John Lawrence Toole

J. L. Toole
Born John Lawrence Toole
(1832-03-12)12 March 1832
St Mary Axe, City of London
Died 30 July 1906(1906-07-30) (aged 74)
Brighton, Sussex
Years active 1852 – 1893

John Lawrence (J. L.) Toole (12 March 1830 – 30 July 1906) was an English comic actor, actor-manager and theatrical producer. He was famous for his roles in farce and in serio-comic melodramas in a career that spanned more than four decades. He was so famous in his day that he was the first actor to have a West End theatre named after him.

Life and career

Toole was born in London, the younger son of James Toole and his wife, Elizabeth. His father was a messenger for the East India Company and for some years an usher at the Old Bailey, who for many years in the 1840s acted as toastmaster in the City of London.[1][2]

He was educated at the City of London School from 1841–45, and started work as a clerk in a wine merchant's office. In 1854, Toole married Susan Hale (née Caslake), a widow five years older than he. They had a son, Frank Lawrence, and a daughter, Florence Mabel, but both children died in their 20s.[3]

Early career

Toole began his acting career by training as an amateur with the City Histrionic Club, beginning in 1850 and by performing in other amateur theatricals and in comic sketches. He earned good notices, particularly as Jacob Earwig in Boots at the Swan, and soon met Charles Dickens, who had heard of him and came to see him act.[4] His last amateur role was as Simmons in The Spitalfields Weaver by Thomas Haynes Bayly[5] at the Haymarket Theatre. Encouraged by Dickens, he made his professional stage debut in 1852 at the Queen's Theatre in Dublin, under the management of Charles Dillon, and by 1853 became the principal "low comedian" at the Theatre Royale in Edinburgh. His older brother, Francis, acted as his manager throughout his early career.[2] During the next two years, he performed widely in Ireland and Scotland, gaining a reputation for sunny extemporaneous comedy, humorous expressions and a uniquely comic voice, freedom with his texts, and an engaging rapport with audiences.[1]

Spy cartoon of Toole entitled "A Spelling Bee" (1876)
Toole in The Butler at the Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh

In 1854,[6] Toole made his first professional appearance in London at the St. James's Theatre, acting as Samuel Pepys in The King's Rival, by Tom Taylor and Charles Reade, and Weazel in My Friend the Major by Selby.[4] There he also played in Boots at the Swan and Honours before Titles.[7] He returned to the provinces, but by 1856 was engaged in London at the Lyceum Theatre, including as Hilarion Fanfaronade in Belphegor, in which Marie Wilton made her first London appearance.[8] Thereafter, he frequently performed with Wilton.[4] In 1857, having had a great success in London as Paul Pry in John Poole's farce of that name, he made his first of many successful provincial summer tours and often repeated the character thereafter. During this first tour, he met and acted together with Henry Irving, and the two remained close friends over their long careers. In 1858, he scored a notable hit creating the role of Tom Cranky in John Hollingshead's farce The Birthplace of Podgers.[1]

Peak Years

In 1858, at the suggestion of Dickens,[4] Toole joined Benjamin Webster's company at the Adelphi Theatre and established his popularity as a farceur, creating, among other parts, Joe Spriggins in Ici on parle français by T. H. Williams,[9] Augustus de Rosherville in The Willow Copse by Boucicault,[10] in Birthplace of Podgers, Tom Dibbles in Good for Nothing by J. B. Buckstone, and in Bengal Tiger.[7] He remained at the Adelphi as principal low comedian for nine years, frequently partnering with Paul Bedford, whose sedate comic style complemented his own contrasting energetic style.[1] His most successful roles there included Bob Cratchit in A Christmas Carol (1859), the title role in Asmodeus in 1859,[11] Peter Familias in The Census by William Brough (among many pieces by Brough),[12] Milwood in George de Barnwell by H. J. Byron (1862),[13] Caleb Plummer in Dot (1862), by Dion Boucicault,[8] Pitcher in The Area Belle (1864),[14] and Prudent in The Fast Family by B. Webster, Jr.[15] His other great successes there were as Mr. Tetterby in an adaptation of Dickens' The Haunted Man and of a frightened servant in Boucicault's The Phantom.[7] He played a season in 1867 with the impressive new company at Queen's Theatre that included Irving, Henrietta Hodson, Lionel Brough and Charles Wyndham, where he appeared in such works a H. J. Byron's Dearer Than Life, as Michael Garner, and W. S. Gilbert's La Vivandière, as Sergeant Sulpizio. Frederick Waddy wrote of Toole in 1873 that as Harry Coke in Off the Line, "Mr. Toole makes one of those perfect pictures of everyday life of the lower class in which he has so often proved himself a consummate artist. But in low comedy and broad farce it would be difficult to find an actor of equal merit.... As Paul Pry he keeps his audience in a roar whenever he is on the stage".[7]

Toole in the title role in The Don (1888)
Toole in the title role in Paw Claudian

Toole was then engaged in 1868 at the Gaiety Theatre by Hollingshead, appearing in many pieces there including Thespis (1871), the first Gilbert and Sullivan collaboration, and as John Lockwood, in a drama called Wait and Hope.[7] In 1872–74, among other successes, he portrayed Tom Larkin in Good News by H. J. Byron,[16] the Irishman Brulgruddery in John Bull by George Colman the Younger; Bob Acres in The Rivals by Richard Brinsley Sheridan, together with Charles James Mathews and Samuel Phelps; the title role in a Robert Reece burlesque called Don Giovanni in Venice; another title role in Guy Fawkes by H. J. Byron, and created the role of the barrister Hammond Coote in Wig and Gown by James Albery.[1][17] Toole's fame was at its height in 1874, when he went on tour to America, but he failed to reproduce there the success he had found in England. He remained based mostly at the Gaiety until the end of 1877, when he moved to the Globe Theatre under his own management for two years.[18]

