II.
VAGABONDAGE OF THE COMMONWEALTH.
£. s. d. on Tour - The Search for Independence - The Old Showman
of Shepherd's Bush - Not the "Carte" I Wanted - The Commonwealth
- Our Repertory and Our Creditors - "Well, Mr. Bundle" - A Thirsty
Situation and a Melodramatic Finale - A Stammerer's Story - Comradeship
in Adversity - Roaming the Country - Back in London and the Search for
Work - Diverse Occupations and Little Pay - A Savoy Engagement at Last
- Understudy to Grossmith - A Real Opportunity.
__________
THE "Princess Ida" tour, as I have said, opened at Glasgow.
It ran for about a year, with enthusiasm and success wherever the company
played, though unluckily for me, my services as understudy were never required.
The D'Oyly Carte companies then, as now, were always a happy family, the
members of which were always helpful to one another and always remarkably
free from those petty jealousies that distinguish some ranks of the profession.
Looking back on those romantic times, my wife and I often marvel how,
with all our inexperience in house-keeping, our slender finances withstood
the strain of our extravagance. Whenever we moved on to a new town we had
the usual fears as to what sort of a landlady we were to get. In these
times landladies do not always look on actors as their legitimate "prey."
But then they were extortioners, though there were, of course, some pleasant
exceptions. I remember, for instance, that in some places we were charged
5s. a week for potatoes, and in others only 6d. On the whole, on that tour,
we must have been in luck. Notwithstanding that we had lived fairly well
- and we did indulge odd tastes for luxuries - we found that at the end
of the 52 weeks' engagement we had saved £52.
Following the "Princess Ida" tour, we were sent out into the
provinces again with other productions, and in this way we served under
the Gilbert and Sullivan banner for the best part of two years. But they
were not continuous engagements. From time to time we would find ourselves
idle and our tiny resources steadily dwindling. Luckily, during this period
we always managed to secure a fresh engagement before we had spent our
last sovereign, though we were hardly as fortunate in the dark days that
were coming.
I remember receiving at this time the advice of a dear old friend, a
Mr. Chevasse, of Wolverhampton. "The turning-point in your career,"
he said to me, will come when you have got 'independence.' " "What,"
I asked him, "do you mean by that?" "Get £100 in the
bank," was his answer, "and in your case that will bring the
sense of independence. It will put you on a different footing with everyone
you meet, and you will know that at last you are beginning to shape your
career yourself. Save everything you can. Save a shilling a week, or two
shillings a week, but save whatever happens." And he was right. Later,
when I had that £100 stored away, I found myself in a position that
enabled me to assert my claim for principal parts, and I was sent out into
the provinces to take three leading rôles
- Ko-Ko, Jack Point, and Sir Joseph Porter.
But this is anticipating my story. Before that time came there were
dark days to pass through, days when we did not know where the next meal
would come from, and days when we tramped the country as strolling players,
footsore and weary. When our modest savings had been exhausted during one
prolonged period of "resting," I remember being driven by sheer
necessity to apply for an engagement at the booth of an old showman at
Shepherd's Bush. I had to do something. So I walked up to the showman,
who was standing outside the tent in a prosperous-looking coat with an
astrakhan collar, and asked him for a job. What did I want to be? I wanted,
I told him, to be an actor, and would play anything from melodrama to low
comedy.
"All right," said the showman. "Go over there and wash
that cart!"
I went "over there" and started the washing. But it was no
use. Sorry as things were with us, I just could not come down to that,
and off I bolted. That was not the sort of Carte I wanted.
Our next venture was very interesting. It brought us no fame, precious
little money, a great deal of hardship, and yet a host of pleasant remembrances
to look back upon in the brighter days. "We were seven" and one
and all down on our luck. Failing to obtain any engagements in town, we
decided to band ourselves together as fellow-unfortunates, and to seek
what fortune there was as entertainers in the villages and small towns
of Surrey. It was to be a Commonwealth. Whatever profits were made were
to be divided equally. One week this division enabled us to take 7s. 10d.
each! That was the record. What ill-success our efforts had was certainly
not due to any want of "booming." The services of a bill-poster
were obviously prohibitive. So at the dead of night we used to put our
night-shirts over our clothes to save these from damage, creep out into
the streets with our paste-bucket and brush, and fix our playbills to any
convenient hoarding or building. It had to be done in double-quick time,
but we had spied out the land beforehand, and generally we made sure that
our notices were pasted where they would prominently catch the public eye.
