRAISING AT GOLDENHURST Susannah Slater provides memories of a fundraising event at Goldenhurst on 26th August 1984 when Dulcie Grey and Michael Denison unveiled a plaque in memory of Sir Noël Coward. The programme for the day included Celebrity guests, A Procession of Vintage Rolls Royces, Marching Band, City of Canterbury Band, Crafts and Pony Rides and a Poetry Corner with local actress Miss Olwen Griffiths author of Walking Your Way. Moira Lister and Joyce Redfern were also at the event. In the evening in the marquee there was a show called, Dulcie Grey and Michael Denison Where Are The Songs We Sung “featuring the words and music of Sir Noël Coward.” This was performed by the Lissenden singers from London and one of the beneficiaries the Aldington Amateur Dramatic Society. On display was “Memorabilia of Sir Noël Coward, His Friends and Associates’ with items supplied by The Raymond Mander and Joe Mitchenson Theatre Collection.” Michael Denison and Dulcie Grey (3rd from left) with other guests. - 12 - Speaking of Noël Coward the Alan Farley Interviews Introduced by Dominic Vlasto This is the first of a series of pieces which will appear over several forthcoming editions of Home Chat, featuring transcripts of interviews conducted by Alan Farley, in pursuit of his 30-year series of radio programmes for KALW Radio, San Francisco about Noël Coward and his work, with many actors, musicians and administrators who had worked closely with Coward. A collection of interviews – then known as Conversations about Coward – was first transcribed in the late 1990s by Alan’s San Franciscan friend Ron Lazar. At the time, Alan and myself were hard at work finalizing the information for what would become the Coward Music Index. The collection of interview transcripts provided a rich vein of practical observational details about Coward’s work, and occasional surprising revelations about the origin or original performance of pieces of Coward’s music and lyrics, and many small details from the interviews found their way into both the Music Index and, following our attendance at the 1999 Noël Coward Conference at Birmingham University, into the piece on Coward’s music included in the post-conference volume Look Back in Pleasure, - The Potency of Cheap Music (Methuen, 2000). Alan’s impressive range of interviewees were met and recorded in London, San Francisco, Hollywood, New York, Switzerland, and many other places in the UK including Kent and Sussex, as opportunity allowed. I think it is worth giving an idea of the more significant interviewees here: Peter Matz Interviewed by Alan Farley, May 23, 1986 As the song says, “Let’s start at the very beginning…” Well, at least with one of the very earliest interviews, with the accompanist and orchestrator Peter Matz in 1986. This transcript had been particularly useful to me in the preparation of The Potency of Cheap Music in 1999. It was clear that in this instance – it is a fifty-minute interview - that there is way more than enough for a single-interview article. What follows below is really no more that heavily edited extracts, to which an occasional word of editorial comment/explanation is added [in square brackets]. Peter Matz (1929-2002) was aged 26 when he was very suddenly launched into one of the most surprising and longlasting successes of his career, taking on the accompaniments and music arrangements for Coward’s cabaret act at Las Vegas at rather less than three weeks notice, following the refusal of the US authorities to grant a work permit to Coward’s UK accompanist Norman Hackforth. Matz starts by remembering their initial meeting in New York in mid-May 1955: Sheridan Morley (1984 & 1989), José Ferrer (1986), Peter Matz (1986), Joe Layton (1987), Graham Payn (1987 & 1994), Geoffrey Johnson (1987), Joe Mitchenson (1987), Helene Pons (1988), Charles Castle & Stanley Hall (1988), Evelyn Laye (1989), Mary Ellis (1989), Joyce Carey (1989), Alan Strachan (1989), Norman Hackforth (1990), Wendy Toye (1990), Judy Campbell (1990), Elaine Stritch (1991), Moira Lister (1991), Ned Sherrin (1993), Don Seawell (1993), Philip Hoare (1993 & 1995), Peter Greenwell (1995), Harry Allan Towers (1996), Terry Castle (1996) and Joan Sutherland (1998). To commemorate Alan Farley’s extraordinary lifetime contribution to the study and promotion of Coward’s work, Ron Lazar has now decided to publish Speaking of Coward on line. The book will be published through AuthorHouse.com and made available through Amazon.com and several other prominent online merchants. The proceeds will go to the copyright holder, National Public Radio, KALW, San Francisco. Ron Lazar will donate fifty copies to the NCS to be used to raise funds for the Society . At the same time, NCS feels that we should highlight and celebrate Alan’s work in a series of Home Chat articles extracted from the most important of these interviews. This is the first of our series of perhaps six articles, most of which will probably contain extracts from more than one interview. PM:“He came to my apartment to audition me, which I thought was nice. I knew Noël Coward the playwright, I knew about the plays and so forth, but I had no idea about his songs – that English Music Hall comedy thing was completely new to me. Somehow I guess he sensed that. “He came into my apartment and said, “Well, do you know the ‘Trolley Song’ – can you play it in the key of B?” Some keys are very difficult to play and you seldom play in the key of B – all sharps and that kind of thing. So I said, “Well, it’s kind of weird, but I’ll try”. And he said, “Very fast”, and started singing in that great funny voice, “In my high starched collar, in my high top boots”—a Judy Garland song – flying through the song. So, I caught up with him on the piano, and he sort of looked down at the keyboard and then he asked me to play one or two other things which were American film-type songs or show tunes which I knew. “And then he said, “Can you be in Los Angeles tomorrow?” I said, “Yeah, I guess so.” And he said, “Fine, I’ll be at Clifton Webb’s house. We’ll start rehearsing.” It turned out we had like ten days – no time at all! And [at Clifton Webb’s House] he started teaching me, not only his songs, but this whole style of playing them. I don’t know if he ever thought of himself as a teacher [but] he was a great director. He made me learn very forcefully that this was about comedy performance, and a couple of times he screamed, “Don’t play [i.e. don’t let the music cover the words] when I’m making a joke!”, and I - 13 - gradually saw that this was a whole other kind of music. “At night I was working on the orchestrations, and began to get a picture of where we would need the orchestra. What it boiled down to was, the orchestra would play an introduction and get the thing started, and then mostly it would be just the piano and the drum and the bass maybe [for the main part of the song], and then maybe the orchestra would play an interlude and then an ending – I didn’t really do full-blown orchestrations. But they did sound good! It was a good band in Las Vegas. I