Marie Tempest

Dame Marie Tempest
DBE

In the title role of Dorothy
Born Marie Susan Etherington
15 July 1864
London, England
Died 15 October 1942
London, England
Occupation actress
Years active 1885–1938
Spouse(s) Alfred Edward Izard
Cosmo Gordon-Lennox (1899–1921)
W. Graham Brown (1922–1937)

Dame Marie Tempest DBE (15 July 1864 – 15 October 1942) was an English singer and actress known as the "queen of her profession".

Tempest became the most famous soprano in late Victorian light opera and Edwardian musical comedies. Later, she became a leading comic actress and toured widely in North America and elsewhere. She was, at times, her own theatre manager during a career spanning 55 years. Tempest was also instrumental in the founding of the actors' union Equity in Britain.

Life and career

Tempest was born Mary Susan Etherington in London. Her parents were Edwin Etherington (1838–1880), a stationer, and Sarah Mary Castle Etherington. Tempest was educated at Midhurst School and an Ursuline convent in Thildonck, Belgium. Later, she studied music in Paris, France and at the Royal Academy of Music in London, as a singing pupil of Manuel García, the tutor of Jenny Lind.[1] She adopted as her stage name part of the name of Lady Susan Vane-Tempest, whom she referred to as her godmother.[2] Tempest had a sister named Florence Etherington who married theatre manager Michael Levenston.[3]

Tempest married Alfred Edward Izard, another student at the Academy, in 1885. That marriage ended in divorce four years later, and Izard was awarded damages in the divorce settlement. She had a son named Norman in 1888,[4] who would later be referred to in the press as "Norman Lennox", taking the surname of Tempest's second husband, Cosmo Lennox, whom she married a decade later.[5]

Early career

Tempest debuted in 1885 as Fiametta in Franz Suppé's operetta Boccaccio at the Comedy Theatre in London, where she also took the title role in Erminie by Edward Jakobowski. She starred steadily in London for the next two years in light operas by Hervé and André Messager, among others.[2][6] She became internationally famous for her performance in the title role in Dorothy by Alfred Cellier and B. C. Stephenson (1887), which ran for a record-setting 931 performances (becoming a hit after Tempest took over the title role from Marion Hood).[7] Her marriage was damaged by rumours of an affair with her producer, but the same rumours only enhanced her appeal to her audiences.[1] Richard D'Oyly Carte considered engaging her for his opera company but W. S. Gilbert (after seeing her in Dorothy) reported that she "screeched", and the proposal was dropped.[8]

Tempest in A Greek Slave (1898)

In 1889, Tempest starred in Cellier and Stephenson's Doris. The next year, in 1890, she created the role of Kitty Carol in The Red Hussar in London and then in New York City.[9] She then toured the United States and Canada for a year with the J. C. Duff Comic Opera Company in such operettas as Carmen, Manon, Mignon,[10] The Bohemian Girl and The Pirates of Penzance.[1] She returned to Broadway for the next three years in numerous productions including The Tyrolean, The Fencing Master by Reginald De Koven and Harry B. Smith, and The Algerian.[11] During this period she was considered one of the few rivals of Lillian Russell. An American critic wrote in 1894, "Miss Tempest combines a voice of extraordinary pitch and sweetness with the dramatic fervor of an emotional actress to a greater degree probably than any other prima donna now upon the English speaking stage".[12]

In 1895, George Edwardes bought her back to London to star in his Daly's Theatre productions, beginning with Adele in An Artist's Model, which ran for over 400 performances. This was followed by title roles in the even more successful The Geisha (1896), which ran for 760 performances, A Greek Slave (1898) and another international hit, San Toy (1899).[13] Tempest was a difficult star, and her arguments with Edwardes and some of her colleagues were well known.[1] She felt that Edwardes was too strict and finally left San Toy in 1900, reportedly over a quarrel concerning her costume.[14]

1899 through World War I years

By 1899, Tempest had married again, to the actor-playwright Cosmo Stuart (Cosmo Charles Gordon-Lennox), the son of Lord Alexander Gordon-Lennox. On his advice, Tempest forsook operettas for straight comedy. In 1900 she created the role of Nell Gwynne in Anthony Hope's English Nell (based on Simon Dale) at the Prince of Wales's Theatre in London,[15] followed at the same theatre in 1901 by the title roles in Peg Woffington by Charles Reade and Becky Sharp, an adaptation of Vanity Fair, by Robert Hichens and her husband. The same year, she played Polly Eccles in T. W. Robertson's Caste,[10] followed in 1902 by the title role in The Marriage of Kitty, also written by Stuart. These established her as a leading comedy actress, particularly when playing the type of vivacious lady in drawing room comedies that TIME magazine called "a Marie Tempest part... a sprightly, well-bred matron, with a feline manner and a sharp tongue but a heart of gold."[16] Max Beerbohm described her as "one of the very few English actresses equipped for emotion".[17]

After many more such roles at the Duke of York's Theatre and the Comedy Theatre,[10] Tempest toured in America in 1904, reprising her role in The Marriage of Kitty and in the title role of The Freedom of Suzanne. She appeared in London in 1907 in The Truth at the Comedy Theatre, written and directed by and starring Dion Boucicault, though "it is the acting of Miss Tempest that people will go to see," said The Observer, "and they will not be disappointed".[18] She also starred in Alfred Sutro's The Barrier in 1907.[2] In 1908 Somerset Maugham's Mrs. Dot provided her with arguably her finest role, followed by parts in All-of-a-Sudden Peggy and Penelope.[10] She returned to America in 1909 for a two-year tour, and appearing in such plays as Caste, Vanity Fair, .[1][5]

