Harry Nicholls (comedian)
Harry Nicholls (1 March 1852 – 29 November 1926)[1] was an English actor, comedian, songwriter and playwright, popular during the Victorian era. As an actor, he appeared in music hall, Victorian burlesques and Edwardian musical comedy. He was perhaps best known for starring in the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane's annual Christmas pantomimes, alongside Dan Leno and Herbert Campbell and as the author of long-running musicals at the Gaiety Theatre.
Biography
Nicholls was born Henry Thomas Nicholls in London and was educated at The City of London School.[2] As a youth he worked as a clerk in a railway office and spent some time as an apprentice auctioneer. He became interested in acting and made his stage debut in 1870, acting in provincial theatre where he achieved little success. He made his debut on the London stage on 3 October 1874 where he played the part of Honeybun at the Old Surrey Theatre in Joseph Stirling Coyne's farce Did You Ever Send Your Wife to Camberwell? Nicholls remained at the theatre for two years.[2] Early in his career, he also played Don Andres in La Perichole with Selina Dolaro's company.[1] He next moved to the Royal Grecian Theatre in Shoreditch. There he met the music hall comedian Herbert Campbell, and the two formed a professional union.[2]
Nicholls married Lucy Jane Pettitt, sister of the dramatist Henry Pettitt, in 1878 in Islington, and they had three children.[2] In 1879, Nicholls was engaged in a short contract at the Folly Theatre where he played comic roles in The Dragoons, Lord Mayor's Day, The First Night, and Heavy Fathers.[2]
Theatre Royal, Drury Lane
Nicholls joined the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane company in 1880, and his act together with Campbell became one of the standing features in the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane's elaborate pantomimes until 1893.[2] A reporter for the South Wales Daily News considered: "a Drury Lane pantomime was never complete without the assistance of Mr Harry Nicholls."[3] Among the dramas in which Nicholls appeared during those years were Pluck (1881), Human Nature (1882), A Run of Luck (1885), Pleasure (1886), The Armada (1887), The Royal Oak (1888), A Million of Money (1889), A Sailor's Knot (1890), The Prodigal Daughter (1891), and A Life of Pleasure (1893).[2] In 1886 the composer Isidore de Lara wrote an operetta entitled Minna; or, The Fall from the Cliff with Nicholls in mind and created a role especially for him.[4] In 1894, Nicholls became contracted to the Adelphi Theatre where he appeared in, among others, Fatal Card.[5]
Later life
Nicholls was a popular songwriter and author and achieved great success at the Gaiety with the Edwardian musical comedies A Runaway Girl (1898)[6] and The Toreador (1901).[1] In 1900 Nicholls, along with the playwright William Lestocq, wrote a three-act comedy called Jane.[7] It starred Charles Hawtrey, Henry Kemble, and Charles Brookfield, and appeared at the Comedy Theatre, London.[8]
Nicholls appeared at the Gaiety in the role of Hooker Pacha in the long-running musical The Messenger Boy (1900).[1] He was engaged by a touring theatrical company and undertook a six-month tour of South Africa in 1902.[6] In 1910, Nicholls was elected as a warden at the Worshipful Company of Joiners and Ceilers.[9][10]
Nicholls died at his home, 31 Birch Grove, Acton Hill, London,[2] on 29 November 1926, aged 74.[11] He was buried in Old Chiswick Cemetery.
Notes and references
- 1 2 3 4 "Harry Nicholls", Gilbert and Sullivan Archive, 7 October 2004, accessed 10 August 2016.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Harry Nicholls", The Stage, 2 December 1926, p. 22
- ↑ "Mr Harry Nicholls", South Wales Daily News, 7 December 1900, p. 3
- ↑ St. James's Gazette, 13 July 1886, p. 7
- ↑ Honigsbaum, p. 128
- 1 2 "Obituary: Noted Comedian", Aberdeen Press and Journal, 30 November 1926, p. 3
- ↑ "The World of the Theatre", The London Illustrated News, 6 November 1920, p. 734
- ↑ "Jane: A Face in Three Acts", Archive.org, accessed 14 August 2016
- ↑ "Mr Harry Nicholls", The Daily Maid, 29 July 1910, p. 7
- ↑ Hull Daily Mail, 29 July 1910, p. 10
- ↑ "Famous Comedian Dead", The Western Gazette, 10 December 1926
Sources
- Honigsbaum, Mark (1930). A History of the Great Influenza Pandemics: Death, Panic and Hysteria, 1830-1920. New York: I.B. Taurus & Co Ltd. ISBN 978-1-78076-478-8.
Further reading
- Blumenfeld, R. D. (1930). RDB's Diary 1887–1914. London: Heinemann. OCLC 68136714.
External links
- Harry Nicholls at the Internet Movie Database