Our repertory consisted of a striking drama entitled "All for Her,"
a touching comedy called "Masters and Servants," and an operetta
known as "Tom Tug the Waterman." In addition, we did songs and
dances, and as it happened these were the best feature of the programme.
We had no capital available to spend on dresses and scenery. What we did
was to take some ramshackle hall or barn, and then to make a brave show
with our posters, though the printer was often lucky if he got more than
free tickets for all his family to see our performance. Generally our creditors
considered that, as there was small chance of getting any money from us,
they might as well have an evening out for nothing. Our costumes were improvised
from our ordinary attire. The men figured as society swells by using white
paper to represent spats or by tucking in their waistcoats and using more
white paper to indicate that they were in immaculate "evening dress."
As for scenery all we had was our own crude drawings in crayons and pencil.
We presented our plays by what is known, as "winging." By
that I mean that only one manuscript copy of the play was usually available,
and each player had to get an idea of the lines which he or she had to
speak after each entrance, though the actual words used on the stage were
mainly extemporised. "Winging," even when one has theatrical
experience behind one, is not at all easy. I know that in "Tom Tug"
I dreaded the very thought of having to go on and make what should have
been a long speech designed to give the audience a more or less intelligent
idea of the plot. I was so uncertain about it that I took the book on with
me in the hope of getting furtive glimpses at it as we went along.
"Well, Mr. Bundle," I began.
"Well?" Mr. Bundle responded.
"Well," I stammered again.
"Well?"
"Well."
The next "Well" did not come from the stage; it came from
the audience. "Well?" it yelled, accompanied, so to speak, by
a tremendous note of interrogation. "Well?" it echoed again.
"Say something, can't you?"
This was too much. In confusion I rushed off the stage. Even that was
not all. I should, as I have said, have outlined the course of the story,
but not only did I not do this but in my confusion I left behind me the
book of words on which we were all depending. From the others in the wings
there came anguished whispers. "Where's the book?" "You've
left the book on the table!" So I had to put the best face on things
and walk on to get it. But the audience had had enough of me that night.
"Get off " they shouted - and I did.
"Tom Tug" was also once the occasion of a painful fiasco.
Instead of dashing on to the stage where my wife was playing the part of
a simple fisher-girl, and greeting her like the jolly sailor-man I was
with a boisterous "Here I am my darling," I found myself, standing
behind her in such a state of stage-fright that I was absolutely "dried
up." I could not utter a word. I simply stood behind her limp, speechless
and motionless, and no amount of prompting would induce me to go on with
the wooing. So there was nothing for it but to ring down the curtain, and
for the rest of the evening we had songs and dances, with which we made
amends.
"All for Her" was a drama of a desert island that should have
melted hearts of stone. We were all dying of thirst (at least, according
to the plot). Nowhere on that desert island was water to be found. They
sent me out to explore for it while they rolled about the stage moaning
and groaning in agony. During my absence from the stage I sat near a fire-bucket
in the wings. Then came my cue to reappear.
I staggered on famished and weary. The quest had been in vain. "Not
a drop," I croaked in a parched, dry voice, not a drop of water anywhere."
"Liar!" screamed the audience in unison. Our audiences, as you
will have gathered, were often critical folk who could sit with dry eyes
through our most anguishing scenes. It transpired that while I was sitting
near that fire-bucket the bottom of my Arab cloak had dipped into the water
and there it was dripping, dripping, dripping right across the stage! The
dramatic situation was absolutely spoilt.
The company included, besides my, wife and myself, a young actress named
Emmeline Huxley, who after these hard times with us went to America and
there undoubtedly "made good." Then there was a "character"
whom we called " 'Oppy." He was the general utility man who acted
as conductor and orchestra rolled into one, and then went behind the scenes
to play the cornet, to act as stage adviser, or at a pinch to take a small
part. He was an enthusiast who was here, there and everywhere. " 'Oppy,"
in addition to having a wall eye and a club foot, had a decided impediment
in his speech, but, strangely enough, he was entirely unconscious of this
disability. For that reason we often used to induce him to tell his story
of the lady who sang "Home, Sweet Home."
This story is bound to lose some of its effect when put into cold print.