Returning to England in 1911, Tempest joined a star-studded cast for Herbert Beerbohm Tree's production of The Critic by Richard Brinsley Sheridan, also starring Arthur Bourchier, C. Hayden Coffin, Lily Elsie, George Grossmith, Jr., Charles Hawtrey, Cyril Maude, Gerald Du Maurier, Gertie Millar, Edmund Payne, Courtice Pounds, Violet Vanbrugh and Arthur Williams, among others.[19] She then began to manage the theatres in which she starred. She leased The Duke of York's Theatre and produced a revival of The Marriage of Kitty. She starred in her own productions in London theatres for the next few years. This followed in 1913 by the revival of London Assurance, given in aid of the King George's Actors Pension Fund.[1] She spent eight years, beginning in 1914, touring in America, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, India, Singapore, China, Japan and the Philippines.[2] One of her roles, in 1915, was the title role in J. M. Barrie's Rosalind.[20] Barrie admired Tempest's ability to both laugh and cry, writing, "such a masterpiece at letting these two melt one into the other, not only upon her own face, but on the faces of all those in front".[10]

Later years and death

Tempest in Hay Fever, 1925

Tempest finally returned to England via America in 1922, reviving The Marriage of Kitty. Tempest's second husband had died in 1921, and she married again that same year, this time in Sydney to the actor William Graham Browne, who had accompanied her throughout her tour, and who regularly partnered her onstage in her subsequent West End appearances.[21] By the 1920s, Tempest had outgrown her troublesome temperament and moved into playing charming and elegant middle-aged women.[1][16] In 1924 she took a singing part again in Clifford Bax's Midsummer Madness at the Lyric Theatre.[21] She created the role of Judith Bliss in Noël Coward's Hay Fever (1925), in which she was followed in later revivals by leading actresses from Edith Evans to Judi Dench. Her popularity continued in such shows as Passing Brompton Road by Jevan Brandon-Thomas and The Cat's Cradle by Aimee and Philip Stuart.[2] She also had one more singing role in 1927 in The Marquise, written for her by Coward. ("It is a dried and brittle little piece, but it frames the great actress adequately".)[22] She then starred as Olivia in Mr. Pim Passes By by A. A. Milne (1928), The First Mrs Fraser by St. John Ervine (1929, giving 632 performances at the Haymarket Theatre), and Fanny Cavendish in Theatre Royal (1934).[1]

In later years, Tempest became active in working for the good of the members of her profession. In 1934, she was instrumental in the founding of the actors' union Equity, when she hosted a dinner at the Savoy Hotel for 85 leading entertainers. On 28 May 1935, Tempest's golden jubilee was celebrated with a benefit performance at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane attended by King George V and Queen Mary. The programme has tributes from, among others, J. M. Barrie, Noël Coward, Edward German and Somerset Maugham. Tempest appeared in one act each from The Marriage of Kitty and Little Catherine, two of her most popular roles. The proceeds of £5,000 from the event were donated to St George's Hospital for use by members of the theatrical profession.[1]

Coward wrote the following to Hector Bolitho, her biographer: "she wastes no time on personal inhibitions or inferiority complexes. In fact, she takes off her coat and gets down to the job of the moment with less shi-shi than any actress I have ever met.... Despite the fact that for fifty years she has performed a multitude of plays to multitudes of people, she has always contrived to remain the mistress of her tradition rather than allow any tradition to become the mistress of her."[23]

She was created a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in 1937, the same year in which her third husband, Graham Browne, died. The next year, she created the role of Dora Randolph in Dodie Smith's play Dear Octopus. She continued to act after this, though with less frequency.[1] She toured Great Britain in The First Mrs. Fraser with A. E. Matthews and Barry Morse in 1941, a year before her death. That same year, Tempest's home was bombed in London during the Blitz, and she lost most of her possessions. She remarked, "Hitler has taken nearly everything from me but my life, but you can't live on regret".[16]

Tempest died in London in 1942 at the age of 78, and she was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium.[24] A blue plaque was placed at the site of her home at 24 Park Crescent in London.[25]

Filmography

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Gillan, Don. "Marie Tempest (1866–1942)", at the Stage Beauty website
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Gray, Frances, "Tempest, Dame Marie (1864–1942)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, accessed 3 November 2008
  3. "Michael Levenston, Theatre Manager, 1855–1904"
  4. Bolithio, p. 33
  5. 1 2 "Marie Tempest to be a Manager", The New York Times, 14 December 1910, p. 13
  6. Traubner, p. 26
  7. Traubner, p. 197
  8. Jacobs, p. 251
  9. "Marie Tempest", The Illustrated American, Vol. 3, 6 September 1890, p. 428
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 Obituary, The Times, 16 October 1942, p. 7, col. D
  11. Traubner, pp. 142, 144 and 188
  12. "Health More than Success", The Times, Trenton New Jersey, 1 February 1894, reprinted in In Press and Literature at the Stage Beauty website
  13. Traubner, pp. 201–05
  14. Traubner, pp. 204–05
  15. "Marie Tempest Applauded in Comedy", The New York Times, 22 August 1900
  16. 1 2 3 Obituary, 26 October 1942, TIME Magazine
  17. Beerbohm, p.329
  18. The Observer, "Miss Tempest's Triumph", 7 April 1907, p. 5
  19. Performance details for The Critic, University of Bristol theatre collection
  20. "40 and a Bittock", Atlanta Constitution, 17 October 1915, reprinted at the Stage Beauty Website, www.stagebeauty.net
  21. 1 2 The Manchester Guardian, 16 October 1942, p. 6
  22. The Manchester Guardian, 17 February 1927, p. 14
  23. Day, Barry. The Letters of Noël Coward, (Vintage Books, New York, 2009), 113–114
  24. Deaths: The Times, 23 October 1942, p. 7, col. B
  25. Photo of Tempest's blue plaque

References

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