But by 1852 they had evolved
into something quite different, something special, something unexpected.
The halls of the 1850s were
a new breed. Led by the self-styled ‘Father of the Halls’, Charles Morton, - a
title also claimed by the 1844 manager of Evans, Paddy Green - the new music
halls were purpose built buildings, seating between 700-1,500 people each
night. The Canterbury
Music Hall was the first
of these, opening in 1852, and then again in 1856, after a significant rebuild
to increase seating capacity. Morton built this hall at 143 Westminster Bridge Road , and it
signalled the new style of entertainment, specifically for the working classes,
in the heart of the city of London .
It was a marvel to behold: opulent ceilings, chandeliers and a carpet that had
reportedly cost 1000 guineas. The middle classes were shocked, why was Morton
going to such expense just to provide entertainment to the masses? Elegant
designs and exteriors belonged to those who could afford to have them at home,
not just to be visited for pleasure.
But this is where the very
core of the entire music hall industry ideal exists. It was a world of fantasy;
it attempted to create perfection and sold it to the people who would never
have enough money to obtain it. It was the modern day celebrity gossip magazine
and reality TV star world rolled into one, and appearing twice nightly just
down your road. Historians have argued that the music halls were the first
commercial mass entertainment to appear in Britain , they appealed to everyone.
In a world that was solely orientated along class and gender lines, the music
halls were a place that drew in men and women, old and young, from all walks of
life. Until the 1880s they were a primarily working class space, with audiences
made up of tradesmen, clerks and the occasional ‘toff ‘or ‘swell’ looking to
rough it amongst the common people. Through topical songs they kept their
audience informed of parliamentary bills, changes in the geographical landscape
of London ,
political intrigues, as well as domestic relationships and trials. The songs
were witty, clever, and occasionally stolen from the poetry of the greats like
Byron or Keats. Above all, they educated their audience about their rights and
situation. And this was viewed as highly dangerous.
By the later half of the
nineteenth century, there were over 300 music halls licensed in London alone. Syndicated
groups began to appear, opening music halls in towns and resorts across the
country, and later the world. Their influence over the tastes and ideas of
their audience was unlike anything that had ever been seen before. National
stars were created, Marie Lloyd, Mark Sheridan and Little Tich all represented
the ‘true working class’ and packed houses to the roof night after night.
Marie Lloyd Singing 'A Coster Girl in Paris'
This combination of mass
congregation and the popular masses was too much of a threat to the
intellectual elites, who watched in horror as, across the water, the European
working classes began to replace and rebel against their former masters. Keen
to stop any social unrest from occurring in Britain , the elites and middle
classes managed to take hold of the one weapon that could have radicalised and
revolutionised the British working class – the music halls.
Through a steady process of
regulation, and subversive tactics of a slow alteration to song topics –
goodbye political information, hello ‘Ere, ‘e’s got an awful big carrot in ‘is
barraaa’ *wink* *nudge nudge* - the music halls altered from an expression of
the working classes, to a middle class stereotype of working class character.
This happened slowly over a period of about twenty years, from the 1870s to the
1890s. Previous historians often lay the blame on a capitalist-driven
social-climbing management, who bowed to the new measures – less alcohol, no
prostitutes, no innuendo - to insure a higher paying audience. The halls
themselves altered, getting rid of their promenades – even though this resulted
in vandalism by the patrons, including a young Winston Churchill – and seating
5000 people in grand buildings more like cathedrals than the simple churches of
entertainment from the 1850s. Electricity came in to replace the dangerous gas
lighting and the ‘Palaces of Variety’ were born.
Harry Champion Singing 'I'm Henry the Eighth I Am'
But while this social
manipulation took hold, there was one area of the music halls that saw little
alteration, and that was in its performers. They came from the true working
class: singers, contortionists, illusionists, acrobats, comic duos, dancers,
animal tamers, trick cyclists, and ballet girls. The music hall bills were a
combination and mutation of every form of entertainment you could think of.
John Davidson’s 1891 poem,
In a Music Hall, gives some idea of the audience’s attraction to the halls:
“I did as my desk fellows did;
With a pipe and a tankard of beer,
In a music hall, rancid and hot,
I lost my soul night after night.
It is better to lose one’s soul,
Than to never stake it at all.”