As " 'Oppy" told it the humour was irresistible. "Sh-sh-she
wan-wan-ted to go on the sta-sta-sta-stage," he used to say, "and
the man-an-an-ager he sa-a-a-aid to her, 'Wh-wh-wh-what can you sing?'
And she said, 'Ho-ho-ho-home, Sw-we-we-we-weet Ho-ho-home.' And he told
her to sing-sing-sing it. And (here he could not keep a straight face over
the poor lady's misfortunes) she-she-she couldn't sing- sing-sing it for-for-for
stam-stam-stam-stam-stam-mer-ing."
Never did " 'Oppy" tell this story, of the ridiculousness
of the telling of which he seemed entirely unconscious, without his hearers
exploding with laughter. "Wh-what makes you all lau-lau-laugh so?"
he used to ask, incredulously. "You lau-lau-lau-lau-laugh altogether
to-to-to-too hearty. It's a good-good-good yarn, but I'm dam-dam-dam-damned
if it's as fun-fun-fun-funny as that."
Once he received an unexpected windfall in the shape of a postal order
from a relative for two or three shillings. "Come and have a little
dinner with me to-morrow," he said to me and my wife. "I know
you're hungry." When we arrived we found his plate was already on
the table and empty. He apologised profoundly. He had been too hungry to
wait for us and had already eaten his dinner. So while my wife and I each
enjoyed a chop - the first square meal we had had for many a day - he sat
by and kept us entertained. Splendid fellow! Little did we guess that as
he did so he was suffering the pangs of hunger accentuated by the sight
of our satisfaction. Next day the landlady confided to us the fact that
as our friend's windfall had been insufficient to provide chops and vegetables
for three, he had smeared his plate with the gravy from the chops we were
to have, and then made us believe that he had satisfied his hunger already.
What became of him later on I have never discovered. I only know that
I have tried hard to find him in order that that noble act of self-denial
might be in some generous manner repaid. Neither inquiries nor advertisements,
however, have ever revealed his whereabouts to me, and it may be that already
this honest fellow has gone to receive his reward. God rest his soul!
Then there was Arthur Hendon. If ever a Christian lived it was that
sterling fellow. Time after time in those heart-aching days we were on
the verge of despair. Luck was dead out. Life was a misery. But Hendon,
though he was as sore of heart and as hungry as the rest of us, was always
ready with some cheery word, some act of kindness, some "goodness
done by stealth." Louie and I were rather small in size, and often
as we tramped from one place to another he carried one of us in turn in
his arms. For we had little food, and were tired, footsore and "beat."
And he, too, was "done." Only his great heart sustained him in
those terrible times as our "captain courageous."
The Commonwealth venture lasted for about three months altogether. As
I have shown it was one continual struggle against adversity and poverty.
For some time we were located at Aldershot. Our show ran as a rule from
six to eleven o'clock, and for want of better amusement the soldiers gave
us a fair amount of patronage at threepence a head. If we did not please
them they did not hesitate to fling the dregs of their pint pots on to
the stage. One night we felt ourselves highly honoured by the presence
of a number of military officers at our performance. "All for Her,"
I am glad to say, went without a hitch on that gala occasion. Our "theatre"
was an outhouse owned by a publican, who was very considerate towards us
in the matter of rent, because he found that our presence meant good business
for his bar-parlour receipts.
From Aldershot we went on to Farnham, and from there to other hamlets
where we believed there was an audience, however uncouth and untutored,
to be gathered together. Eventually we reached Guildford. By then matters
were getting desperate. The Mayor or some other local public man heard
of our plight. He drove out to where we were playing, witnessed part of
our performance, and engaged us to sing at a garden-party. I remember that,
exhausted as we were, gratitude enabled us to give of our very best as
the only return we could make for his kindness. He told us it was a great
pity that such clever people should be eking out such a precarious existence
in the villages, and offered to pay our train fares to London in addition
to the fee for the engagement we had fulfilled. This generosity we accepted
with alacrity. The next morning we were back in town again - each to follow
his or her different way. So ended the vagabondage of the Commonwealth.
It was an experience which none of us was ever likely to forget.
Once more in London it would be idle to say that our troubles had disappeared.
It meant the dreary search again for employment. Mr. D'Oyly Carte had no
immediate vacancies. Other managers had nothing more to offer than promises.