was too young and too dumb to be frightened by all this. I didn’t realize how important it all was. And, of course, the truth is that it was a tremendously important thing in his life, but I didn’t know this. For me it was just a job in Vegas, and it was great! AF: “Now, it was recorded…how many sessions, how many shows were recorded, do you remember? PM: “I seem to recall it was three nights, and two shows a night, so [Columbia Records] probably taped or actually recorded six shows. AF: “I was in a record store just the other day and they said they could still sell as many copies of that album today as ever… and listen to this from Coward’s Diaries: “Peter Matz knows more about the range of various instruments and the potentialities of different combinations than anyone of any age I have ever met in England.” Amazing. PM: “That’s nice; but actually he did work in England with a guy who is a marvelous, marvelous orchestrator and composer, Wally Stott, who is now Angela Morley and one of the leading composers of film music out in California [Angela Morley/Wally Stott died in 2009]. I think Noël was just being nice to me. One thing is true, though: he hadn’t had experience of that kind of hot dance band, a typical Las Vegas show band with saxophones and many trumpets and trombones – that was kind of new to him. So my facility with that combination probably surprised him. And, of course, it’s a highenergy combination, that nightclub band thing. AF: “Then later that year there was the TV special [Together With Music, CBS TV 1955] with Mary Martin, then the following year the recording session in New York. PM: “We rehearsed a lot for the TV special with Mary because it was live – an hour-and-a-half live! Unbelievable in these days of videotape to think of that. [Noël and I] rehearsed in New York to start with, then I went and joined him in Jamaica, which was wonderful. He liked to write in the mornings – he would be in his study and I would be in my little guest area [working on the orchestrations]. Then we would all meet for lunch, and rehearse all afternoon. The material for the show evolved there. Mary was determined to sing something in her “real” soprano voice, and they argued about that. In the end he gave in and let her do ‘Un Bel Di’ from Puccini’s Madam Butterfly. AF: “You mean, that the skit they did was based on fact? AF: “Was all his work done away in his study? PM: “Exactly. He took the argument and turned it into a comic sketch event as part of the show… I remember the Jamaica trip as being really fun. I had a violent crush on Mary, so I was trying to get to her in the swimming pool! I remember being just in awe of the level of the work that was going on and feeling that something kind of historical was happening. PM: “No, he was very comfortable working in front of people … he played the piano OK, no wrong notes or anything, but he was limited harmonically… like all of us who compose anything, there are certain things that you fall into that are frequently called ‘style’ but which are really the demonstration of the - 14 - Pete Matz limitation of what you know about music, so he tended after a point to repeat certain harmonic and melodic things. But he wasn’t closed off to modern music. And if something was needed [for the show he was working on], he’d sit at the piano and compose a few bars and say, “Did you get that? Someone write that down. That’ll do for the transition” – he was quite comfortable doing that. AF: “Then, a couple of years later, you had a sort of falling-out over his ballet London Morning? PM: “The falling-out was basically about the money! He felt that our relationship was such that I should still work for him on the same basis as before, which was rather smallscale; but the fact is that I was doing pretty well in TV by then, and to stop and go and do Noël’s project [in London] would have been a serious financial drop. I was married and had one small kid, you know how these things are… and I think to be really honest, I didn’t have the passion about doing the work that he wanted. There seemed to be a lot of loose ends, and I finally had to say, “Noël, I don’t think I can do it”. He was very upset. It seemed to him that I was being disloyal. AF: “But then you worked with him again on Sail Away? PM: “It was my first job in the theatre as Music Director – I’d had jobs as rehearsal pianist, dance music arranger and so forth, but it really represented my whole reason for He was playing in Suite in Three Keys, and we went backstage to see him and then met a night or two later and had dinner. Another day we met him for lunch. having gone to New York to begin with, so I was thrilled that he asked me. It was a wonderful learning experience. AF: “What was Elaine Stritch like to work with? PM: “Wonderful! Brilliant! Funny! One of the best working actors I’ve ever known in my life. I had a chance to work with her again recently on Musical Comedy Tonight on TV. Elaine did a Rodgers and Hart song called ‘To Keep My Love Alive’. The first orchestration I wrote we rehearsed with her the day before the show, and she said, “It’s not right. It doesn’t work.” I said, “Wait a minute, we can fix…” She said, “It’s not about fixing. This is wrong!”. I went home and it was late, and I said, “She’s right! God damn it, she’s right.” And I rewrote it, and a new orchestration came in the next morning, and she said, “Now that, I can work with that!”. She’s meticulous. Every word counts. And at the end of it she gave a great performance. AF: “Did you spend much time with him aside from just working? PM: “Not an awful lot, but he did spend several evenings with me and my ex-wife, Janet. They got along great, and used to argue about all kinds of things – friendly arguments, but he loved to tear into anything. It was the same apartment there, for a while, where he had come to audition me, on East 61st Street; and we visited in Bermuda with him once, which was a wonderful, delightful time. Then when we went to England in 1968 we spent a bit of time together. He bequeathed me a conductor’s baton – a wonderful silver baton that folds up into a little case. It was given to him by some orchestra he went to conduct up north in England many years before I knew him – would it have been the Liverpool Philharmonic? – he’d come to guest conduct one of the suites of music from one of his shows, and they presented him with this baton. He willed that to me, which I thought was quite wonderful.” * * * [Peter Matz died in Los Angeles on August 9th 2002 and was survived by his second wife Marilynn Lovell Matz, two sons from his first marriage, Zachary and Jonas, and one grandson. Home Chat published an obituary in its October 2002 edition. The photograph of Peter Matz used both there and for this article was taken by Alan Farley at the time of his 1986 interview.] An informal photograph probably taken by Cole Lesley after the official photo shoot for the original cover of: ‘Noël Coward at Las Vegas’ shown here on the right PHOTO: NC Aventales AG - 15 - ALanceChoice of Coward Salway introduces us to... ... A