In the early days, a bill
would consist of 9-10 acts, of differing appeals with a Chairman, who sat on
stage, sometimes in almost a grand throne, and acted as general overseer and
organiser of the night’s entertainment. Mid-way through the changes, and
certainly by the late 1880s, the role and office of Chairman had almost totally
died out, the tables that had filled the auditorium had been removed, and a pit
for the musicians had been created, but the bills remained the same.
And so did the pay and
situation between artists, agents and mangers. By 1907, it was the artists who
were really suffering. The long hours, contracts that would ban you from
working within a ten-mile radius of any hall for six months after an
appearance, and little pay had taken their toll. The acts went on strike. The
‘Music Hall War’ affected performers across the industry, from the highest paid
stars to those scraping a living. The formation of unions such as the Variety Artists Federation (which went
on to become Equity) show that the
industry had begun to regulate itself, inside as well as for outside
appearances. The success of the campaign was another demonstration of how far
the music halls had come from their working class origins. And this was no more
apparent than at the first Royal Variety Show (yeah, it’s from the music
halls!) in 1912, then called the Royal Command Performance.
I recently watched a BBC
documentary with Julian Fellows proclaiming that the attendance of Royalty at
the show signified just how close to the people the King and Queen had become,
how much they felt a kinship with their subjects and how greatly they enjoyed
it when Vesta Tilley appeared on the stage. They didn’t. It may have been a
good piece of public relations, but when Vesta Tilly appeared on stage, in her
male attire and began to sing, Queen Alexandria was so shocked that she turned
her face away and ordered the entire court to do the same. If anything, this
single moment signifies just how great the social divide still was between the
monarchy and the attitudes and beliefs of the common people. But here they all
were, brought together under the banner of the music halls.
So what happened to the
music halls? Where did this brilliantly inclusive and entertaining for of
theatre seem to die out? Traditionalist historians say it was with the advent
of the First World War, and the combined threat of cinema and radio. Revision
historians disagree, the halls evolved to incorporate both these new forms of media,
creating ‘cine-variety shows’ and live performances on the BBC. Throughout the
1920s and 1930s new music halls were still being built and acts achieving
international success. It is clear though, that the one threat it could not
survive was television. Even ‘Saturday
Night At The London Palladium’ became the last vestige of a dying art form.
One of the most poignant films to capture this sense of loss was by one of the
most famous stars of the music halls. Charlie Chaplin’s Limelight, (1952), has an overwhelming ache for times gone by, and
performances past.
Charlie Chaplin's 1952 film 'Limelight'
So there you are, a brief
history of the music halls. And this is just the short version; I haven’t
talked about the prostitutes, the serial killers, the spies, the alcohol or any
of the other equally fascinating and exciting parts of its history. There isn’t
enough time to cover everything. But the next time you hear a stand up
comedian, or watch a new avant-garde comic duo, remember that without the music
halls, they would never have existed. The legacy of the halls echoes through
time, and deserves far more attention than we currently seem to give.
Fern Riddell
is a PhD Student exploring Religion, Sexuality and Crime in London 's Music Halls from 1850 - 1939. Follow
her on Twitter @FernRiddell and for more on the curiosities of Victorian
entertainment get yourself over to her blog at viceandvirtue.posterous.com (some content may not be suitable for those of a
stereotypical ‘Victorian’ constitution!)
As a visitor to London last summer, a real highlight was taking in the show at Wilton's. Great fun!
ReplyDeleteIsn't it a beautiful place? If only walls could talk, I bet the bricks there could tell you some stories!
ReplyDeleteHave you read Essie Fox's novel 'The Somnambulist'? Part of that is set at Wilton's and the Music Halls figure prominently; also it's a very good read.
Speaking of good reads, this really was one.
ReplyDeleteI so enjoyed this, My Great Grandmother worked as a Music Hall dancer and I believe that is how she supported her family. From that beginning she got to travel the world as a dancer. She was one of Paul Valentine's protegees and I have photos and a diary of her travels.There is a photo in the family of Rosetta at the Old Canterbury Music Hall in London and I suspect that she helped her family financially by performing as a child, as Paul Valentine gave opportunities for poorer children to do so. Interestingly, most of Rosetta's career is after the Music Hall wars in 1908 when her husband walked out leaving her with her one surviving child (out of three or four.) She was still dancing in her forties.You might be interested in the pictures on her blog. http://ladyoutsidehertime.blogspot.co.uk/
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