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      In loving memory of Tom, Gwen and Kitty, and of my brother Terry, whose ambition in life was to see this book written

      Contents

       Cover

       Title Page

       Dedication

       Leaving the Stage

       1 The Road to Music Hall

       2 The Basement and the Cellars

       3 At the Fringe

       4 The First Pioneer

       5 Explosion

       6 The Swells and the Costers

       7 The Serio-Comediennes

       8 Marie Lloyd

       9 Dan Leno and Little Tich

       10 The Comic and the Minstrel

       11 The Cross-Dressers: Girls Who Were Boys

       12 Top Hats and Black Faces

       13 The Business of Pleasure

       14 Warp and Weft

       15 The Exotic and the Bizarre

       16 Amusement of the People

       17 The Literati and the Artists

       18 Enterprise and Outrage

       19 Overseas Music Hall

       20 Music Hall War

       21 Tom and Kitty

       22 The Seeds of Decline

       23 World War I

       24 Aftermath

       Index of Songs

       General Index

       List of Illustrations

       Acknowledgements

       Author’s Note

       About the Author

       Other Works

       Picture Section

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

      ‘Who is to write the history of music hall? What a splendid theme …’

      JOHN ROBERTSON, HISTORIAN (1856–1933)

      In March 1962, I sat with an old man as he lay dying. He was barely conscious, with familiar half-smiles dancing across his well-worn and gentle face, but I knew where he was in his imagination – where he wanted to be. The lights were bright. A boisterous audience was cheering. Aged eighty-two, and over thirty years since he had left it, he was back on the stage. In life he had few possessions, but he died a richer man than most, with a song in his heart and joy in his soul.

      He was my father, Tom.

      The men and women who entertained so royally are all dead. They are gone, but not quite forgotten. We know some of their names, and some of their songs, but few people now living saw them onstage. Their magic is now the stuff of myth and legend.

      But then, music hall has always been an elusive concept. What exactly is it? Is it a style of singing comic ballads? That is certainly the principal ingredient, but it is far from the whole. Is it a theatre, hosting a mixture of variety? Up to a point, yes – but it is so much more than that.

      Even the name is misleading. ‘Music’ hall was never simply music, but encompassed everything from the sublime to the surreal. A typical evening’s fare might include opera and ballet, popular singers and comedians, speciality acts, animal acts, acrobats, monologists and any other performer who might, however loosely, ‘entertain’. Nor was the setting necessarily a hall. Elements of music hall were widespread in pleasure gardens, taverns, streets and markets long before the nineteenth century. Its growth was organic: often haphazard, ramshackle – more the product of events than rational planning. And always, always it was a reflection of the lives and tastes of its audience.

      The term ‘music hall’ was invented by the early entrepreneurs who built theatres to exploit widely popular forms of entertainment. These entrepreneurs have a role to play in the history of music hall, but it is sentimental myth to claim they invented it. It had its heart in the East End of London, yet it was not purely a southern phenomenon. It was centred on the capital because that was where the biggest audiences were to be found, but from the outset it was popular in towns and cities across the length and breadth of Great Britain. Lancashire,

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