Guide offered by the Granada TV Series of televised Coward plays which includes ‘Noël Coward Talks to Granada’ and his introductions to the individual plays... NOËL COWARD TALKS TO GRANADA August 1964 “I don’t like propaganda in art, that’s why I attack very rightwing or very left-wing plays; anything that smells of propaganda to me spells bad art. So therefore I slightly resent it. I like being entertained in the theatre, and I’ve been entertained a great deal recently. It gave me a great feeling of happiness because I love the theatre qua theatre and I haven’t seen such good acting in such a short space of time for a long while. I’ve nothing but admiration and praise for the younger playwrights who really mind about the theatre. I find the thing that irritates me is minding about a political or personal cause more than the theatre. Having been brought up in the theatre I naturally mind about the theatre first. And I think maybe that is what has got me this reputation for being reactionary. I’m not reactionary about youth. I want them to do well, but I do wish that they would learn that playwriting is a craft as well as an art. I was brought up in it, both the craft of playwriting and the craft of acting. I have very little patience with what is known as—and is I think being rather overdone—The Method. Every great star and great actor that I’ve ever known had method. Lynn Fontanne and Alfred Lunt, Ina Claire, Peter Evans, Laurence Olivier, John Gielgud, they all work with method, but it is not ‘The’ Method. ‘The’ Method has been bowdlerised. It’s been made into a sort of joke and it’s not quite fair because a field of very good actors has come out of the Actors’ Studio in New York and a great many very bad actors too. But that applies to any acting school. The thing I think that is wrong about ‘The’ Method is that too much emphasis is placed upon the actor’s view of what he is doing. The actor is encouraged to talk about himself, to think about himself in relation to the part too much. The way to act is to learn to act technically, to learn your words, to know what the play is about, to think it out in your own mind and then come on and do it—not waste a whole lot of the director’s time by saying ‘Should my motivation be because I was bitten by a rocking horse when I was four?’ This I think is a bore and I also think it’s a great waste of time. In fact, I do not allow it. I don’t like actors to keep coming and explaining to me how they’re going to do it and what they’re going to do—that’s their job. If they’ve got the script and have read it they should know. Acting is an art and a craft, it is not a question of a state of being. The mistake that many ‘Method’ actors make is that they believe that they can give the same degree of emotion at every performance. This they cannot do, if it is true. It must never, never be true except in rehearsal. The mood must be set, and what must be given to the audience is a repeat of what they have originally felt. This must be technically sound and accurate. It is no use telling me that when you come on the stage you lose yourself in your part — if you lose yourself you lose your audience. It’s a fatal mistake and when I hear that actors have to get in the mood before they go on it is all nonsense. What they’ve got to do is to remember their words, project them clearly, generally forward in the mouth. They’ve got to remember not only the five rows of the stalls, they’ve got to remember the people in the gallery and without shouting they’ve got to appear perfectly intimate and at ease—but every word must be heard all over the theatre. This does justice to the author and in the long run to themselves as actors.” Present Laughter - Monday 10th August at 9.10pm “Present Laughter is a flagrant example of what is known in theatrical parlance as a ‘star vehicle’, which means that, although most of the parts in it are good, they are all subservient to the leading part. It is, in fact, the leading part that carries the play. Through all the years that the living theatre has existed there has been a great deal of nonsense talked and written about the iniquities of the ‘star’ system. It has been attacked and vilified with recurrent fervour by professional critics, amateur critics, unsuccessful playwrights, unsuccessful actors, overidealistic managers and occasionally, with sublime disregard for cause and effect, even by some of the stars themselves. The only voices not heard in this shrill chorus of condemnation are those of the commercial managers, who possibly to their eternal shame are concerned with paying their rents, their staffs, their actors, their authors’ royalties, their production expenses and making a reasonable profit. These gentlemen, even though their artistic judgment may occasionally falter, even though their choice of plays may be motivated by the hope of financial gain rather than critical esteem, need not be utterly despised. They regard the theatre, rightly to my mind, as primarily a place of entertainment and they do their best to provide the public with what they think it wants. The despised ‘star’ system to true followers of the drama may appear to be a shameful compromise, but to a hard working playwright, believe me, it is frequently a very great comfort. Having been a hard working playwright myself for fortyfive years I must say fearlessly that on this question I am entirely on the side of the managers. When a new play is produced in one of the smaller more avant- garde theatres with a starless but efficient cast it is almost certain to receive good press notices. But as a general rule, unless it happens to be a very remarkable play indeed, this is about all it will get. To me good press notices are not enough. If I had ever cared about good press notices I should have shot myself in the early twenties. Present Laughter was written with the sensible object of providing me with a bravura part. It was an enormous success and I received excellent notices and, to my bewilderment and considerable dismay, the play also received excellent notices. The very thought of this so unnerved me that I can say no more.” - 16 - Blithe Spirit - Monday 17 August at 9.00 pm “When I was one-and-twenty I was ambitious, cheerful and high-spirited. I had never heard of the death wish and I was blissfully unaware that I belonged to a dying civilisation. Today this dubious implication is pitched at me from all directions. Despair is the new religion, the new mode. It is in the books we read, in the music we hear and far too often in the plays we see. Well I am no longer one-and-twenty, I still have no preoccupation with the death wish. I am still ambitious, cheerful and I hope not offensively high spirited, and I am still unaware that I belong to a dying civilisation. If I do there is really nothing to be done about it. So I am going to press on with my life as I like living it until I die of natural causes or an atom bomb blows me to smithereens. I knew in my ‘teens that the world was full of hatred, cruelty, vice, unrequited love, despair, destruction