In 1878, Toole created the role of Charles Liquorpond in A Fool and his Money by H. J. Byron. Liquorpond was a retired footman unexpectedly overtaken by wealth, and Toole's affectedly superior pronunciation, particularly of his own name, was a tremendous success. In his prime, Toole achieved wide popularity as a comic actor, being noted for his comic delivery of words, but he did not confine himself exclusively to comedy. He also excelled in domestic melodramas (adaptations by Dion Boucicault and others of Charles Dickens and similar writers), playing "tender-hearted victims of fate", where he was famously able to combine humour and pathos. The Times said of his performance in Dearer than Life by Henry James Byron:

"Mr. J. L. Toole... is associated in the minds of the general public mainly with parts provoking to uproarious laughter; but it may fairly be questioned whether, like his predecessor in this also, his heart does not lie with, and he himself is not seen to more advantage in, the telling sketches from everyday life to which, for want of a better, we give the name of domestic drama. Anything more lifelike than the intensity of cold and hunger from which he may be almost said to suffer, in the garret-scene, as Michael Garner it would be difficult to conceive."[19]

Later years

In 1879, Toole realized a lifelong ambition by taking over the management of the Folly Theatre in London. This triumph was offset by the death of his son in the same year, after a football injury.[3] He renamed the theatre "Toole's Theatre" in 1882, becoming the first actor to have a West End theatre named after him.[1] He was often away in the provinces, but he produced here a number of plays:

Toole began to be troubled by gout in 1886. After his daughter died in 1888, followed by his wife in 1889, Toole was disconsolate, and his health deteriorated further.[1] By this time, his acting was unfashionable: he began to be seen as the last of the line of old-fashioned low comic actors who had been popular earlier in the century, including Buckstone, John Liston and Edward Richard Wright.[1] Nevertheless, he toured Australia and New Zealand in 1890.[4] He published his reminiscences in 1888, and his stage appearances gradually became fewer. The gout left him sometimes unable to walk, and after an 1893 illness during Thoroughbred by Ralph Lumley, he retired from the London stage, although he made occasional appearances in the provinces until about 1896. His theatre was demolished in 1895 for an extension of Charing Cross Hospital, and he dissolved his theatre company after an 1896 tour.

The critic Clement Scott called Toole "one of the kindest and most genial men who ever drew breath. ... No one acted with more spirit or enjoyed so thoroughly the mere pleasure of acting."[8] His genial and sympathetic nature was conspicuous off the stage as well as on it, and he was known as a great practical joker.[1]

Ultimately he retired to Brighton, where after a long struggle with Bright's disease and a degenerative spinal illness, he died in 1906 at the age of 76. He is buried at Kensal Green Cemetery in London, next to his wife and children. Toole was a good businessman and left a considerable fortune of over £81,000, out of which he made a number of bequests to charity, to needy actors and to his friends.[1]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Read, Michael. "Toole, John Lawrence (1830–1906)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004), Oxford University Press online edn, 2008, accessed 9 June 2008 (requires subscription)
  2. 1 2 "John Lawrence Toole Papers" – 1850-1907, University of Rochester libraries
  3. 1 2 Clipping about the death of Toole's son in 1879
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Obituary, The Times, 31 July 1906, p. 5
  5. Bayly, Thomas H. The Spitalfields Weaver.
  6. Pollock, W. H. (1886). "MR. J. L. TOOLE". In Matthews, Brander; Hutton, Laurence, eds. Actors and Actresses of Great Britain and the United States. NY: Cassell & Co. pp. 267–271.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Waddy, Frederick. Cartoon Portraits and Biographical Sketches of Men of the Day, pp. 22–24, Tinsley Brothers: London (1873), accessed 2 January 2011
  8. 1 2 3 Toole's Theatre-Polygraphic Hall-Charing Cross Theatre-The Folly (Arthur Lloyd) accessed 11 Oct 2007
  9. Williams, Thomas John. Ici on parle français.
  10. The Adelphi Theatre Calendar 1859–60 (2013), accessed 27 March 2015
  11. Adams, p. 85
  12. Adams, passim
  13. Adams, p. 572
  14. Adams, p. 72
  15. Adams, p. 496
  16. Adams, p. 595
  17. Adams, pp. 411 and 621
  18. Hollingshead, John. Good Old Gaiety (1903) London, p. 39
  19. The Times, 27 December 1871
  20. MacMichael, J. Holden. The Story of Charing Cross and Its Immediate Neighbourhood (1906) Chatto & Windus, accessed 12 October 2007
  21. The Upper Crust and Auntie. The New York Times, 26 April 1880, accessed 11 October 2007
  22. Adams, p. 92
  23. Adams, p. 582
  24. Grossmith, George (1888). A Society Clown: Reminiscences. Bristol/London: Arrowsmith. Chapter 8 Available online here
  25. Adams, p. 606
  26. Adams, p. 410
  27. Notices and posters for Toole's Theatre pieces
  28. Peter Pan exhibition site

References

Further reading

External links

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