Dan Leno (20 December 1860 – 31 October 1904) was an English comedian and stage actor of the Victorian and Edwardian eras, famous for performing in music hall. As a child, he was known for his clog dancing, and in his teen years, he became the star of his family's music hall act throughout Britain.[1] He was an increasingly popular solo artist during the late 1880s and 1890s.[2][3] He also performed in pantomimes and a few Victorian burlesques and comic plays and musicals, especially in the last two decades of his career.[4]
Leno's first theatre appearance (as distinguished from music hall) was in pantomime in Liverpool in 1865, where he had a supporting part as a juvenile clown in Fortunatus; or, The Magic Wishing Cap alongside his parents, who appeared as "Mr and Mrs Leno – Comic Duettists".[5] Leno earned wider theatrical notice as Dame Durden in a pantomime Jack and the Beanstalk at London's Surrey Theatre in 1886, having been spotted singing "Going to Buy Milk" by the theatre's manager.[6] The piece was a success, and Leno received rave reviews; as a result, he was booked to star as Tinpanz the Tinker in the following year's pantomime, Sinbad and the Little Old Man of the Sea; or, The Tinker, the Tailor, the Soldier, the Sailor, Apothecary, Ploughboy, Gentleman Thief.[7]The Era reported that Leno "made a capital Tinker, full of drollery and grotesque business."[8]
Sinbad brought Leno to the attention of Augustus Harris, the manager of the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, one of the largest London theatres, which staged elaborate pantomime spectacles every Christmas.[9][10] Harris offered Leno a role in the theatre's 1888 Christmas pantomime, Babes in the Wood.[11] One critic wrote that "'the cake' for frolicsome humour is taken by the dapper new-comer, Mr. Dan Leno, who is sketched as the galvanic baroness in the wonderfully amusing dance which sets the house in a roar. The substantial "babes", Mr. Herbert Campbell and Mr. Harry Nicholls, would have no excuse if they did not vie in drollery with the light footed Dan Leno."[12]Babes was a triumph: the theatre reported record attendance, and the run was extended until 27 April 1889.[13] Leno went on to star in a total of 16 Christmas pantomimes at Drury Lane from 1888 to 1904.[14] In 15 of these, he played alongside Herbert Campbell, a veteran pantomime performer, with Leno playing predominantly dame roles.[15] Leno became famous for his characterisations of dame roles, and he was described as the "precursor of contemporary pantomime dames".[16]
Leno also performed in a few other theatre productions during his career, including burlesques and musical comedies, while continuing to perform in his own popular music hall act, in London and on tour in the British provinces.[17] By 1902, he had become an alcoholic and had begun to decline physically and mentally; he was briefly admitted to a mental asylum in 1903 and, upon his release later that year, played in only one more production.[18] Leno died the following year, aged 43.[19]
Leno's first recorded theatrical performance; he appeared in the harlequinade, while his parents, Louisa and Will, played the principal boy Fortunatus and Ursa Major Britain, respectively. His parents were billed as "Mr and Mrs Leno – Comic Duettists". The music hall comic Harry Liston was also in the cast.[5]
By Will Leno. Performed during a tour of Ireland; young Dan Leno received praise from Charles Dickens, who was in the audience and told him: "Good little man, you'll make headway!"[20]
22 Jan 1870
Jack the Giant Killer; or, Harlequin Grim Gosling, or the Good Fairy Queen of the Golden Pine Grove
By Will Leno. The Lenos also featured in the variety entertainment that preceded the pantomime,[21] which offered Dan Leno a chance to "demonstrate his all-round talents".[22]
26 Dec 1886
Jack and the Beanstalk, which grew to the moon; or, the Giant, Jack Frost and the Ha-Ha Balloon
By Horace Lennard. This reworking of the F. C. Burnand burlesque, The Latest Edition of Black-Eyed Susan; or, the Little Bill that Was Taken Up, was not well received.[25] However, The Entr'acte called Leno's dancing "quite phenomenal".[26]
By Augustus Harris, Cecil Raleigh and Arthur Sturgess. The lavish production included a carriage drawn by real horses and "the use of thousands of lights".[37][38]
By Arthur Sturgess and H. Leonard. The production was considered to be one of the weakest of the Drury Lane pantomimes, but Leno's characterisation of Widow Twankey was admired as one of his finest Dame roles.[39][40]
^Hogg, James. "Leno, Dan", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, accessed January 2013 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
^Brandreth, p. 69; produced by the manager Milton Bode, the piece initially played in a suburban London theatre before Leno was available to play in it. See "The Foreign Stage", The New York Dramatic Mirror, 10 September 1898, p. 8, accessed 16 January 2013
^Produced by the manager Milton Bode; Leno's uncle Johnny Danvers appeared in the piece. See "Amusements in Birmingham: Grand Theatre", The Era, 11 November 1899, p. 23a; Brandreth, p. 69; and "Dan Leno at The Theatre Royal", Sheffield Independent, 31 October 1899, p. 11
^Produced by the manager Milton Bode. Booth (1996), p. 203; the musical was revived on Broadway in 1904 with many of the songs composed or re-set with new music by the young Jerome Kern.
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