Lucky is the actor - if he exists - who throughout his career has been
free from this compulsory idleness. During this period I had to turn my
hand to all sorts of things. Once I called at a draper's shop and secured
casual work as a bill distributor. I had to go from door to door in a certain
select part of Kensington. I remember I looked at those gilded walls and
those red-carpeted stairs with a good deal of envy. Later on I was destined
to visit some of those very houses and walk up those same red-carpeted
stairs as a guest - those very houses at which to earn an odd shilling
or so to buy bread I had delivered those bills! Yes; and there was one
house at which I called in those humble days where they abruptly opened
the door, showed me a ferocious-looking dog with the most business-like
teeth, and significantly commanded me to "get off - and quick!"
I had done nothing wrong, and my body and my heart were aching. Years afterwards
I became a breeder of bull-dogs - about that you shall hear later on -
and sold one of them to those very people. And, as if in poetic justice,
that bull-dog bit them!
My training under Trood was turned to advantage during these empty days.
A fashion had just set in for plaques. I painted some scores of these terra-cotta
miniatures, and although it was not remunerative work, it served to put
bare necessities into the pantry. We were living about that time in Stamford
Street, off the Waterloo Road, and in those days it was a terrible neighbourhood
where one's sleep was often disturbed by cries of "murder" and
"police." Our baby's cradle was a travelling basket - we could
not afford anything better. I remember, in connection with those plaques,
that in after years I was dining at the house of a well-known writer and
critic, and he showed me with keen admiration two beautiful plaques which,
he said, had been won by Miss Jessie Bond in a raffle at the Savoy. She
had made a present of them to him. "Yes," I commented, "
and I painted them." He was kind enough to say that that enhanced
their value to him considerably.
For a time I went into a works where they made dies for armorial bearings.
Here I had to do a good deal of tracing, and the work was fairly interesting.
I drew five shillings the first week - hardly an imposing stipend for a
family man - but the second week it was ten shillings and the third twenty
shillings. Singing at occasional smoking concerts and running errands supplemented
this money very acceptably. The job at the die-sinkers might have continued,
but the foreman wanted me to clean the floors in addition to doing my artistic
work, and at that my dignity revolted. I left.
Some months went by in this flitting from one job into another, but
it is useless to attempt a full catalogue of my versatility, for it is
neither impressive nor very inspiring. During all this hand-to-mouth existence
I was calling on theatrical managers. Slender as the rewards which the
stage had thus far given me were - just a meagre livelihood and precious
little encouragement - the call to return to it remained insistent and
strong. Sooner or later I was bound to return, and whether it were to be
to good fortune or ill, the very hope buoyed me up. I had worried Mr. Carte
with ceaseless importunity. Every week at least I went round to try and
see him on the off-chance of an engagement. And at last there came the
turn of the tide.
It happened on the eve of the first London production of "Ruddigore."
Concerning this new opera, the producers had for good reasons maintained
an air of secrecy, and the unfolding of the mystery was thus awaited with
more than usual public curiosity. It was the talk of the town and the subject
of many skittish references in the newspapers. Calling once again at Mr.
Carte's office, I caught him, after a long wait, just leaving his room
and hurrying along a corridor. Without more ado I button-holed him and
asked him once again for an engagement. Mr. Carte was not a man who liked
that sort of conduct. "You should not interrupt me like this,"
he said, in a tone that betrayed his annoyance. "You ought to send
up your name." Explaining that I had done so and had been told he
was out of town, I repeated my plea for an engagement. Hurrying on his
way Mr. Carte told me to go down to the stage. Success had come at last!
When Mr. Carte sent a man to the stage that man became ipso facto a
member of the company. Later the news came through that Mr. Carte had chosen
me as understudy to Mr. George Grossmith as Robin Oakapple. This
was indeed a slice of good fortune. Understudy to Mr. George Grossmith!
"Ruddigore" was produced for the first time on Tuesday, the
22nd January, 1887, at the Savoy. Towards the end of that week Grossmith
was taken seriously ill with peritonitis. By an effort he was able to continue
playing until the Saturday. Then he collapsed and was taken home for a
serious operation. Upon the Monday morning I was told I was to play his
part - and play it that very night.
Chosen to step into the shoes of the great George Grossmith! Faced with
such an ordeal to-day I verily believe I should shirk it. But then, the
audacity of youth was to carry me through. The supreme chance had come.
At all costs it had to be grasped.