and murder. I also knew at the same time that it was filled with kindness, pleasure, joy, requited love, fun, excitement, generosity, laughter and friends. And through all my years I have never changed in my mind the balance of these absurd phenomena. I do become increasingly exasperated, however, when in my own beloved profession everything that I have been brought up and trained to believe in is now decried. Nowadays a well-constructed play with a beginning and a middle and an end is despised, and a light comedy whose sole purpose is to amuse is dismissed as being trivial and insignificant. Since when has laughter been so insignificant? No merriment apparently must be allowed to scratch the set grim patina of these dire years. We must all just sit and wait for death, or hurry it on according to how we feel. To my mind one of the most efficacious ways of hurrying it on is to sit in the theatre and look at a verbose, ill-constructed play, acted with turgid intensity which has received rave notices and is closing on Saturday. Perfection in art is, like anything else, a question of degree. All creative artists strive to achieve it within the limits of the form they have chosen. I must admit, with what must seem to be a refreshing gust of modesty, that I have never yet achieved the great play that I have always longed and will always long to write. But I am for ever grateful to the almost psychic gift that enabled me to write Blithe Spirit in five days during one of the darkest years of the war. It was not meticulously constructed in advance. In fact only one day lapsed between its original conception and the moment when I sat down to write it. It fell into my mind and on to the manuscript. Six weeks later it was produced and ran in London for four and a half years and I am still wondering whether or not it was important. Only time will tell.” The Vortex - Monday 24 August at 9.00 pm “The Vortex was produced on the 25 November 1924, at the Everyman Theatre, Hampstead. It was an immediate success. It established me both as a playwright and as an actor, which was very fortunate because up until that time I had not proved myself to be so hot in either capacity. With the success came a lot of the pleasurable trappings : new suits, a car, silk shirts, and an excessive amount of dressing gowns and pyjamas and still more extravagant amount of publicity. I was photographed, interviewed, photographed again, in my house, in the park, in the street, in my dressing- room, at my piano, with my dear old mother, without my dear old mother, and on one occasion sitting up in an over-elaborate bed looking like a heavily doped Chinese illusionist. I’ve always felt that this photograph did me a great deal of harm. Anybody looking at it would conclude at once, with a certain justification, that I was a weedy sensualist in the last stages of physical and moral degeneration and they’d better hurry quickly to see me in my play before my inevitable demise put that rather macabre pleasure beyond their reach. All this was very good for business, temporarily, but after a time it became tiresome. For many years I was never mentioned in the press without allusions to cocktail parties, jazz, post-war hysteria and decadence. My object in The Vortex was to write a good play with a whacking good part in it for myself, and I’m thankful to say, with a few modest reservations, that I think I succeeded. It is still, I hope, a good play and it is certainly still a whacking good part. Be that as it may however, that first night in that little Everyman Theatre in Hampstead forty years ago, and another first night the following year at the Henry Miller Theatre in New York, were two of the great moments in my career for which I shall never cease to be grateful.” Design for Living - Monday 31 August at 9.10 pm “Design for Living, as a project not as a play, sat patiently at the back of my mind for eleven years. It was waiting until Lynn Fontanne, Alfred Lunt and I had each arrived by different roads at the exact moment in our careers when we felt we could play together with a more or less equal chance of success. In the interim, being old friends, we met and planned and argued and discussed, and parted again. We all three many times knew we wanted a play written by me, but we were searching wildly through our minds to find three suitable characters on which to base it. At one moment we were to be foreigners. Lynn a Eurasian, Alfred a German, and me a Chinese. At another moment an acrobatic group, rapping out ali-oops and flicking handkerchiefs at each other. And then there was another idea, that I should write a play the entire action of which took place in a gigantic bed, and dealt with life and love in the Schnitzler manner. This idea was hilariously discarded after Alfred had made some suggestions of stage directions which, if faithfully followed, would have landed all three of us in jail. Finally when the whole project seemed to have sunk out of sight for ever I received a cable from them in the Argentine, where I happened to be at the moment, saying ‘Darling, our Theatre Guild contract is up in June, we shall be free, what about it?’ This not unnaturally made the rest of my South American holiday a little distracted. However a month or two later in a small Norwegian freight boat sailing from Panama to Los Angeles suddenly the play germinated in my mind and I wrote it, and with a sublime disregard of the flamboyant Mexican coast line on the starboard horizon, I set the mise-en-scene firmly in Paris, London and New York. Design for Living as a title is ironic, rather than dogmatic. I never intended for a moment to suggest that the design for living in the play- applied to anyone outside its principal characters, Gilda, Otto, Leo. These three glib over-articulate amoral creatures force their lives and their problems, impelled chiefly by the impact of their personalities each upon the other. They are like moths in a pool of light, unable to tolerate the lonely outer darkness and equally unable to share the light without constantly colliding and bruising one another’s wings. The end of the play is equivocal. The three of them are left, as the curtain falls, laughing. Different minds have found different reasons for this laughter. Some saw in it an anticipation of some sort of triangular carnal frolic. Others with less ribald - 17 - imaginations merely saw it as a fairly neat way of bringing the curtain down. I as the author prefer to think that Gilda, Otto and Leo are laughing at themselves.” The Casts PRESENT LAUGHTER A Comedy. Written in 1939. London production 29 Apr. 1943, Haymarket Theatre. Original Cast: Daphne Stillington Miss Erikson Fred Monica Reed Garry Essendine Liz Essendine Roland Maule Henry Lyppiatt Morris Dixon Joanna Lyppiatt Lady Saltburn Granada TV Cast: Monday 10th August at 9.10pm Daphne Stillington Miss Erikson Monica Reed Garry Essendine Liz Essendine Roland Maule Henry Lyppiatt Morris Dixon Joanna Lyppiatt Lady Saltburn Jennifer Gray Molly Johnson Billy Thatcher Beryl Measor Noël Coward Joyce Carey James Donald