Effie Bancroft
Marie Wilton, Lady Bancroft | |
---|---|
Marie Wilton (later Effie Bancroft) | |
Born |
Marie Effie Wilton 1839[1] Doncaster, Yorkshire |
Died | 1921 |
Resting place |
Brompton Cemetery 51°29′16″N 0°11′37″W / 51.48779°N 0.19351°WCoordinates: 51°29′16″N 0°11′37″W / 51.48779°N 0.19351°W |
Occupation | Actor-manager |
Years active | 1846 – 1885 |
Spouse(s) | 1868 Squire Bancroft |
Marie Effie Wilton, Lady Bancroft (1839–1921) was an English actress and theatre manager. She appeared onstage as Marie Wilton until after her marriage in December 1867 to Squire Bancroft, when she usually appeared under the name Lady Bancroft. Bancroft and her husband were important in the development of Victorian era theatre through their presentation of innovative plays at the London theatres that they managed, first the Prince of Wales's Theatre and later the Haymarket Theatre.
Life and career
Bancroft was born at Doncaster, and as a child appeared on the stage with her parents, who were both actors. Among her early parts was that of Fleance in Macbeth (1846). She made her London début on 15 September 1856, at the Lyceum Theatre, as the boy Henri in Belphegor, playing the same night in Perdita; or, the Royal Milkmaid. She won great popularity in several boy roles, in burlesques at various theatres, as Cupid in two different plays, and notably as Pippo, in The Maid and the Magpie, by H. J. Byron, at the Royal Strand Theatre (1858). For several years she remained at the Strand, taking numerous parts of the same general type.
Prince of Wales's Theatre (1865-80)
In April 1865, she began, in partnership with Henry Byron, the management of the Prince of Wales's Theatre. For two seasons before her marriage she managed the theatre alone. She secured as a leading actor Squire Bancroft, whom she had met shortly before in Liverpool and married in December 1867. The Prince of Wales's soon became noted for its series of successful comedies by T. W. Robertson, namely: Society (1865), Ours (1866), Caste (1867), Play (1868), School (1869) and M. P. (1870).
Bancroft regularly took the principal female parts in these pieces, her husband playing the leading man. Together, Robertson and the Bancrofts are considered to have instigated a new form of drama known as 'drawing-room comedy' or 'cup and saucer drama'. The Bancrofts gave Robertson an unprecedented amount of directorial control over the plays, which was a key step to institutionalizing the power that directors wield in the theatre today.[2]
The Bancrofts were also responsible for making fashionable the 'box set', which Lucia Elizabeth Vestris had first used at the Olympic Theatre in the 1830s – this consisted of rooms on stage which were dressed with sofas, curtains, chairs, and carpets on the stage floor. They also provided their actors with salaries and wardrobes. Also, the Bancrofts redesigned their theatre to suit the increasingly upscale audience: "The cheap benches near the stage, where the rowdiest elements of the audience used to sit were replaced by comfortable padded seats, carpets were laid in the aisles, and the pit was renamed the stalls."[3]
Other plays that the Bancrofts produced at the Prince of Wales's Theatre were Tame Cats (1868), The School for Scandal (1874), Sweethearts (1874), The Vicarage (1877), and Diplomacy (1878, an adaptation of Victorien Sardou's Dora). Mr. and Mrs. Bancroft likewise presented at their theatre a number of prominent actors, among them Hare, Coghlan, the Kendals, and Ellen Terry. In 1879, she reprised a favourite role of hers, Nan, in John Baldwin Buckstone's Good for Nothing, in a mixed bill alongside W. S. Gilbert's Sweethearts, in which she played Jenny Northcott.[4]
Later years
In 1879, the Bancrofts moved to the Haymarket Theatre, a larger house, where they continued the successful presentation of modern comedy until both retired from the stage on 20 July 1885, having made a considerable fortune producing theatre. After that, they rarely appeared onstage.
Books
Bancroft was the author of the novel The Shadow of Neeme. She also collaborated with her husband in the production of two volumes of reminiscences called Mr. and Mrs. Bancroft On and Off the Stage, Written by Themselves (London, 1888) and The Bancrofts: Recollections of Sixty Years (Dutton and Co.: London, 1909).
Recordings
Bancroft recorded three 10" discs for the Gramophone Company in June 1903.
- 1236 Drinking the waters.
- 1237 The Deutscher's baby.
- 1238 (a) A boy's philosophy; (b) Love.
Notes
- ↑ William Baker, Judith L Fisher, Andrew Gasson and Andrew Maunder (2007). Lives of Victorian Literary Figures, Part V. Pickering & Chatto. ISBN 978 1 85196 819 0.
- ↑ Vorder Bruegge, Andrew "W. S. Gilbert: Antiquarian Authenticity and Artistic Autocracy" (Associate Professor, Department Chair, Department of Theatre and Dance, Winthrop University). Professor Vorder Bruegge presented this paper at the Victorian Interdisciplinary Studies Association of the Western United States annual conference in October 2002, accessed 26 March 2008
- ↑ Information about Cup and Saucer realism (PeoplePlay UK)
- ↑ Information about Sweethearts (PeoplePlay UK)
References
- The Bancrofts: Recollections of Sixty Years (Dutton and Co.: London, 1909)
- Information from the People Play website
- Information from the Picture History website
- "Sir Squire Bancroft" Britannica article
- Columbia Encyclopedia article
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Effie Bancroft. |
- Works by or about Effie Bancroft at Internet Archive
- Discussion of the Bancrofts and their theatres
- Photographs of Bancroft
- Marie Bancroft Photograph part of the Nineteenth Century Notables Digital Collection at Gettysburg College
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Gilman, D. C.; Thurston, H. T.; Colby, F. M., eds. (1905). "article name needed". New International Encyclopedia (1st ed.). New York: Dodd, Mead.