Gerald Case Dennis Price Judy Campbell Gwen Floyd Jennie Linden Ruth Porcher Joan Benham Peter Wyngarde Ursula Howells James Bolam Edwin Apps Danvers Walker Barbara Murray Jane Eccles An improbable farce in three acts. Written in 1941 First performed, Opera House, Manchester, 16 June 1941. Later at Piccadilly Theatre, London, 2 July 1941, St James’s Theatre, 23 Mar. 1942. Edith Ruth Charles Dr Bradman Mrs Bradman Madame Arcati Elvira Ruth Charles Madame Arcati Dr Bradman Mrs Bradman Edith Elvira Helen Cherry Griffith Jones Hattie Jacques Edward Jewesbury Coral Fairweather Ursula Hirst Joanna Dunham THE VORTEX BLITHE SPIRIT Original Cast: Granada TV Cast: Monday 17th August at 9.10pm Ruth Reeves Fay Compton Cecil Parker Martin Lewis Moya Nugent Margaret Rutherford Kay Hammond Noël Coward adapted the play for a film produced in 1944 with Rex Harrison as Charles and Constance Cummings as Ruth. A play in three acts. Written in 1923. London production 16 Dec. 1924, Royalty Theatre. Original Cast: Preston Helen Saville Pauncefort Quentin Clara Hibbert Florence Lancaster Tom Veryan Nicky Lancaster David Lancaster Bunty Mainwaring Bruce Fairlight Claire Keep Mary Robson F. Kinset Peile Millie Sim Lilian Braithwaite Alan Hollis Noël Coward Bromley Davenport Molly Kerr Ivor Barnard First American production 16 Sept. 1925, Henry Miller Theatre, New York. Granada TV Cast: Monday 24 August at 9.10pm Bunty Mainwaring Tom Veryan Pauncefort Quentin Helen Saville Nicky Lancaster Bruce Fairlight Clara Hibbert Preston Florence Lancaster David Lancaster Ann Bell Philip Bond Tony Bateman Faith Brook Nicholas Pennell Tom Gill Bernadette Milnes Angela Barrie Margaret Johnston Noël Howlett DESIGN FOR LIVING A comedy. Written in 1932 NewYork production 24 Jan. 1933, Ethel Barrymore Theatre. London production 25 Jan. 1939. Haymarket Theatre. New York London Gilda Lynn Fontanne Diana Wynyard Ernest Campbell Gullan Alan Webb Otto Alfred Lunt Anton Walbrook Leo Noël Coward Rex Harrison Miss Hodge Gladys Henson Dorothy Hamilton Photographer Ward Bishop (Cut in London) Mr Birbeck Philip Tonge Cyril Wheeler Grace Torrence Ethel Borden Everley Gregg Helen Carver Phyllis Connard Cathleen Cordell Henry Carver Alan Campbell Ross Landon Matthew Macleary Stennett James Mclntyre - 18 - Granada TV Cast: Monday 31st August at 9.10pm Gilda Leo Otto Ernest Miss Hodge Mr Birbeck Grace Torrence Matthew Helen Carver Henry Carver Our thanks go toLance Salway for providing a piece that I doubt many of us will have seen before. Jill Bennett Daniel Massey John Wood Richard Pearson Madge White Desmond Newling Stella Bonheur Benny Nightingale Carol Cleveland Warren Stanhope An Earlier Essay Competition R. P., Barnet; Norman E. Gibbs, Daventry ; BM/ BEFL, High Holborn; “Aldersey,” Oatlands, Weybridge; Mary Lake, Ampthill Square, N.W.I, and the cheque for Five Pounds to Miss Joan Littlefield. With thanks again to Lance Salway here are the published results of the competition in Play Pictorial No 368 - of November 1st 1932 The Prize Essay Competition Plays and Players, our Sixpenny Illustrated Review, whose motto is “Be Just and Fear Not,” had the happy thought to invite the public to express their opinions on Noël Coward with a Five Pound bonus for the best essay sent in. The seven score odd essays were submitted to a fairly intelligent individual, an experienced dramatist and actor of the past, and he selected half-a-dozen with the intimation that he left to us the invidious task of naming the winner. Taking two nights to sleep on our cogitations, we decided eventually on the paper by Miss Joan Littlefield, of Alexandra Avenue, N.22. In our announcement in Plays and Players we reserved the right to print such other of the essays as we thought proper, and accordingly a guinea will be sent to each of the following : THE PRIZE ESSAY By Joan Littlefield It would perhaps have been better for Noël Coward if he had not been a child of the theatre. He has lived so long in the world of make-believe, has mastered so easily the arts and crafts that go to the making of a play, has, in fact, so infallible a sense of what is “good theatre” that it is difficult for him to get away from the merely theatrical. That he is the biggest all-round man of the theatre of his generation is unquestioned. The man who could create and stage such a show as Cavalcade, contrive the felicities of a revue like Words and Music, compose a Bitter Sweet, and spin the thin web of story that was Private Lives into an evening’s entertainment, stands unrivalled to-day in talent and versatility. He has written drama and comedy, devised spectacle and revue, composed music that is the very echo of his time ; but though it has been obvious from the first that he was a stern moralist, the prophet as well as the historian of the ‘Bright Young Things,’ one, who perhaps more than any figure in England, has epitomised the tragedy of post-war nerves and post-war futility, he has always been so much of the theatre that people have not taken him seriously. Congratulations to All. In nearly every case, the Essays showed a fair insight into Mr. Coward’s work, combined with an admirable gift of expression. Many of them, however, were written by unqualified admirers and were noticeable more for their enthusiasm than for their judicial quality. A few went to the other extreme, and held but lightly Mr. Coward’s gifts as author and composer, but allowing full praise as opportunist and producer. The essays we have printed in this issue give a general view of Mr. Coward’s career and accomplishment, and on the whole, are a fairly sound summary of Mr. Coward’s achievements and possibilities. The majority of his plays have dealt only with a small section of society—cocktail-drinking, unmoral wasters, for the most part—and though the characters are drawn from the life and with a satire that goes home, they are to the average theatregoer merely figures in a play—the dramatic skill with which they are handled only adding to their unreality. For always, however serious his purpose may be, Mr. Coward is too efficient a craftsman to miss a good curtain, or indeed, the tiniest possibility of dramatic effect. Even in Cavalcade which, together with his unacted Post Mortem, is probably his most significant achievement so far, there have been moments when his sense of the dramatic and of the possibilities of Drury Lane stage, have run away with him. The first thing one realises about Cavalcade is that it is magnificent “theatre,” and for many people that is its only significance. But Mr. Coward meant it to be more than that, did, indeed, get into it something of the spirit of the immediate past, and the piece, which might easily have become bathos, is notable for its restraint and for the economy of means with which its greatest effects—Queen Victoria’s funeral, for instance, and the symbolic treatment of the War years—are achieved. - 19 - In it, too, he got away, in the earlier scenes at least, from the smart set which occupies too much of his attention, and proved that he is capable of understanding the ordinary man as well as the neurotic, and that he can be something more than the mouthpiece of smart sophistication. If to have genius is to recognise the psychological moment for writing and producing a given work, then Mr. Coward has it in abundance. When people were tired of jazz, he gave them Bitter Sweet ; when a wave of patriotism swept the country, Cavalcade was ready, and so it has always been. But if one’s definition of genius is of something more than this, then Mr. Coward has yet to prove that he has depth as well as brilliance. The stuff, I think, is there but unless Mr. Coward puts up a stiff fight against his craftsmanship, he will continue to remain the playboy of the West End world. 4, Alexandra Avenue, N.22. CRAFTSMANSHIP is the plain man’s word for all that sums up the sure and certain building of a labour of love to polished fruition. Nothing here of flame and divine uncertainties, of passion or of despair, which must accompany the birth of those masterpieces delivered to the world at slow difficult intervals. To make a decision between these two qualities in the person of Noël Coward the critic must understand acting, theatrical production and showmanship, each separately, and not be dazzled by the conjunction of the three, possessed in such large measure by one man. Coward is an “all round “ man of the Theatre, versed in every branch of his art. Genius or Craftsmanship ? Divine cunning certainly. The inspired knowledge of when and how to say the word, to keep a finger on the pulse of the times and of the temperaments, and to establish eternal contact with humanity. It is given to him as so few indeed to understand the value of the curb, the gentle jerk that lifts our heads above saccharine or somnolence. His the hand that drops the acid into the sweet, and tempers the whole. So it was with Shakespeare and with Dickens. They were always one of ourselves, endearing themselves to us because of their eternal comradeship. It is not magnificence nor splendour, nor rhetoric that makes us hail Noël Coward as the supreme craftsman of our theatrical age, that separates him from the impermanence of others, but that sure brain that understands the mind of the people, and is content to be one of them. It is always difficult to say “Genius” to men born in our time. We are noticeably inclined to attribute to the word some abnormal efflorescence of the intelligence, rather than the thin but steady flame of the divine that shines in unexpected places. This artistry of Noël Coward seems to just light this flame. It is not always evident, not indeed nearly so often as many would unhesitatingly declare; but, at moments when the true note is so splendidly struck, and with so unerring a hand, and the answering chord is wrung from us, then—then we can declare with laughter or with tears, that the link with the divine is surely there, and the master hand at work among us. Rosamond Poole, Hadley, Barnet. Assessing the value of Noël Coward’s achievements in the drama, the first essential considerations to examine for criticism are those of a personal nature; his versatility, the quality, the technique, the depths and the realities of his work, its design, development and importance in relation to life itself. Not until these questions have been answered, and one has traced something of his career as an actor, and its important influences, can one fairly determine his claims as Craftsman or Genius. Dr. Johnson has it that “where there is no hope, there can be no endeavour.” Coward has had both, and he has succeeded in his youth because of his untiring energy and enterprise, his strength of will and power of concentration, his opportunism, his sincerity, and the belief he has always had in himself. Apart from being an experimentalist, and writing his own way, and fighting against adversity and hostile criticism afterwards, he has shaped his work with craftsmanship, having literally grown up in the Theatre. Thus the experience and the insight he gained in those early years, when he was struggling for success, puts him in possession of the technicalities of dramatic authorship and production itself. Coward has written brilliantly and stupidly, loosely and thoughtlessly, hurriedly, implied a great deal without saying much, created some characters that talk like fools and amuse themselves in frivolous absurdities and glorious quarrels, with a great amount of talk and little action; he has given laughter and boredom, some intelligence, but a great deal more inane nonsense. About his comedies there is that essential restlessness of atmosphere and that flippancy and independence that is characteristic of our time. He has upheld ‘Youth,’ but not flattered it; has expressed just what he has felt and thought with conviction. His candid expressions and indictments and satirisations of the ‘Smart Set’ have revealed these people as shallow puppets, bored with life generally, but back-biting against each other with malicious delight. A genius writes of all types of characters; he understands and possesses a depth of feeling, and has an extensive knowledge of men and women, and life itself. Genius creates life, and interprets its finer shades of meaning, both tragic and comic. In this light. Coward’s gallery of people and scenes are restricted, one is conscious of many repetitions in plot and development; one feels the people are set to type, they have no growth, and the plays themselves no real depths, for he has seemingly worked to a formula, and that is not Genius. Noël Coward, then, is a man of many parts, who is still an experimentalist; he is of the Theatre and knows what it demands, and so he is brilliantly endowed with craftsmanship through experience, but his knowledge of life itself is limited. Post Mortem, though, is astonishing proof of what he is capable of; it vindicates his position, for in this, his most serious contribution to drama, he shows a greater command of language, writes with intense creative feeling, and proves how, if he so desires, he can write of real vital problems with the same biting satire and flair for burlesque that has been a distinctive feature of his work throughout Comedy to Revue. Only when he has crowned his glorious prelude with plays of character, maturity, and value, can he be acclaimed a Genius ; until then he will remain a doyen of the stage, blazing his trail successfully with craftsmanship, comedy, music, song, and wit, but at the same time developing the seeds of genius that he has, to take his ultimate place amongst the great and famous. - 20 - Norman E. Gibbs, 59, St. James Street, Daventry. That Noël Coward is an accomplished craftsman is beyond dispute. In fact, he is a master of several crafts. He has amply demonstrated his technical ability as actor, producer, dramatist, lyric writer and composer of light music. If versatility constituted genius, we could acclaim Mr. Coward without further discussion. Thus we are led to the question: “What is genius ?” The problem has been considered by philosophers and psychologists since the days of Aristotle, but so far no precise definition has been formulated. Fortunately the dictionaries give at least a hint. They state that genius is intellectual power, transcends what can be taught, is individual in character, and above all creates original conceptions, forms and expressions. These suggestions agree with, and to some extent clarify the vague ideas we all have about genius. In their light let us examine Mr. Coward’s dramatic compositions, on which primarily his fame rests. Mr. Coward’s plays and revues reveal an outstanding sense of the stage. His situations are skilfully contrived; his dialogue is economical and pointed, and can be as occasion requires tender, witty or caustic; his characterisation, if it often runs to type, is faithfully observed, and at times rises to individual portraiture. His satire is mordant; and though he has been credited with a desire to be sensational, his works bear out his claim of a genuinely ethical inspiration. In short, there is sufficient evidence of Mr. Coward’s intellectual, emotional and moral powers. Mr. Coward has contributed nothing to dramatic technique, though an experimental tendency may be noted in Post Mortem and Cavalcade, which are significantly among his most recent work. He has been content to use the old forms as a vehicle for the expression of his ideas, for his denunciation of post-war society and (what is often overlooked) for his condemnation of ignoble marital ideals. In other words his work is original in substance but not in form. But that it is individual is questionable. He has voiced, however ably, merely the disillusionment common to the younger generation; indeed it is precisely in being their mouthpiece that his importance, hitherto, has consisted. One looks in vain in Mr. Coward’s plays for that individual note, that peculiar personal quality, that is visible in the plays of Shaw and Barrie; or, if that comparison is deemed unfair, in the plays of say Dunsany and O’Neill. That Mr. Coward’s success has been exceptional is obviously no evidence. Equally inconclusive is the imposing output of so young a writer, or the fact that the first two plays (I’ll Leave It To You and The Young Idea) were written in the early twenties—a striking achievement. And, be it noted, these two plays compare not unfavourably with Mr. Coward’s subsequent work. That is to say that, though his technique has become more firm and mature, his work has not shown that progressive development in depth and substance which would indicate a truer insight and a wider vision. The conclusion, then, is that Mr. Coward’s title to be ranked as a genius is “non proven.” But he is only thirty-three. At the same age Barrie had only begun to write for the stage, and Shaw’s first play had yet to be written. In Mr. Coward’s equipment— his gift for the theatre, his power of satire, his courage, his sincerity and his social conscience—may be discerned, it is reasonable to hope, the true stuff of genius. If we deny that he is a genius in esse, we salute him as a genius in posse. BM/BEFL, High Holborn, W.C.I. The subject of your competition interests me so much, that although I have not seen by any means all Mr. Coward’s productions—notably not Cavalcade —I feel I must make my effort. For Noël Coward has at least this feature of genius : he makes people think about him, hard and long. Which leads direct to another consideration. I find one thinks of his work solely from the dramatic point of view. He does not preach, he does not teach, he does not scoff, he does not upbraid. He is the exact antithesis to Mr. Bernard Shaw who forces his views on life and past history and the present age into dramatic form, in which they often appear decidedly uncomfortable. Mr. Coward has his age at his finger-tips but he does not moralise on it, he simply uses it—with consummate craftsmanship. If I am right so far, we are getting very near to the great artist. But before venturing a step farther, I think there is this to be said. One must always accept the artist’s hypothesis, or problem, or call it what you will; there is no true criticism otherwise. If, on Mr. Coward stating : “I am going to write a play about two spoilt and frivolous people who alternate between excessive love-making and violent quarrelling, and who have little hesitation in coming to blows and rolling about _on the floor” — his critic replies— “How disgusting! Why can’t you write a pretty play?” that critic is really refusing to enter the lists. But if his answer is Granted! Now go ahead and let’s see what you can make of it. If he meets his author on his own ground, and may find that something has been made of it very subtle and remarkable indeed. But what more is needed ? —a sense sublime. Of something far more deeply interfused — Something, for which craftsmanship is only as the scaffolding, and a piquant modernity only the ornament. Something which has no age, no date, no nationality, it is so profoundly touching, so deeply human. This Noël Coward, has to my mind, achieved in one play at least, and, for me, that one achievement stamps him with genius. There runs through Bitter Sweet a vein of true poetry. The author presents us with a woman who lives so richly, deeply and courageously, that her life, whatever its events, is worth while. She is of the same temper as Juliet and Desdemona, and there is a passionate glory in the heart of all their stories. This play seemed to me, also, superbly constructed, particularly the great scene in the cafe where the lovers are locked in a last embrace, and the cold-blooded lecher who has hilled one and widowed the other, looks on, contemptuous and complacent. I saw it with a friend, herself an artist, and on our homeward journey she wrote the following on the margin of her programme, and handed it to me : “If I should never paint or write again. Life were not wholly weariness and pain. Still could I hear the high refrain of bliss. And lose myself an hour, in work like this.” “ALDERSEY,” Oatlands, Weybridge. First let us consider the difference between the two words Genius and Craftsman. Genius is essentially a spiritual quality, craftsmanship a material one. One must be born a genius, but craftsmanship can be acquired by careful work and study. Genius usually manifests itself, in whatever form it is to take, - 21 - early in life, whereas it takes at least several years of hard work to attain any marked degree of proficiency as a craftsman. With Noël Coward, it seems that he has never had much thought outside the theatre, and his career as an actor began at the age of ten. His musical talent was also quickly shown, and he is said to have been able to play any piece of music that he had happened to hear, with his own improvisations and variations, without being able to read a note of music. He has been, it appears a playwright, if not a composer, from his earliest childhood. It has been said that the extraordinary success of his plays may lie, not so much, perhaps, in the virtue of the plays themselves, as in his uncanny sense of knowing exactly the right type of play to produce at a particular moment. Given that this is so, a clever craftsman who knew his public and had a sound knowledge of psychology, might be able to achieve this once or twice, but to keep a finger on the pulse of the theatregoing people and know at any time and without error, whether they will be m a romantic, patriotic, cynical or just willing-tobe- amused frame of mind in say, next December, needs the intuitive perception of the genius. Another distinction between the two—a craftsman, forced to rely on his acquired knowledge, and at best that is limited, tends to develop a “one track” mind. Having brought to perfection certain ideas, he is often content to use them again and again in varying forms, his imagination thus becomes dulled and hîs work stereotyped. On the other hand the genius, if more erratic, is guided by intuition, his ideas come from inspiration and his imagination is unbounded. He must, of necessity, learn the technical side of his work in order to carry out his ideas, but having once acquired it, it takes second place in his mind, to be called on when required. The work of Noël Coward, especially during the last year or two, shows an ever-growing power of versatility and imagination. Bitter Sweet, Private Lives, Cavalcade, and Words and Music, are linked only by his characteristic music. The first three, although so different in character, have the same virtue of being real. Their characters are real people, with whom one laughed and wept in sympathy. The delicate crinoline romance of Bitter Sweet, with its haunting music, which took the hearts of its audience back to those bygone days and ways, Private Lives brought them right up to date, yet in both the reality was there and it was certainly there in the living pages of history that was Cavalcade. Words and Music, as a revue naturally differs in the quality of its reality, yet the polished satire is none the less, rather painfully perhaps true. Can there be any doubt that Noël Coward possesses a depth of understanding, a quickness of perception, a natural gift of satire and dramatic art impossible for even a brilliant craftsman to acquire, and belong only to those of whom we speak as a genius. You and Yours... Items from NCS Members This photograph has been sent in by Susannah Slater and shows Donald Sinden unveiling the commemorative plaque to mark Noël Coward’s birthplace at 131, Waldegrave Road, Teddington where Noël’s family had been living since 1883. - 22 - Mary Lake, “Greengates,” 20, Ampthill Square, N.W.I. Brenda Bantock recalls a treasured memory sparked by ‘Lady in the Dark Dear John Knowles, A coincidence of events returned me in memory to New York, when at the age of 12 I, among several other evacuees then under the auspices of the Edwin Gould Foundation, was taken to see Gertrude Lawrence and Danny Kaye in Lady in the Dark on Broadway. The memorable performances by Gertrude Lawrence and the then emerging star Danny Kaye have enabled me to remember the Kurt Weil melodies and the Gershwin lyrics over these many years. I often wondered why Lady in the Dark had not been re-visited more often on air when on 2nd June on the Radio 4 programme Desert Island Discs, the retiring Governor of the Bank of England, Sir Mervyn King requested Jenny’s yearning fantasy... ‘My Ship Has Sails...’ The following day Granville and I received Home Chat with the article featuring the Broadway show and much more concerning Noël Coward. It was Noël who, with his committee of kind and concerned fellow actors and acresses, had made it possible for children in their care to evacuate to New York during the War years and then, as an added gift, enabled us to see several other excellent productions. Sincerely, Brenda Bantock NCS REUNION IN SARASOTA NCS members Jim Griffith and Bobi Sanderson held a reunion and dinner for past NCS Chairman Barbara Longford and her husband Patrick, with Douglas Gordon and Michael Chen in attendance at their home in Sarasota. Ken Starrett joined the party through an online conference call as he was unable to attend in person - for reasons that are explained elsewhere in this month’s Home Chat. The dinner adopted the theme of Coward songs with: Cavalcade, Sail Away, Nina and World Weary. Other guests included: Dean and Barbara Bock, David Coyle, John and Alida DeJongh, Jack Denison, Taylor and Corrine French, Nancy Gross, Ellen Harrison, Marian Kessler, Fran Knight, John Markham, Fred and Molly Moffat, Tom Monaghan, Bill Murtagh and Madge Stapleton. Pictured here from Left to Right are: Michael Chen, Jim Griffiths, Barbara Longford, Douglas Gordon, Bobi Sanderson and Patrick Longford in Sarasota. Home Chat is a magazine produced by The Noël Coward Society, funded through the generosity of The Noël Coward Foundation. Noël Coward Ltd. Chairman: Robert Gardiner Directors: Denys Robinson, Stephen Greenman and John Knowles, Company Secretary: Graham Martin. The Noël Coward Society: President: HRH Prince Edward The Duke of Kent GCMG GCVO Vice Presidents: Maria Aitken, Barry Day OBE, Stephen Fry, Tammy Grimes, Penelope Keith CBE Organising Committee: Chairman: Denys Robinson; General Secretary: John H. Knowles; Resources: Stephen Greenman; Membership: Stephen Duckham, Media and Theatre Representative: Michael Wheatley-Ward; Events: Denys Robinson, Geoffrey Skinner and Peter Tod; North American Director: Ken Starrett; US West Coast Liaison: Kathy Williams; NCS in Australia: Kerry Hailstone; NCS in France: Hélène Catsiapis Home Chat: Editor: John H. Knowles, US NCS news: Ken Starrett, Publication and Distribution: Stephen Greenman Assistant Editors and Proofing: Kathy Williams and Ken Starrett, Music correspondent: Dominic Vlasto. Details of productions and events are as received, with our thanks, from: Samuel French (Play Publishers and Author’s Representatives), Ken Starrett (US), Alan Brodie Representation (Professional Productions), NCS members and theatre companies. NCS website: www.noëlcoward.net Unless otherwise stated all images and text are copyright to NC Aventales AG Key Addresses: General enquiries: John Knowles, 29 Waldemar Avenue, Hellesdon, Norwich, NR6 6TB, UK johnknowles@noëlcoward.net +44 (0) 1603 486 188 Finance & Resources: Stephen Greenman, 64 Morant Street, London, E14 8EL stephengreenman@noëlcoward.net Events Secretaries: Denys Robinson [email protected] and Geoffrey Skinner [email protected] Membership Secretary: Stephen Duckham, 47 Compass Court, Norfolk Street, Coventry,West Midlands, CV1 3LJ [email protected] +44 (0) 2476 229 502 Media and Theatre: Michael Wheatley-Ward, Chandos House, 14 Vale Square, Ramsgate, Kent CT11 9DF [email protected] North American Director: Ken Starrett, 49 West 68th Street, Apt 1 R New York, New York, 10023, USA [email protected] US West Coast Liaison: Kathy Williams, 141 Stonegate Road, Portola Valley, California 94028-7648 USA kathywilliams@noëlcoward.net NCS in Australia: Kerry Hailstone, 10A Westall Street, Hyde Park, South Australia, 5061 Australia [email protected] NCS in France: Hélène Catsiapis, 115, Boulevard de Port-Royal F-75014 Paris, France [email protected] - 23 -